Home Haier Phones Haier M600 Haier M600 Specs Battery 830 mAh Display 1.1 inches 96 x 96 pixels Storage 0.064GB, microSD Description Haier M600 is very simple phone, tri-band GSM. It has tiny color display, music player with microSD memory, Stereo Bluetooth and FM radio. I want it 4 users I have it 0 users I had it 0 users Specs Compare Display Size: 1.1 inches Resolution: 96 x 96 pixels, 123 PPI Technology: OLED Screen-to-body: 12.47 % Colors: 65 536 Hardware Internal storage: 0.064GB Storage expansion: microSD Battery Capacity: 830 mAh Type: Li - Ion, User replaceable Design Dimensions: 3.54 x 1.37 x 0.70 inches (90.6 x 35.3 x 18.2 mm) Weight: 2.25 oz (64.0 g) Multimedia Radio: FM Connectivity & Features Bluetooth: 2.0 USB: miniUSB, USB 2.0 Other: Computer sync Phone features Notifications: Polyphonic ringtones (64 voices), Vibration, Phone profiles Other features: Voice recording Despite our efforts to provide full and correct Haier M600 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 New Gemini standalone app launches on iPhone Amazon is now selling all cellular-capable Apple Watch Series 10 models at an unprecedented discount Best Garmin watches for sports and everyday use in 2024 Is the foldable market in trouble all of a sudden? I don’t buy it! These phones are changing the battery game, and they're coming your way Meta slammed with an $840 million fine by the European Commission Popular stories Verizon Message+ app lives on a little longer amid complaints that Google Messages is inferior T-Mobile stores will have a special gift waiting for you this Tuesday Amazon and Best Buy are selling the Pixel 9 at a huge discount well ahead of Black Friday Samsung survey asking for Galaxy S25 wishlist reveals the phone's early release date BestBuy somehow deepens its Pixel 9 discount to $350 Unprecedented T-Mobile investment making employees wonder if jobs are on chopping board