Nokia Archive

Nokia’s new N8 smartphone

Nokia’s new N8 smartphone

Nokia’s new flagship smartphone, the N8, will feature an unbelievable 12Megapixel camera and HD video capabilities. It features Nokia’s new Symbian^3 software platform, and the amazing camera has Carl Zeiss optics and a xenon flash.

Here are the full specs:

  • 3.5-inch HD capacitive multitouch touchscreen
  • 12MP camera, auto-focus, xenon flash
  • 16GB of built-in storage, expandable to 48GB with a micro SD card
  • HDMI out port with Dolby surround sound
  • video editing software, global maps, etc

As you can see this phone is pretty spectacular, and can be used as a complete digital camera replacement. The software is pretty impressive too with Nokia’s custom user interface being very responsive and easy to use.

There are 3 user customized home screens, and video editing software is included on the phone as well as well as app-development software. The phone also delivers facebook and twitter updates to the phones home screen automatically, much like the backflip.

The N8 is formed from one single piece of aluminum for a very strong frame. It will start shipping in 3rd quarter 2010 in 5 colors, and at a price of around $490.

Nokia N900

Nokia N900

The Nokia N900 is basically a handheld computer with phone functinalities. It has the same 600MHz processor as the Motorola Droid and has a zippy Linux based OS.  Ubergizmo did an extremely thorough review of the N900 and here are their thoughts:

Physical Design (Nice, but chubby)

1
The Nokia N900 design is clean. It has a full qwerty sliding keyboard, which is practical for typing comfortably. However, this also contributes to the thickness of the N900. The keyboard keys remind me of the HTC Touch Pro as they are small and densely packed. The sliding mechanism is solid and that’s good because I feel like this device has been designed to use in landscape mode. Typing speed is on par with the Nokia N97: not optimum, but still better than a virtual keyboard. On the back, there is a 5 megapixel digital camera with dual-LED flash and a lens cover. There is a VGA front camera too.

On the top and bottom, there are two speakers. They are used in games, but also during calls in “speaker mode”. The sound quality is decent, but not as good as the iPhone 3GS.

The WVGA (800×480) touch display is superb and it is surprisingly accurate (it uses resistive technology, so you can use your nails), it’s practical to put the cursor wherever I want. Despite its resistive technology, it is very reactive and doesn’t require a lot of pressure to operate. Unfortunately, it does not support multi-touch, which would have been nice.

Phone basics (Very good)

2
Searching and finding contacts to place a call is very easy with the Nokia N900. At first, I was worried that an “internet tablet” with phone functions might not cover the basic “phone stuff” well, but I’m glad to see that the N900 is an efficient voice device. If you don’t want to slide the keyboard out, Nokia has implemented a quick way to find contacts: you can quickly go through an alphabetically sorted list. Once a contact is found the N900 will propose to connect via a phone call, or via a VOIP service like Skype. It is possible to place a Skype-to-Skype or a Skype-to-phone (SkypeOut) call from the handset which is awesome to save money, especially when roaming is involved. Make sure that you are not using international data roaming to call though! It is possible to place Skype calls via WiFi and via a 3G network (I’m using T-Mobile’s 3G network right now).

When not using the physical keyboard, there is a virtual keyboard that will appear whenever you are in an editable field. The virtual keyboard is large an comfortable because it takes most of the screen space. Thanks to its size, the error rate is lower, but the virtual keyboard works only in landscape mode. If you want, you can de-activate the virtual keyboard completely in the settings. Personally, I find it faster to slide the physical keyboard out when I need to type something.

Web Browsing (Excellent)

3
Yay! Flash ads are working too! Err wait… hahaha
The Nokia N900 uses the Maemo web browser, which is built with technology from Mozilla, the foundation behind Firefox. You can find more information about it from Maemo or Nokia, but there are a few things that I would like to point out:

4
Hulu works, but not fast enough yet
Flash support: The N900’s Maemo Browser is the first mobile browser that I have tried that has Flash 9.4 support. Yes, it means that you can go to Vimeo, Hulu or Youtube (for desktops) and it works… but… video playback in a window is significantly slower than on a desktop machine, so although Flash support is there, the actual experience isn’t (yet). There are good news: in full-screen mode, Youtube videos run fast enough to be enjoyable. At the moment, that’s not the case for Hulu or Vimeo unfortunately. Remember that the Nokia N900 has to manage a lot more pixels (800×480=384000) than an iPhone (480×320=153600). I suspect that the Flash player still needs some work and my sense is that Nokia engineers will have to write the low-level optimizations that take advantage of the hardware. It may come by launch time, but we won’t know until then.

5
A double-tap in the text zone will make it fit the screen
Zoom modes: The Nokia N900 does not support multi-touch, so pinch and zoom is out, but Nokia came up with a “spinning” motion to zoom. It doesn’t work all that great, but it’s good enough to get the job done. I just feel like my finger has been traveling 10 times the distance, when compared to pinch and zoom. Another way to zoom quickly is to simply use the volume button. It’s convenient, except if you want to change the volume while streaming music in the web browser. Yet a better way to zoom is the double-tap: upon a double tap, the browser will look at the structure of the page and will try to zoom so that you can see the entire element that has been tapped on (image, text block or else). If you double-tap on a zone that is perfectly readable, the browser will assume that you want to zoom out and will do so. In practice, it works very well, but it depends on how the page is formatted. Douple-tap is my preferred way of zooming into content.

Hover mode: Some websites (especially Flash sites) do require a mouse cursor to hover above a user interface item. That thwarts many mobile browsers, but not this one.

6
A hot question in forums, and the answer is YES, Google Docs works
Web apps: Google Docs and Google Wave work too, although sometimes very slowly. It is fair to assume that most web services and websites will work without any issues, in fact I have not found one site that was not fully functional, but complex sites (heavy use of Flash or Ajax) will often be too slow to use on the N900. Overall, the web experience is excellent, and it’s great that most sites don’t even need zooming, if you have sharp eyes.

Rating: Note that I rate the web browsing experience as “excellent” because all web functionalities work and the page rendering is… excellent. That said, I still consider the web browsing experience on the iPhone 3GS to be more pleasant because the device is more reactive to user input and the (pinch and) zoom feature is better and faster.

Email (Very good)

7
E-mail is pretty efficient, no complaints there
Out of the box, the Nokia N900 supports a large number of email services like .Mac, AIM, AOL, Hotmail, EarthLink, Yahoo and many more. If you use one of the available mail services, all you need is your account login information. If not, you will be asked for the mail server name, port and so on. It is possible to add several email accounts. In my case, I’m using Exchange, Gmail and Hotmail.

Creating and sending an email is done quickly and efficiently, but the Nokia N900 user interface has not been designed to be email centric: there’s no homepage that tells you how many emails are waiting (and from who). Getting to the email application can require two or three taps, which is a lot if you check email frequently. Of course, that could simply be solved by an “email widget” (not available right now). Overall, it would be nice to have a faster access to email information.

Conversations (Good)

8
IM and SMS messages are grouped in a single thread named “Conversations”. Currently, the N900 supports the following IM services: Ovi, Skype, Google Talk, Jabber and SIP. I can only assume that more will follow, but that’s what I have today. I like the idea of having all my conversations in a single list, but if I start an exchange with one of my friends by SMS, then continue on Skype, this will show up as two different threads. In short: the N900 is not yet people-centric like MotoBlur or Palm’s Synergy. Android 2.0 will have something like that, so I hope that Maemo will follow.

Photos/video captures (Excellent/Very good)

9
I’m pretty impressed by the photo quality
Photos: The Nokia N900 is by far the best camera-phone that I’ve tried. Out of the box, the color balance and contrast are closer to what they should be. I’m very impressed with the photo quality.

Video: Video capture is done in 848×480 pixels (3.4Mbps, 22.3fps, AAC mono 48kHz), which is way higher than any Android phone that I know of, and superior (in resolution) to the iPhone 3GS, which records in 640×480 at 30fps. In good lighting conditions, the videos are really nice and detailed. In dim lighting, you will be able to see compression artifacts, but overall, the video recording is very good – I just wish that we had the option to trade off resolution for faster frame-rate.

You might wonder if it’s possible to use the flash as a flashlight when filming videos: I have not found this function, but I’ll keep an eye open.

Maemo user interface (Simple)

10
The user interface is reactive and fairly simple
It’s the first time that I have been using Maemo extensively. I’m not going to review the OS here, but the user interface is very responsive, which is definitely a plus. It’s very different from Android, Windows Mobile or the iPhone, but it doesn’t take very long to get used to it. There’s a “close window” icon at the upper-right of the screen just like most desktop OS. It works on app thumbnails too. On the upper-left, there’s a task view icon, which is equivalent to ALT-Tab in Windows. It will show all currently opened apps as thumbnails. If you press the “Power” button, it acts like a Ctrl-Alt-Del and brings a menu that lets you kill the current app, go the phone mode, lock the screen and more…

There is a main dashboard that lists all the applications, but there’s also a panoramic dashboard (up to 4x screens big) that you can customize with shortcuts and widgets. There are arguably not a lot of widgets at the moment, but Maemo has a lot of potential.

I prefer Maemo over the Symbian OS 9.4 found in the N97, partly because it is more reactive (the hardware helps too), but also because the user interface is just better in general.

Performance (Very good)

There is no real benchmark to measure absolute performance from one handset to the next, but I guess that “reactivity” is a metric that we’re all sensitive to. In that sense, the N900 is much better than the N97. It reacts quickly, even when there are multiple applications running in the background. For multitasking, I found the N900 to be superior to many Android phones that I have tested so far (except the Droid).

11
3D graphics in the game Bounce Evolution
The N900 comes with OpenGL 2.0 support and this unit was loaded with “bounce evolution” a 3D game with simple, but relatively fast 3D graphics (somewhere in between the iPhone 3G and the iPhone 3GS). The game doesn’t seem to use any GL 2.0 features (it’s more like a GL 1.x game) but the frame rate was around 25 to 30fps. It will be interesting to see what type of games will come out for the Maemo platform. Theoretically, the iPhone 3GS uses a Power VR Graphics Processor (the SGX535, versus the N900’s SGX530) that is supposed to be twice as fast at drawing polygons.

As it is the case with multi-task capable smartphones, having more programs running in the background will slow things down. Fortunately, the N900 is shows you exactly what’s running and makes it easy to shut things down. That’s not the case with current Android phones.

Entertainment (Good, needs content)

At the moment, the best way to enjoy the N900 as an entertainment device is to copy media files to it. There’s ample room (up to 32GB internally+16GB via micro-SD) and that’s how you’ll get the best image quality for the videos. Music is pretty easy to acquire, but videos formatted to the optimum size and bitrate is another story. I hope that Nokia will provide videos via the Ovi Store soon.

Web videos: Of course, there’s always online video services like YouTube or Hulu. At the moment, YouTube works “OK” in fullscreen but could be better. Hulu “technically” works, but it is definitely not fast enough to be enjoyable. Flash is supposed to bring a world of videos to the N900, and I’ve seen some N900 demos showing YouTube working better than what I’ve seen on this particular unit. Let’s wait for the final release to drop a verdict.

13
Transformers played from the Flash memory
Videos files: The Nokia N900 is capable of playing DVD-resolution videos. The real issue is to find digital video files that have been properly sized and compressed to take advantage of the device’s screen and decoding capabilities. Video playback formats: Video playback file formats: .mp4, .avi, .wmv, .3gp; codecs: H.264, MPEG-4, Xvid, WMV, H.263. Video streaming formats: H.264, MPEG-4, Xvid, WMV, H.263 in .avi, .mp4, .wmv, .asf and .3gp containers.



Music player: it’s easy: browse by Artist, Songs, Genres or Playlists by scrolling or by typing the first letters. There’s no search function that’s based in keywords. For example, you won’t find the song “Magic Words” by typing “words”. It should be OK if you don’t have thousands of songs. The playback interface itself is pretty classic will all the options that you would expect. The sound quality (tested with Bose Quietcomfort 15 headphones) is very good.

Photo gallery: it is on par with what you can find on Android, but it’s definitely not as fast as the iPhone 3GS or the Zune HD.

TV-Out: The Nokia N900 connects to a TV via an analog video out (it uses the 3.5mm jack). It would probably work best with a 30″ screen. I tested it on a 52″ LCD TV and with the length of the cable (3 or 4 feet), I was a bit too close.

18
Broadcast the audio output via FM
FM transmitter: The N900 can transmit all audio output on an FM channel (user selectable). That allows you to listen to music (or games) wirelessly on a better audio system, without the hassle associated to cables and Bluetooth. It works in cars of course.

Applications (Waiting for more)

As I said earlier, I’m using a pre-release Nokia N900 and the official app store is not yet open/populated, so it’s hard to judge the quality of the software offering right now – there’s just not enough stuff to look at. I’ll highlight a few apps that I use a lot, and we’ll see what will be available at launch time and shortly after. What I do know is that the Maemo community is very active.

Mapping: This Nokia N900 is loaded with Ovi Maps 1.0, which is quite a step down from Ovi Maps 3.0 as you can imagine. I have not found a way to download maps and use maps in “offline mode” to avoid map downloads (one of the best features of Nokia Maps to save $$$ while traveling abroad). There’s no Google Maps apps on the N900 (yet) so “street view” is another feature that I sometime miss. Google Maps also has much better coverage for places like Tokyo, Japan. In a pinch that might be very handy. Ovi Maps 1.0 is “ok” to get by, but I can’t wait to see something more robust.

Office apps: Word to Go, Sheet to Go and Slideshow to Go are loaded on the N900. I have a trial version which it can read office files, but not edit them. There is also a PDF reader application on the N900. If you want to take notes (text only) or do quick sketches, there are a couple of apps that will do just that. There is no voice recording application on the phone right now.

Battery Life

Just like most phones in its class, the battery life (with WiFi ON at all times) is less than 24hrs with very moderate use (basically sit around and fetch emails/notifications). With intense use, I doubt that you could use it for a full working day. In any case, the N900 will need to be charged at least every day, or you will find a dead phone in the morning. In this video a Nokia employee says that the goal was to get a “one day” of “full usage” (3:20). This might be improved by the time it launches.

Form factor: The N900 is on the bulky side, and while this could be justified by how powerful this device is (I’m not so sure of that), the fact is that the form factor might simply be too big for many potential users. Secondly, equally fast devices like the Motorola Droid with full Qwerty keyboards are noticeably thinner. There are sacrifices that need to be made in order to achieve sexiness: stylus, lock button, TV out, high-end lens, dual-flash, infra-red port and front camera: many would happily trade all of that for a thinner device. Apple’s strength with the iPhone is not to have every feature, it’s about adding the ones that matter the most at that time, while preserving the “soul” of the phone. It’s time for difficult choices.

Conclusion (Very good, but…)

The Nokia N900 is currently the best smartphone that Nokia has ever produced and I’ll call it a smartphone even if the company brands it as an “Internet tablet with phone functions”.  The Nokia N900 is much better than the N97 is, I can vouch for that. However, I think that its form factor alone will be a deterrent for many potential users. If Nokia wants to create an great smartphone eco-system, it needs to have a strong user base (in that space), and to achieve that, it needs sexier phone designs, there’s no way around it.

Price: $499.99

buy

via Ubergizmo

Nokia N97

Nokia N97

The Nokia N97 is the most powerful, smartest and fully featured phone of the company. It is also the first Nokia phone to make use of a large touch-display and that alone has raised the expectations from die hard Nokia fans that have refused to switch over to the iPhone. And Nokia has put quite a lot of work and thought in the N97. Does it live up to the hype?

Phone Highlights

  • 3.5″ Touch Display
  • 32GB internal storage + 16GB optional storage vis flash card
  • 5 Megapixel Carl Zeiss Lens
  • GPS
  • WIFI, Bluetooth
  • 3.5G
  • FM Radio
  • Complete specifications (pdf)

Phone Basics (Very Good)

As with any phone, the first thing that I check is how good the sound quality is, and how easy it is to dial a number or a contact. The good news is that the sound quality is good, although the volume is not very loud. It would be nice to have a more powerful sound output.

Dialing a number is quick and relatively efficient. There’s no need to use the physical keyboard as the virtual numeric pad works great and there was no typo whatsoever while dialing numbers.

Dialing a contact is a bit more complex, if you have a bunch of them. From the contact list, you can scroll and click, or type a name and click. Typing a name requires the use of the physical keyboard, which is not very practical if you phone was closed. The T-Mobile G1 suffered from the same lack of virtual keyboard. Every qwerty slider phone should have one.

As you try to dial, the phone will ask you if you want to place a video call, each time! I’ve not seen anyone use video calls (ever), so I think that Nokia should have the option to skip that question. After a week, it was getting on my nerves.

Answering calls is easy, so is placing people on hold, or hang up. Good job Nokia. Locking and unlocking the phone is also easy and foolproof, thanks to the side button.

Physical Design (Good)

The Nokia N97 is a nicely designed phone. The design is agreeable to look at, and the build quality is good, except maybe for the battery cover which has a plastic feel – but it needs to be flexible because it’s *removable*. The display is a mixed bag: it has a resolution of 640×360 but the colors seem a little faded and the clarity seems inferior to other touch phones. I suspect that one of the display layers has something to do with this. Two people that I’ve shown the phone to immediately made the same remark as well.

Next to the speaker, you will notice a front-facing camera and a proximity sensor. The 5 Megapixel camera is in the back, protected by a sliding lens cover. There’s a “camera” button that makes taking picture more natural than taping on the screen (which often induces a last minute shake that could makes photos blurry). The keyboard sliding mechanism feels solid.

The Nokia N97 is a little thick (15.9mm). The bottom part is basically as thick as my Blackberry Curve or an iPhone, and the display is 3mm (or so) thick on top of it. These 3mm represent what it takes to add a physical keyboard to a phone like that. The T-Mobile G1 is even thicker at 16.35mm. If you want a big display and a full keyboard that’s the price to pay right now.

They use a standard micro-B USB connector and a standard voltage for a power connector, which makes it compatible with any micro-B USB cables. Cool move, Nokia.

Touch Phone (Just OK)

For many things (but not all), the Nokia N97 can be used as a pure touch phone. The company has done an “ok job” on the tactile user interface. It’s mostly intuitive, except for the setup menus (I question their logic). Nokia uses a double-tap system to avoid accidental clicks vs. drag interpretations. For example, in the menu, if I want to go to my contacts, I need to click once to select “contacts”, then click a second time to actually launch the application. Depending on your tastes this can be great or annoying. We’re not fans of it, but I got over it.


The switch to Landscape Mode is just not hapenning here…
…but opening the keyboard does force it change.

The portrait/landscape switch works most of the time, but it sometimes won’t switch from portrait to landscape and you will have to open the keyboard to force it to do so.

The display of the N97 provides a tactile feedback upon clicking. It’s interesting, but it won’t help with typing speed, if you wonder. It might be something that we want to disable to expand the battery life a bit.

Some functions like “Unlock” or “Menu” are accessible only by the hardware buttons, which is weird considering that most people would expect everything to be accessible via the touch display. It’s not a roadblock, but it’s not completely intuitive.

Responsiveness (Average)

There’s nothing as frustrating as a slow phone, right? The Nokia N97 is a mixed bag when it comes to responsiveness. Most of the time, it is responsive and does what I want, but if there are a few applications running it will get slow. I understand that it’s better to have less apps opened, but it’s “only” a few apps. Secondly, it’s too much work to go and close them one by one, so I suspect that most people will do exactly what I did: nothing. All phones should have a “close all apps” icon on the homepage.

Homepage Widget (Well Implemented)

Widgets are popular these days. Samsung and Sony Ericsson are big believers of Widgets, but the N97 has the best homepage widgets implementation that I have seen so far. On many phones, widgets are messy but Nokia has done a good job at maximizing the use of screen space. I like the default homepage that includes Facebook, but I noticed that the widget was often out of sync with the real-time content (this is true for Exchange as well). That should be fixed. It would also be nice if we could interact with the widgets directly from the homepage, like updating a Facebook status or a Tweet from the homepage.

Keyboard (Average)

Having a physical keyboard is just great for heavy texters. The N97 keyboard suffers from the same issue than all sliders have: the buttons are very thin, which reduces the typing speed – at least, for me. To be fair, this is one of the better slider keyboard that I have played with recently. Also, the keys are spaced just a little too far apart, making the finger travel much and that makes the typing slower too. The space key is oddly placed too. As an alternative, I would propose having an Sym, Shift and Func (to get the blue characters) on both side of the keyboard and place a recessed trackball, instead of using directional “joystick”.

For those who text in the dark, the keyboard has a beautiful backlighting and the two-tone (white and blue) characters make it very readable. Other phone makers should definitely take notice.

Text/Email (Good)

The N97 has a lot of email options and the one that I prefer for work is Exchange: it is well implemented and works flawlessly. Emails arrive instantly and the only thing that I noticed is that upon a soft reset (battery removal), the phone does not cache the Exchange email and spends time doing a “sync” from scratch (that can take a couple of minutes).

I also setup a GMail account. From the @gmail.com address, the N97 was able to preset all the mail server settings. All that I had to provide is my email and password. By default, that email was setup to use the 3.5G connection, so you might want to set it up with the “default” connection, to make it work over WIFI as well. All in all, the setup couldn’t be much easier.

Mapping (Great)

The N97 comes loaded with Nokia Maps, and I can say that it is my best “out of the box” experience with a default navigation app. Unlike Google maps, the Nokia maps are cached on the device itself, so once they are onboard, they are not downloaded (over the air) again. Better yet: you can pre-load an entire city, country or the whole world (4GB) so that Nokia maps doesn’t load the maps while you’re traveling. That cuts down on roaming charges, waiting time and frustration.

Nokia Maps is fast and lets you scroll the map smoothly. Upon a zoom in/out it will take a second readjust the level of details (see video). I found the compass be not very useful in pedestrian mode. Using it makes the map rotate left and right -all the time- which doesn’t help the overall map readability. Nokia should also improve the search and use a single text field like Google Maps does. It is also not possible to select an origin/destination directly on the map. That would be easy to add.

Nokia Maps can send .lmx files that contains a geo-position, but unfortunately, there are no popular applications out there that read them, so you’re stuck with sending it to your Nokia-wielding friends.

Overall, Nokia Maps is a great mapping software and one of Nokia’s finest application. I only wish that Nokia would make it available to other platforms like Google does.

Web Browsing (Very Good)

The Nokia N97 has a good browser, it worked with pretty much all the sites that went to, including Yahoo Finance and Google Docs. Y! Finance is usually an interesting site to try on a phone because it’s hard to render on small displays. The N97’s resolution is high enough to display it correctly, so that’s a win. It is possible to log into Google Docs and view text documents, but sheets did not work, even in read-only mode. Adobe Flash Lite is supported. You can go on YouTube, follow links to YouTube and do things that you would normally do on a computer, without going through a YouTube “app”.


YouTube is the real deal: no “app” required

Ovi Store (Bare Minimum)

Ovi Store is a very basic implementation of an app store. The bottom-line is that there’s nothing very exciting about it and most of the coolest application are already embedded in the N97 (my own preferences here, obviously). Browsing the store is a bit tedious and slow, I guess that I would rather browse apps on a PC and download something from there. “Existence” is often superior to “perfection”, but I hope that Nokia will improve the store soon.

Data Connection (Normal)

These numbers can vary depending on your location and quality of signal. I wish that I had more time to run around San Francisco, but this is what I got at the office:

  • 3.5G: 630Kbps
  • WIFI: 1.4Mbps

Note that it is technically possible to use the Nokia N97 as a 3.5G modem. It works only via Bluetooth, which tends to deplete the battery faster. I think that a USB tethering option would come in handy in the future. The modem drivers are in the Nokia PC Suite or can be downloaded separately if you don’t want to install all the software package.

Camera (Very Good, for a phone)

It won’t come as a surprise that Nokia has a good 5 Megapixel camera. Of course, Megapixels don’t mean much in terms of quality, but in my experience this is “good” to “very good”. The flash works well too. In my tests, I found that the N97 had a photo quality superior to the Blackberry 8900.

I had some issues with the video recording: the auto-focus never worked (!). Nobody else seems to complain, and Nokia has not replied to my email on the subject. At the moment, I’ll file this as a “problem with our unit”, but drop a comment if you noticed this elsewhere.

Multimedia (Just OK)

With 32GB of internal memory and the possibility of adding 16GB more via a microSD card the storage is great. With Windows Media Player (iTunes is not supported), it is relatively easy to sync files with the N97 (who uses WMP to manage media files?). Make sure that you connect with the “Media Transfer” option and the N97 will appear in Windows Media Player. From there you can drag and drop things that you want to sync. It takes seconds to sync a dozen .mp3 files. WMA files with DRM won’t work (Rhapsody…). As you can guess, the sound quality was definitely OK and will be limited by your earplugs, unless you are walking around with expensive audio gears.

You can play music while reading your emails if you want. If a call occurs during the playback, the music will stop and will restart where it stopped.

The video playback demos included in the phone were working fine and looked like they were running at 30 frames per second. The image quality is just OK – not great like it was on the HTC Touch Pro 2. The N97 video playback is good enough to enjoy a TV show. On the video side, the big question is where the content will come from. Users rarely take the time to convert their desktop videos to a mobile format, even if there are good options out there to do it. The store content was very interesting to me, but you might find something there…

Another thing of interest is the Radio. it works really well and tunes itself to available local stations. The sound was very clear on the few stations that were found immediately. Cool stuff.

Battery Life (Average)

During the test, I found the that average battery life was about 1.5 to 2 days with my usage (see “context” up there). Obviously, this will vary a lot depending on your own usage, but the bottom line is that most people would charge it daily, but if you forget it, you won’t have a dead phone in the morning.

Nokia PC Suite

The Nokia N97 can be used in conjunction with the Nokia PC Suite, a client application (for Windows) that helps you manage your phone for the comfort of your PC via USB. The last time that I looked at the PC Suite, it was solid and these days, I prefer to do everything directly on the phone, but you should know that it exists. Right now, the last thing that I want to do with a smartphone is to install a bunch of stuff on my PC to manage it.

Conclusion (Average to Good)

Nokia is playing catch up in a market that has become extremely competitive in the past couple of years. In that game and at that price, there’s only one thing that really counts: the user experience. The Nokia N97 is not a “bad” phone and it doesn’t deserve the some of the harsh reviews that I’ve seen recently. In fact, it has good hardware, great storage, and nice design.  The pricing however, is  a little steep ($599 unlocked), but you can get one cheaper with a 2 year contract.

Price: $549.99

buy

via ubergizmo