Serene (phone)

Summary

Serene is a mobile phone produced as a joint venture between Samsung Electronics and Bang & Olufsen. It was released in the last quarter of 2005 in Europe. It was available in select stores throughout the world and cost $1275 (~€1000).

Serene
Serene, open, on stand
ManufacturerSamsung Electronics and Bang & Olufsen
Compatible networksGSM 900/1800/1900 MHz, GPRS
Availability by region2005
SuccessorSerenata
Form factorClamshell
Dimensions64.7 X 69.7 X 23.9 mm
Mass115 g
Memory31 MB
BatteryLithium Ion 800 mAh
Display320 X 240 px TFT LCD, 256K colors
Rear camera0.3 megapixel
ConnectivityBluetooth
Data inputscircular keypad

A successor to the Serene called the Serenata was announced and released in October 2007.[1] It features a slide out speaker and has a heavy focus on the music functions of the handset. Serenata retailed for $2000.[2]

The joint venture edit

Bang & Olufsen and Samsung formed the joint venture with the aim of competing in the high end mobile phone market, primarily competing with several handsets from Nokia. The partnership has drawn on the design strengths of Bang & Olufsen and Samsung's mobile phone technology enabling Bang & Olufsen to re-enter the mobile phone market after an absence of several years and Samsung to expand into premium mobile phones.

It is not the first time that Bang & Olufsen has worked with other companies to produce mobile phones. Notably the BeoCom 9800 was produced with Philips[3] and the BeoCom 9500 was produced in partnership with Ericsson.[4]

Handset Aims edit

 
Serene, closed, on stand.

Like most Bang & Olufsen products, the phone is industrially simplistic. The concept of the phone was brought down to pure communication and, although the phone can facilitate voice calls, text messages, multimedia messages and take pictures, its camera is only 0.3 megapixels and common, often expected, features of many common phones, such as games are not present.

Handset Design edit

The phone consists of two halves on an aluminium hinge. The hinges have an internal power assist motor to help open the phone completely. One half features a circular keypad with an iPod-style scroll wheel, and the other features a liquid crystal display. The handset was designed so that for standard use the screen is at the bottom of the phone, and the keypad is on the half that flips out. This was for two reasons: It stops the phone from getting greasy when you talk, and it also improves the weight balance while holding the phone. The handset also inverts so you can hold the phone up the other way if you so wished.

There are some major ergonomic flaws in the Serene. The camera is located on the side of the phone on one of the hinges which makes taking photos hard. In addition, you must use a special screwdriver to access the battery compartment.[5] [6]

Technical specifications edit

Form factor Clamshell / Transformer
GSM frequencies 900/1800/1900 MHz
GPRS Yes
Screen TFT, 256K colours, 320x240 pixels
Camera 0.3 Megapixels
Multimedia Messaging Yes
Built-in memory 31 MB
Java No
Memory card slot No
Bluetooth Yes
Infrared No
Data cable support Yes
Browser 1.2.1
Email Yes
Music player No
Radio No
Video Player No
Polyphonic tones Yes, 64 chords
Mp3 ringtones Unknown
Battery Li-Ion 800 mAh
Talk time Up to 3 h 30 min
Standby time Up to 225 h
Weight 115 g
Dimensions 64.7x69.7x23.9 millimeters
Availability Q4/2005

References edit

  1. ^ "B&O Serenata review". Stuff. 4 December 2007. Retrieved 6 November 2020. The first collaboration between Danish hi-fi gurus Bang & Olufsen and Samsung resulted in the Serene. It was a uniquely designed handset, but lacked features and was an ergonomic disaster. Far from being perturbed, the self-styled 'dream team' has returned with the Serenata
  2. ^ "Update: Samsung+Bang & Olufsen F310 Serenata Cellphone: Totally real, totally $2,000". 2 October 2007.
  3. ^ "BeoCom 9800 GSM Cellular Mobile Telephone". BeoWorld. 2007-02-10. Retrieved 2008-06-18.
  4. ^ "BeoCom 9500 GSM Cellular Mobile Telephone". BeoWorld. 2007-02-10. Retrieved 2008-06-18.
  5. ^ Edwards, Cliff (2007-01-22). "Making the Serene Scene With B&O". BusinessWeek. Archived from the original on February 3, 2007. Retrieved 2008-06-18.
  6. ^ "B&O Serenata review". Stuff. 4 December 2007. Retrieved 6 November 2020. The first collaboration between Danish hi-fi gurus Bang & Olufsen and Samsung resulted in the Serene. It was a uniquely designed handset, but lacked features and was an ergonomic disaster. Far from being perturbed, the self-styled 'dream team' has returned with the Serenata

External links edit

  • The Official Serene Website
  • New York Times Article (Requires a free subscription)
  • detailed review of the handset
  • Technical Specifications