Posts tagged ‘nseries’

For those who haven’t noticed yet, the Nokia N75 have been released. So what we have here is an early preview and first impression about the Nokia N75. According to Ben Smith from mobileindustryreview, there are some good, bad and also “umm…” sides about this new Nokia N75 Nseries phone.

So they were pretty impressed with the new Nokia N75. They even more impressed with the software enhancements which are beginning to address some of the usability / complexity issues Nokia and S60 have been suffering from for a while. But let’s just see the up/down/umm…? sides of the N75, shall we?

And here are the list of the up side of the Nokia N75:

  • Call quality is excellent. Speaker sound from device is crisp and clear.
  • The phone has a nice weight. Feels good in hand in ‘candy bar’ mode.
  • All the settings options are now behind a ‘control panel’ icon.
  • The e-mail client is even further improved over the Nokia messaging version tested with the E63. It has better configuration options and graphics.
  • The build quality of the device feels solid and the internal QWERTY keypad has a good rubberised finish which improves accuracy and prevents sliding onto adjacent keys.
  • Has a great crisp screen with a nice bright finish which copes well in direct sunlight. Lacks the attractive FP2 transitions that the N86 had though.
  • The slide-out keyboard really has a ‘wow factor’ and impressed colleagues.
  • Best of all! The keypad tones are now off by default – the first Nokia I’ve ever tested where this isn’t the first thing I turn off!

And here are some bad (or down) sides of the new Nokia N75:

  • When using the D-pad in QWERTY ‘mode’ it’s easy to hit surrounding short-cut keys such as Calendar or E-mail.  This seems much less of a problem in ‘candy bar’ orientation.
  • The E75, like the E71, is still a finger-print magnet – the patterned metal back is already looking mucky after only 15 minutes of handling.
  • My unit has a large gap at one end when the QWERTY keyboard is closed. Could be a manufacturing defect (although slide mechanism is rock-solid).
  • The memory card slot on this unit is so tight I can’t open it.
  • There’s no ‘leather’ sleeve like the E71 and E66 have – it might be a bit naff, but it saved my E71 from a certain death drop.

Last but not least, here are the “umm…?” sides about the Nokia N75:

  • If used flat on a desk with the QWERTY keypad open, the device falls backwards when the D-pad button is used.
  • With ‘tap to silence’ turned on the device only rings for a second or two before silencing (even if untouched on a desk) – could be a bug or user error, will check further.
  • No ‘full-stop and space’ feature on space-bar double-tap like the iPhone and Android.
  • Camera images are a bit too ‘contrasty’ with some colour over-saturated. So far ‘good enough’, but low light tests will be the decider (see the demo images below).
  • No charging via USB port – it’s only just being added to the more expensive N-series devices, but it would have been nice to see.

Here’s a few camera demo shots in good light.  Low-light ones (where most E-series struggle) to follow:

So what do you think, guys?

[Source]

Another giant phone manufacturer showed its teeth in the Mobile World Congress 2009. This time the Nokia, the largest phone market share holders in the world have unveiled three new phones, which are the Nokia N97, Nokia E75 and Nokia E55. We’ve heard about the Nokia N97 and Nokia E75, but the Nokia E55 is a surprise gift from Nokia, just like the Sony Ericsson 12 Mpx cameraphone Idao.

Here’s a brief information about the Nokia N97, E75, and E55:
Image hosting by IMGBoot.com
Nokia N97 is the first member from Nokia devices to have the Ovi Store preloaded in it. The device itself seems to be on the line of the prototypes seen in Nokia World at Barcelona a few months, combining a touchscreen with a QWERTY keypad. Nokia says it will hit the stores in June. checkout the specs, news and comparison here
Image hosting by IMGBoot.com
The E75 seems to be a spin off of the HTC S710, combining both a traditional alphanumeric keypad with a QWERTY one that slides out from the side. It will be the first device with Nokia Messaging built in and is expected to be released in March at a price tag of 375 Euros. The display is a 2.4-inch QVGA, a 3.5mm headphone jack, 3.2 megapixel camera, built-in VPN, HSDA, 802.11 b/g, EGPRS, Bluetooth, and support for up to 16GB microSD card. Standby time is 11 days, and talk time is 5.4 hours on GSM, 4.2 hours on WCDMA, and yes, official colors are silver black, red and copper yellow.
Image hosting by IMGBoot.com
Lastly, it’s the E55, which Nokia claims is the world’s thinnest smartphone, has a standby time of over a month, and is also the first Nokia device to feature a semi-QWERTY  keypad. Priced at 265 Euros, it is expected this summer. The phone sports a 2.4-inch QVGA screen, 3.2 megapixel camera, 3.5 mm headphone jack, 802.11 b/g, EGPRS, and Bluetooth 2.0. There will be 28 days of standby time for GSM and 19 days of standby time for WCDMA.

What’s interesting is that it seems that Nokia is aiming to establish the next ‘App Store’ for their devices, with the name of Ovi Store. Ovi Store offers users relevant (based on location and tastes) content ranging from applications to games to widgets. A developer site for the store has been launched, with developers being offered 70 per cent of revenue from sales of their apps from the store, a share similar to that being offered on the iPhone app store. Users of Symbian S40  and S60 devices will be able to access the store, which is expected to go into business this may.

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So, finally we have the side by side comparison of the most anticipated Nseries phones from Nokia this year, which are the Nokia N85, N96 and N97. Several time ago I posted a comparison between the Nokia N96 and N85, and that time I told you that N85 is better than N96. And later this year the giant Finnish Handset manufacturer Nokia suddenly announced the Nokia N97; a second high-end phone with a touchscreen feature after the Nokia 5800. But is it better than the Nokia N85? I’ll leave the answer to you :)

So what we have here is a side by side comparison between three of the most popular Nseries phone, the Nokia N85 vs Nokia N96 vs Nokia N97. And later we also give you some picture comparison between Nokia N85 and Nokia N96 as a year end bonus :) .

Without further delay, here’s the N85 vs N96 vs N97 comparison; Enjoy, Folks

Phone

Nokia N85

Nokia N96

Nokia N97

Review Summary

The Nokia N85 is another solid N-series phone from the peeps in Finland, but if you’re looking for something different this won’t be your bag. What you have with the N85 is a well-designed, feature-packed phone, but it’s not a million miles away from the N95 — it’s just more refined. We still like it and think that as long as you don’t mind having a 5-megapixel camera instead of an 8-megapixel one, it’s definitely worth checking out

The N96 has everything a gadgeteer could want, including vast amounts of memory, a good camera, great video playback quality and built-in GPS. But its build quality is a bit iffy and it’s not as easy to use as the iPhone

Nokia N97 is the second phone to feature a touchscreen while running on a Symbian S60 operating system. This could well be the 2009 most popular smart phone

Editor’s Rating

8

8.2

8.5

Form Factor

Slider

Slider

Slider

Data

GPRS/EDGE/UMTS/HSDPA 1.8 Mbit/s/HSDPA 3.6 Mbit/s

GPRS/EDGE/UMTS/HSDPA 1.8 Mbit/s/HSDPA 3.6 Mbit/s

GPRS/EDGE/UMTS/HSDPA 1.8 Mbit/s/HSDPA 3.6 Mbit/s

3G

Yes

Yes

Yes

Dimensions

4.0 x 2.0 x 0.6 inches

4.0 x 2.2 x 0.7 inches

4.6 x 2.2 x 0.6 inches

Weight

4.5 oz (128 g)

4.4 oz (125 g)

5.3 oz (150 g)

Talktime

6.83 hours

3.66 hours

6.66 hours

Standby time

360 hours

220 hours

430 hours

Display

OLED; 240 x 320 pixels; 16 777 216 colors

TFT; 240 x 320 pixels; 16 777 216 colors

TFT; 360 x 640 pixels; 16 777 216 colors

Touchscreen

No

No

Yes

Camera

5 megapixels

5 megapixels

5 megapixels

Autofocus

Yes

Yes

Yes

Flash

Yes

Yes

Yes

Dual LED

Yes

Yes

Yes

Digital Zoom

Yes

Yes

Yes

Secondary Camera

Yes

Yes

Yes

Video Stabilizer

Yes

No

No

Geo Tagging

Yes

No

No

Internal Memory

74MB

16GB

32GB

Memory Slot

Yes; microSD/microSDHC

Yes; microSD/microSDHC

Yes; microSD/microSDHC

USB

Yes

Yes

Yes

WiFi

Yes

Yes

Yes

Bluetooth

Yes

Yes

Yes

Connectors

3.5mm Headphone Jack

3.5mm Headphone Jack

3.5mm Headphone Jack

GPS

Yes

Yes

Yes

So which one is your favorite? I personally choose the Nokia N85, even though it doesn’t pack a touchscreen like the Nokia N97. How about you?

There’s another phone that got a firmware update beside the Blackberry Storm. This time the giant cell phone manufacturer Nokia has released the Nokia N85 firmware update. This N85 update will be available through the Nokia Software Updater. Anyway, the release version of the Nokia N85 update is v11.047; and here’s the Nokia N85 v11.047 change log:

  • Characters in memory card not-present prompt note are not localized.
  • Headset – volume adjustment is not working properly.
  • Video disturb happened, once some other event happened during play fone TV on full screen.
  • Bluetooth name cannot be defined in camera application.
  • “Video call” is shown in Options when highlighting a contact in Space UI.
  • Not detecting always wall charger > Not charging.
  • 2G cannot connect to GPRS service in some cities in China.
  • Non stop Music Player “Library update”.
  • FMTX: The audio is routed to DUT speaker after receiving a message when FM transmitter is transmitting audio.
  • Predefined contacts does not support Chinese characters.
  • APN setting for Vodafone Mobile connect “Prompt Password is set to Yes”.
  • Audio > downlink quality.
  • Some of the S60 key presses are not registered by device.
  • Network level icon is not shown during VT call.
  • ITU is not responding when MO is done where slide is closed and opened when call is established.
  • Long press of Media keys prev/next not working correctly for local videos.
  • DTMF tones sent from prepaid line to *700 (or *500) are not received by NW.
  • OFR_opo-up at boot about positionning.
  • Orange enterprises APN is used by default in the email Wizard.
  • Pod cast: messed up characters.
  • All key presses are not registered by device.
  • GSM/WCDMA – OTC – NW lost after handover with open data connection.
  • general instability, improved.
  • Battery KPI: Battery stand by measurement is too high.
  • CSD – Data transmission breaks on HSCSD calls.
  • [DRM Free][ID_MUP_FreeFTMD_102] Mp4AacM4A file cannot be played by the device (34047).
  • Some KPI – Results are out of range.
  • FTP: Speed download to low.
  • [TPRO] Wap Live browsing : Access Time to the home page is too long (34970).
  • 3G Network lost forever after cell reselection from 3G > 2G with an active PDP context.
  • VARIANT – Operator RSK (live! icon) appears too small and distorted when in landscape in mode (VCP).

[Source]

So, with the announcement of the Nokia N97 at the Nokia World 2008 in Barcelona, the battle between smartphones has gone into the next level. So what’s the reason behind the Nokia move that concealed this new Nseries member until its launch date? Could it be the Nokia latest counter to the other smartphones? Well, we can’t really tell. I’m not interested in conspiracy theory or speculations either :) Just wait for the full comparison between the N97 and iPhone 3G and (perhaps) other smartphones..

So what’s exactly do we have here? Yes, it is some reasons why the N97 is much better than the iPhone 3G expressed by my source on 3gweek. Let’s just get started, shall we?

  1. It does 16:9 video. The iPhone doesn’t even do video. So, how can you go to a Daft Punk concert and record it to taunt your friends?
  2. It has a 5 megapixel camera. The iPhone only has 2, and the quality isn’t even close. The camera also has a dual LED flash, so you can take pictures in the dark where the iPhone can’t.
  3. I can type three Facebook status messages on the N97’s nice QWERTY keybord in the time that I can type two on the iPhone.
  4. It does copy and paste, so you can copy URLs to send to your friends. The iPhone can’t do that.
  5. It has replaceable batteries so you can charge up three batteries and Facebook for days, while the iPhone needs to be hooked back up to the wall for recharging after a few hours.
  6. The GPS device does turn-by-turn and has a built in compass, so you’ll get to your parties faster than with the iPhone, which doesn’t have a compass and doesn’t do turn-by-turn.

Above is picture of Nokia N97 and iPhone if put side-by-side (thanks Robert Scoble). I think iPhone is wider in size, but N97 is more detail. Checkout the more detailed specs of the Nokia N97 here

[Source]

So after several days of waiting, Nokia have officially announced their new device which they kept secret until the official announcement. So the new device is the latest member of Nseries: the Nokia N97. This new Nokia N97 has a lot to offer. And the Nseries junior member is set to be a multimedia handset and it has a large 3.5-inch touch screen, 32GB built in memory, QWERTY sliding keyboard, WiFi, Bluetooth, GPS, 5 megapixel Carl Zeiss camera module and also the 3.5mm headphone plug. With the microSD card slot you can also further expand the Nokia N97 storage space to a max 48GB by adding a 16GB microSD card. The Nokia N97 will be sold at around 550 euros, or 693 USD in first half of 2009 next year.

So here are the Nokia N97 specifications:

  • Network: WCDMA 900/1900/2100 (HSDPA), EGSM 850/900/1800/1900 MHz
  • User Interface:S60 5th Edition
  • Dimensions:117.2 x 55.3 x 15.9 mm (L x W x H) *18.25 mm at camera area
  • Weight:Approx. 150 g
  • Display:3.5 inch TFT with up to 16 million colors (640×360 pixels)
  • Battery: Nokia Battery BP-4L, 1500 mAh
  • 32 GB on-board memory
  • microSD memory card slot
  • Video playback:MPEG-4 / SP and MPEG-4 AVC/H.264, up to 30 fps, up to VGA resolution
  • RealVideo up to QCIF @ 30 fps
  • Windows Media (WMV9) up to CIF @ 30 fps
  • Flash Lite 3.0 / Flash Video in internet browser
  • Music playback: MP3, AAC, eAAC, eAAC+, WMA
  • 5 megapixels camera (2584 x 1938 max)
  • Video capture: MPEG-4 VGA (640 x 480) at up to 30 fps
  • Flash: Dual LED camera flash and video light
  • Talk time:Up to 320 min (3G), 400 min (GSM)
  • Standby time:Up to 400 hrs (3G), 430 hrs (GSM)
  • Video playback:Up to 4,5 hours (offline mode)
  • Music playback:Up to 37 hours (offline mode)
  • WLAN IEEE 802.11b/g with UPnP support
  • Micro-USB connector
  • 3.5mm stereo headphone plug and TV-out support (PAL/NTSC)
  • Bluetooth wireless technology 2.0 with A2DP stereo audio, enhanced data rates (EDR)
  • GPS receiver with support for assisted GPS (A-GPS)

Press release below:

Nokia today unveiled the Nokia N97, the world’s most advanced mobile computer, which will transform the way people connect to the Internet and to each other. Designed for the needs of Internet-savvy consumers, the Nokia N97 combines a large 3.5? touch display with a full QWERTY keyboard, providing an ‘always open’ window to favorite social networking sites and Internet destinations. Nokia’s flagship Nseries device introduces leading technology – including multiple sensors, memory, processing power and connection speeds – for people to create a personal Internet and share their ’social location.’

“From the desktop to the laptop and now to your pocket, the Nokia N97 is the most powerful, multi-sensory mobile computer in existence,” said Jonas Geust, Vice President, heading Nokia Nseries. “Together with the Ovi services announced today, the Nokia N97 mobile computer adjusts to the world around us, helping stay connected to the people and things that matter most. With the Nokia N97, Nseries leads the charge in helping to transform the Internet into your Internet”.

Sensing your ‘So-Lo’
The Nokia N97 introduces the concept of ’social location’. With integrated A-GPS sensors and an electronic compass, the Nokia N97 mobile computer intuitively understands where it is. The Nokia N97 makes it easy to update social networks automatically with real-time information, giving approved friends the ability to update their ’status’ and share their ’social location’ as well as related pictures or videos.

Widescreen – Internet and entertainment
The home screen of the Nokia N97 mobile computer features the people, content and media that matter the most. Friends, social networks and news are available by simply touching the home screen. The 16:9 widescreen display can be fully personalized with frequently updated widgets of favorite web services and social networking sites. The Nokia N97 is also perfectly suited for browsing the web, streaming Flash videos or playing games. Both the physical QWERTY and virtual touch input ensure efficiency in blogging, chatting, posting, sending texts or emailing.

The Nokia N97 supports up to 48 GB of storage, including 32 GB of on-board memory, expandable with a 16 GB microSD card for music, media and more. This is complemented by excellent music capabilities, full support for the Nokia Music Store and continuous playback time of up to 1.5 days. The Nokia N97 also has a 5-Megapixel camera with high-quality Carl Zeiss optics, 16:9 and DVD quality video capture, and support for services like Share on Ovi for immediate sharing over HSDPA and WLAN.

The Nokia N97 is expected to begin shipping in the first half of 2009 at an estimated retail price of EUR 550 before taxes or subsidies.

[Source]

This phone is one of the biggest hit of Nokia. After showing its qualities in several Asian Countries such as India, the magnificent N96 has come to U.S. Horrayy!! From my point of view, the N96 might be the best Nokia’s Nseries available to date. N96 is a phone that has some powerful entertaining features that could be the talks of many. N96 phone comprises some of the exciting feature like the 5 MP camera phone with Carl Zeiss optics, voice navigations and many more features.

The phone will be targeted at 3G /HSDPA networks.

With Nokia N96 in your hand you are surely to get immersed in music as

the phone is fully equipped with enhanced multimedia features to improve your communication. It’s a phone that is known for music supports, various video formats and also includes the Windows Media Player with superb effective sound that will make your legs move to the tune. It also supports Wi-Fi for speed connectivity.

“The Nokia N96 offers the best of mobile entertainment, blending phone and multimedia options seamlessly with the unique Nokia Series dual slider – a great way to discover and share your favorite moments. Watch video, take high quality photos and geotag them to specific locations or directly upload them online via the  fast internet connection- the Nokia N96 takes

mobile entertainment and communication to the next level,” said by Alessandro Lamanna, Vice President of Sales, Open Markets, Nokia Americas.

The specifications of Nokia N96 are as follows:

Camera and video:
N96 phone comes with a 5 mega pixel camera with Carl Zeiss optics and a direct upload button. Users can capture their beautiful, clear and vivid images with high picture quality. Users can also tag the location information along with the images. Video quality is also good with the phone as the owner of

the phone can capture video clips at 30 frames per second.

Music:
N96 is a music phone so one can expect some outstanding music. It supports various music formats like MP3, AAC,AAC+, WMA and the famous

windows media player that allows you to download music and movies right on your phone. It has built-in 3D speakers.

Connectivity:
It’s a phone that operates on 3G-HSDPA network for high speed connectivity in the US. It is wrapped with a 3 month navigation service for Nokia maps from the date of activation.

Memory and Battery Life:
The Nokia N96 that can be your companion when you are alone has a built-in memory of 16 GB and which can be extendable up to 24 GB. The battery life is also decent as it offers talk time of 3 hours and 40 minutes and stand by time up to 220 hours.

The US citizens will surely get themselves engrossed with some exclusive music offered by Nokia N96 which will be available in US in the fourth Quarter of 2008 at a price of US $895.

[Source]

Nokia, the giant Finland (thanks for the correction, Brian :) ) company and also the handset manufacturer with the largest market share around the world have many things and many series to offer. But within those series there are two series that attract most people, the Nseries line and the Eseries line.

According to public opinion, Eseries focuses on business tasks while Nseries focuses on multimedia and services. The interesting differences are found over at these S60 platform handsets. I’ve found a post over at the internet that has compared the two Nokia Series from hardware and software aspects. So, the basic question is: Can an Eseries phone work for an Nseries person? Or vice-versa, can an Nseries phone work for an Eseries person?

We will compare both offerings and get the answer.

Hardware

In the hardware lays the most important differences between Eseries and Nseries. The Nseries has more Multimedia-friendly hardware. a larger internal memory, a 3.5mm jack, the Carl-Zeiss Lens which brings a better camera, 30 FPS Recording and more recently, FM Transmitter and DVB-H tuner. The Eseries lacks all of the characteristics mentioned above, but the Eseries also has some hardware that the Nseries lacks. Build quality , QWERTY keyboard, personalized keys and long lasting battery are all present on Eseries, but missing on Nseries.

The Nseries user can’t use a Eseries device, first of all, Eseries devices take mediocre pictures. The Carl-Zeiss lens and the megapixel count get a much better result than the standard camera an Eseries has. Also. the multimedia user will go crazy without a 3.5mm port, in which he can connect a decent pair of headphones. Adaptors are just not convenient, they are generally big and damage the sound quality. The video recording is also necessary if you are a multimedia user.

On the other hand the Eseries user can’t use a Nseries mostly because of the QWERTY keyboard, although he can use a Nseries without losing too much efficiency if the QWERTY keyboard is not a must-have.

Software

Both lines run on the S60 platform, but the Eseries S60 is different from the Nseries S60, for example ,the E-Mail is overall better on Eseries. Also, the Eseries includes the Internet Telephone application and IM application that the Nseries does not have. The Calendar and Organizer is richer and more effective on the Eseries, the QuickOffice is licensed unlike the Nseries QuickOffice. Overall, the Eseries has a more efficient software than the Nseries does. The Nseries’ only strenght is N-Gage, which the Eseries will never have in my opinion.

Here the Eseries user tends to not like the Nseries software because of the lack of efficiency. If the Nseries user goes for a Eseries, he will loose one of the biggest advantages the Nseries has: the N-Gage service. I am a Nseries user, but I just fell in love with the Eseries functionality and much better software offering.

Conclusion

The differences are clear, business/multimedia. But I ask to myself: WHY? Why this difference? Can’t a business user take decent pictures? Can’t a multimedia user use QWERTY keyboard? I still don’t see the point of this division, both users are losing functionalities. Nokia should fully merge these two branches. Nokia divides Multimedia and Business as nature divides oil and water. But in my opinion, what Nokia is not understanding is that users want both worlds, who says a multimedia user does not want a QWERTY keyboard for more efficient writing, or a business user does not need a 3.5mm Jack in his phone? Currently Nseries users cannot use Eseries devices because it will not be enough, but nonetheless, Nseries users definitevely want a bigger long lasting battery in their phones as well as a good build quality and some of them want QWERTY keyboard. As for Eseries devices users, it would be more convenient to have a more multimedia capable phone. I would like to see Nokia merging both lines, and create a line which has the best of both worlds.

[Source]

Another phone from Nseries edition that come along with the N85 is this device. The N79 combines intelligent and customizable design with a fully-loaded multimedia computer. There’s a pack of the latest technologies inside this sleek handset. It offers a full range of multimedia experiences including integrated navigation, music with FM transmitter, high-speed connectivity, superior web browsing, at least 10 pre-loaded N-Gage games and an advanced 5 megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss optics. The Nokia N79 is expected to begin shipping in October 2008, with an estimated retail price of EUR 350, before taxes and subsidies.

Perfect for the style conscious, the Nokia N79 comes with Xpress-on smart covers that are available in five cool colors: Light Sea Blue, Espresso Brown, Olive Green, White and Coral Red. A combination of three of these comes with each Nokia N79.

The convergence of photos, music and navigation in the Nokia N79 combines with high-speed 3.5G HSDPA and Wi-Fi to make it quick and easy to share experiences on websites, blogs or online communities.

The innovative technology packed into this colorful offering means that accessing a rich pool of services to further enhance individual experiences is seamless. Log on to online communities like Friendster, Flickr or YouTube or click through to Nokia services such as the Nokia Music Store, N-Gage, Nokia Maps and Share on Ovi, an online service that enables consumers to share personal pictures and videos from their mobile devices.

The 5 megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss optics, dual LED flash and video light captures sharp, clear images and video that can be edited immediately, without the need for a PC. Images can also be geotagged to specific locations. What’s more, the Nokia N79 comes packaged with a 4 GB microSD memory card that makes it possible to store around 3,000 songs, approximately 2,500 pictures and up to four hours of DVD-quality video clips that can be organized by albums or tags and uploaded directly to Share on Ovi or third party services. The addition of a sliding lens cover helps protect the top-quality lens when not in use.

Continue reading ‘N79 is Announced by Nokia’ »

According to our source, the giant sweddish handset manufacturer will launch this device on Q4 this year. The N85 is set to replace the N81 with 10 N-gage games ready-to-be-played as soon as you buy it. As the title show you, it is the first Nseries with OLED display. OLED screen will help exposing more intriguing colors in N85’s 2.6 inch wide screen. The form factor is sliding, really resembles its predecessor, N81. With black front cover and brownish back cover, this device has only 16 mm thick, 2 mm thinner than N96.

Here are some specification of Nokia N85:

  • Triband HSDPA and Quadband GSM
  • Symbian S60 3rd edition, Feature Pack 2, Multimedia Menu
  • 103 x 50 x 16 mm
  • 128 grams
  • AM OLED 2.6 inch QVGA screen (240 x 320 pixels) with up to 16 million colors
  • Up to 74 MB internal dynamic memory, 78 MB internal NAND flash memory, 8 GB inbox microSD memory card
  • 5 megapixels Carl Zeiss Tessar camera with F2.8 Aperture, 5.45 mm focal length, and Dual LED camera flash and video light
  • Up to 170 minutes of talk time (3G) and 410 minutes of talk time (GSM)
  • Up to 360 hours of standby time (3G and GSM)
  • WLAN 802.11b/g with UPnP support
  • MicroUSB connector, Hi Speed USB 2.0 support
  • 3.5 mm stereo headphone jack and TV-out support (PAL/NTSC)
  • Bluetooth 2.0 with stereo audio support
  • A-GPS with Nokia Maps 2.0 and geotagging
  • FM transmitter and FM receiver
  • 10 pre-loaded N-Gage games and one free game activation voucher

The phone will be available on Q4 2008. The price tag has not been disclosed. This is the true Nokia gaming phone with superb display screen!

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