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I Want My MTV Phone!
By Natalie Hope McDonald
Truth be told, I want a phone that can provide me with many wasted hours of Tetris, in addition to being able to download 50 Cent's "In the Club" ring tone. I've found that phone in the Slider V5 from Virgin Mobile. Known for their categorical penchant for hipness, Virgin has stepped up with a cell phone made to meet the approval of America's wireless teens.
Branded with MTV, the phone has one-touch access to music news and daily polls via OpenWave, as well as text message voting à la American Idol. The phone also features a unique body with a top half that, as opposed to flipping open, slides up (hence its name). When closed, users can choose from several funky screen savers to make fashion-statements.
Its pay-as-you-go plan is definitely designed for the younger user. Teens will drool over this handset without parents having to worry that Chatty Cathy will exceed her talk time minutes. Instead, call time is purchased in advance for a set number of minutes at a set price with additional fees for text messaging and Web browsing tagged on. When minutes run out, you can renew them using the phone's menu plan. A Top-Up command, which comes in the form of a bling, will remind you to add more bling bling to your balance.
You can also customize the LCD screen to its full potential. And while this model doesn't have a built-in digital camera, it's nevertheless graphics-friendly. Besides great stripes and skater boy motifs, wallpaper and screen saver options even include MTV's trademark moon man.
The phone also features a scheduler that keeps you on top of events by the hour, day or month with a built-in alarm. This is a great feature when you're embarking on a blind date. You can pre-program a rescue ring that you, should the date turn into a disaster, can pawn off as an emergency. The user's manual even touts this passive-aggressive feature as a bonus.
Other features include audio postcards from MTV shows like The Osbournes and Sorority Life that can be sent to friends. And then there's Video Clash where users can vote for favorite music videos to be aired on the show of the same name. The artist access enhances the experience with downloadable interviews and streaming video clips of popular VH1 performers.
With an in-depth explanation about text messaging, the Slider's user manual is marketed to a teen audience. Accordingly, the phone let's users chat with friends without making a call, as the manual suggests, "at a party, in a boring class or on a long bus ride."