
The raised keypad is small, but there's enough separation between buttons, and the keys have a solid, tactile feel to them. A five-way joystick just below the screen simplifies navigation through the serviceable menus. The joystick also provides one-touch access to the phone book, the applications folder, the text-message editor, instant messaging, and the Web browser. Although it's not immediately obvious, moving the joystick to the left lets you back out of submenus, which is a feature we always like. We noticed, however, that some organizer functions are needlessly buried under submenus. You also get two soft keys, Talk and End buttons, and a dedicated camera control. There's no dedicated Back key, but the End button serves that function. Both sides of the unit are button-free, so you must use the joystick to adjust the volume during a call. The infrared port sits on the left spine of the unit, and the camera lens is on the rear.

If you're seeking a camera phone, however, look much further than the CT66. The phone's integrated camera is sub-VGA quality (352x288 pixels, or 0.1 megapixel, in Premium mode), so the resulting images are as abysmal as you'd expect. You get a 3X zoom and a self-timer, but other options were limited to adjusting the brightness and white balance; Siemens sells a flash attachment for $35. The phone includes a photo-editing application, allowing you to crop, flip, and resize your shots. But sub-VGA images give you so little to work with that it's hardly worth the effort to try to spruce up your photos. The phone includes 10MB of onboard storage, which provides space for more than 150 images. There's no Bluetooth, but the CT66 features an infrared port for wirelessly exchanging information, such as transferring photos from the phone to a laptop.

The CT66 also includes AOL Instant Messenger, although typing on the small keypad and constantly staring at the tiny, fuzzy screen will quickly grow tiresome for all but the most hard-core IMers. Other features include Siemens MediaNet wireless Web access via the WAP 2.0 browser and four Java (J2ME) games: Bubble Boost, Photopet, StackAttackAdvanced, and WappoJunior. You can personalize the phone with a variety of wallpaper, screensavers, color themes, and sounds. Alternatively, you can download more options, games, and ring tones from Cingular.
Smartphones Basic Specs:
Weight:
3 oz
Style:
Candy bar
Messaging Services:
MMS
Product Basic Spec:
Cellular technology:
GSM
Band / mode:
GSM 850/1800/1900 (Tri-Band)
Talk time:
Up to 300 min
Internet Browser:
Yes
Short Messaging Service (SMS):
Yes
Combined with:
With digital camera
Width:
1.8 in
Depth:
0.7 in
Height:
4.1 in