Home Alcatel Phones You are here Updated : Aug 04, 2008, 5:48 AM Alcatel OT-V212 Specs Battery 670 mAh Display 128 x 128 px Description Alcatel OT-V212 is a dual-band GSM candybar featuring 65k color display, SMS messaging, FM Radio and Speakerphone. I want it 0 users I have it 0 users I had it 0 users Popular Comparisons The Alcatel OT-V212 is most commonly compared with these phones: Alcatel OT-V212 vs Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra Specs Compare Display Resolution: 128 x 128 px Technology: TFT Colors: 65 536 Battery Capacity: 670 mAh Type: Li - Ion, User replaceable Design Size comparison Dimensions: 3.86 x 1.73 x 0.48 inches (98 x 44 x 12.3 mm) Weight: 2.46 oz (70.0 g) Features: Soft keys Cellular Other version supports GSM 900/1800 MHz Multimedia Radio: FM, RDS Phone features Notifications: Polyphonic ringtones (16 voices), Speakerphone Despite our efforts to provide full and correct Alcatel OT-V212 specifications, there is always a possibility of admitting a mistake. If you see any wrong or incomplete data, please LET US KNOW. If you are interested in using our specs commercially, check out our Phone specs database licensing page. Latest News This future smart ring might adjust itself until it gets the perfect reading Verizon’s new My Biz Plan offers maximum flexibility, valuable add-ons Best laptop deals this week: Save up to 73% on a new laptop with these hot offers Google Pixel 9a first impressions: flat on its back but not flat on value Walmart launches yet another JBL Flip 6 promo you don't want miss The Oppo Find X8 Ultra is official now: another déjà vu, but with a clever twist here and there Popular stories T-Mobile leaves many no choice but to consider another provider with its latest decision You may need to delete Google Messages and download from unofficial source for RCS to work I just ditched my grandfathered T-Mobile Magenta plan — and I’m not sorry T-Mobile is raising prices yet again with the oldest and dirtiest trick in the book T-Mobile's free line offer is giving some customers a very expensive surprise Pixel's latest update could mean we're the problem, not Google