You sit at a bus stop, squinting at a three-line monochrome screen, waiting thirty seconds for a WAP browser to load a pixelated weather report or a five-word sports score. It’s slow, it’s expensive, and it’s clunky—but you’re the only person at the bus stop "surfing the web" from your palm. You feel like a genius. The Era of the "Chirp" and the Sanyo
By the early 2000s, Sprint does the unthinkable: they put the "Internet" on the phone. It’s called the . sprint pcs
As the mid-2000s hit, the drops. It has a built-in VGA camera and a color screen. You start taking blurry, 0.3-megapixel photos of your lunch and "beaming" them to friends. This is the peak of Sprint's identity—innovative, slightly underdog, and always pushing the newest hardware. The Merger and the Sunset You sit at a bus stop, squinting at