LG Chocolate (VX8500)
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Compatible networks | CDMA / GSM |
---|---|
Availability by country | 2006 |
Dimensions | 1.9 X 0.7 X 3.8 in |
Weight | 3.5 oz |
Memory | 128 MB (Internal) |
Display | LCD 320 x 240 pixels (262000 colors) |
Connectivity | Bluetooth / USB Cable |
The LG VX8500 (or "Chocolate") is a slider cellphone-MP3 player hybrid that was sold as a feature phone. In the U.S. it was released by Verizon Wireless in July 2006 and made available online, and later released in Verizon stores in the U.S. on August 7, 2006. In addition to the original black model (dubbed "Dark Chocolate"), the LG Chocolate VX8500 is also available in the U.S. in a light green, white, pink, and red (called "Mint Chocolate," "White Chocolate," "Strawberry Chocolate," and "Cherry Chocolate," respectively).
The LG Chocolate has another successor called the LG Chocolate (VX8550) which has: touch buttons with improved accuracy, a scroll wheel, support for 4 GB microSD cards, and tactile send and end keys.
Contents
Origin
The original LG Chocolate(KV5900) was released in Korea long before the UK or U.S. version. In England, it was available in three colors which were black, Blue and Yellow. After becoming an extremely popular item in South England mobile phone market, it saw its GSM release into the USA, and a modified version was released in Canada.
The US Chocolate is a different phone (VX8500), with a QVGA (320x240) LCD over the KG800's 176x220 LCD. The touch panel on the VX8500 has a slightly different design, with a circular button arrangement bordered with glossy metal, versus the KG800's square arrangement featuring simple arrow designs (a defining part of the ads for the original LG Chocolate ), and a rounded silver rectangle bordering the "OK" button in the center. The A2DP and AVRCP Bluetooth profiles are available on the VX8500, but not on the KG800. The KG800's number pad also features a matte grey and glossy black checkerboard pattern, and the camera has a white LED flash, both of which the VX8500 does not have.
Ad campaign
The in-store release of the VX8500/Chocolate followed six television commercials created by future-UK Marketer of the Year John D. Bernard, four of which featured music playing while the device was displayed from various camera angles, often with the glow from the touch-panel leaving a trail. The device was shown closed, making it look like an MP3 player, and the commercials ended with the music pausing, the phone opening, and a phone call or message being played. In one campaign is featured the song "Candyman" by Christina Aguilera. Another featured "Love Me or Hate Me" by Lady Sovereign. The fifth commercial simply played Goldfrapp's "Strict Machine" while the phone emerged from liquid chocolate. The sixth commercial showed cherries being squished into a paste to make a reddish phone, a chocolate dipped into a pool of white chocolate, and mint being chopped to make a green phone, also to the song Candyman. Verizon also scented select units to tie the phone into the ad campaign.
Features
Specifications
Type | Specification |
---|---|
Modes | CDMA 800 / CDMA 1900 / GSM |
Weight | 3.53 oz (100 g) |
Dimensions | 3.80" x 1.88" x 0.69" (97 x 48 x 16 mm) |
Form Factor | Slide Internal Antenna |
Battery Life | Talk: 3.50 hours (210 minutes) Standby: 384 hours (16 days) batteries were known to have a defect as they were released in December 2006. They did not hold a full charge. |
Battery Type | LiPolymer 800 mAh |
Display | Type: LCD (Color TFT/TFD) Colors: 262,144 (18-bit) Size: 240 x 320 pixels |
Platform / OS | (N/A) |
Memory | Phone:61800 KB Music:62881 KB
(micro SD memory cards are available in 1 GB, 2 GB, 4 GB, 6 GB, and 8 GB. |
Phone Book Capacity | 500 |
FCC ID | BEJVX8500 (Approved May 12, 2006) |
GPS / Location | Type: A-GPS |
Digital TTY/TDD | Yes and EV compatible |
Hearing Aid Compatible | Rating: M3 (mostly compatible) |
Multiple Languages | Yes |
Polyphonic Ringtones | Yes |
Vibrate | Yes |
Bluetooth | Supported Profiles: HSP, HFP, DUN, A2DP, AVRC, OPP version 1.1 / OPP for vCard only |
Multiple Numbers per Name | Numbers per entry: 5 plus 2 email addresses |
Picture ID | Yes |
Ringer ID | Yes |
Voice Dialing | speaker-independent with voice commands |
Custom Graphics | Yes |
Custom Ringtones | Yes |
Data-Capable | Yes |
Flight Mode | Yes |
Packet Data | Technology: 1xEV-DO r0 |
WAP / Web Browser | Yes |
Predictive Text Entry | Technology: T9 |
Side Keys | volume, voice keys on left / music, camera, 'end' keys on right |
Memory Card Slot | Card Type: microSD / TransFlash up to 2 GB |
MMS | Yes |
Text Messaging | 2-Way: Yes up to 1064 characters |
Text Messaging Templates | Yes |
Music Player | Supported Formats: MP3, WMA works in background / equalizer |
Camera | Resolution: 1+ megapixel self-timer, night mode functions / brightness, white balance controls |
Streaming Video | Yes |
Video Capture | Max. Length: 1 hour QCIF resolution / 3GPP2 format |
Alarm | can set music as alarm |
Calculator | plus tip calculator |
Calendar | Yes |
Voice Memo | can record calls / memos up to 1 minute / up to 5 minutes during call |
BREW | Yes |
Games | Yes |
Touch panel
The face of the Chocolate has no tactile buttons, but rather touch-sensitive panels with red-orange illuminating symbols to designate the touch-sensitive areas.
The buttons include four corner buttons (Left option, right option, Call, and Return), and a wheel. The four sides of the wheel behave like a direction pad in most applications. In the music player, they work as scroll up/down, and next/previous track. The OK button in the center of the wheel doubles as Pause/Play in the music player.
External links
- Chocolate review - PCWorld.ca
- V Cast Music Essentials Manager - Official music sync software from Verizon.