Monday, March 2, 2009

Nokia N86 MP





Nokia has added another new phone to its N-series range of mobile phones. Known as the Nokia N86, the new phone brags striking camera features that claim to take your mobile phone camera experience to a new level. If you enjoy photography, the N86 phone claims to excite you the most.

As its reviews, the Nokia N86 has an 8 megapixel camera and has been optimized to take still videos and images. The phone also boasts of suiting the new users and boasts the great camera features that could make an impact on the ones who are fond of photography. The mobile phone comes with shorter latencies and variable aperture for super sharp photos in tough low & bright light conditions, fast mechanical shutter, wide-angle Carl Zeiss Tessar lens, and dual LED flash.

Juha-Pekka Sipponen, Director, Nokia Nseries, comments, “People demand mobile cameras that take excellent pictures in all light conditions. That’s why the aperture of the Nokia N86 8MP is comparable to that of a high-quality, stand-alone digital camera. Whether it’s running with the bulls in Pamplona or capturing the panoramic beauty of a sunrise over Sydney, the Nokia N86 MP will take brilliantly clear, wide-angle images that are instantly geotagged to be uploaded onto sites like Ovi Share or Flickr.”

The phone also comes with high speed internet connectivity, which lets you easily share videos and images. It is built-in with an internal memory of 8GB, which is expandable up to 16GB. It also boasts a bright OLED 2.6 inch display screen which is scratch-proof.

The phone is also based on Symbian S60 platform and comes included with new versions of full Ovi integration and Nokia Maps. Additionally, the phone is also capable of giving support to Bluetooth, Wi-Fi connectivity, GPS, TV-out function, secondary video call camera as well as a 3.5mm headset jack.



Tuesday, February 24, 2009

NOKIA E65 - Full phon specifications








General:

2G Network GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900

3G Network UMTS 2100



Size: 105 x 49 x 15.5 mm, 74 cc

Weight: 115 g

Ringtones: Polyphonic, MP3

Display: TFT, 16M colors , 240 x 320 pixels, 2.2 inches

Camera: 2 MP, 1600x1200 pixels, video(CIF)

Memory:

Practically unlimited entries and fields, Photocall

- 50 MB shared memory
- 128 MB SDRAM memory
- Dual ARM 9 220 MHz CPU


Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Nokia N86 8MP slider phone


Nokia announced the new N86 8MP, the company’s first 8 Megapixel mobile phone, at the MWC 2009. The N86 8MP is a dual slider that can slide up and down. The phone features a 8 Megapixel camera with a Carl Zeiss Tessar optics, dual LED flash, digital image stabilization, and 30fps video recording.




The N86 8MP has a 2.6-inch 240 x 320 QVGA OLED display, onboard Assisted GPS with Nokia Maps, WiFi 802.11b/g support and Bluetooth. It comes with 8GB internal storage capacity. You can expect a 3.5mm headphone jack and built-in stereo speakers. The phone runs S60 3rd Edition, FP2.





Nokia N86 8MP supports tri-band 3G HSDPA/HSUPA networks. There are 900/1900/2100 and 850/1900/2100 versions, that will be available in Q2 2009 for about Euro 375.

Monday, February 16, 2009

New Nokia 5800 Xpress





New Nokia 5800 XpressMusic with touch-screen









The new Nokia 5800 XpressMusic is a mid-range music-focussed mobile and it´s Nokia's first touch enabled Symbian S60 mobile. Other key features include a 3.2-inch touch-screen, 3.2-megapixel AF camera with dual-LED flash, VGA front camera, A-GPS, HDSPA, up to 16GB of storage via microSD and loud speakers. The 5800 XpressMusic price will 279 Euro, 129 UK Pounds and $227 USD. This is also Nokia’s first Comes With Music phone, a newly launched music service that offers unlimited music downloads for the first year of ownership.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Nokia N85 Two-way Slider







In addition to N79 Nokia introduces also the N85 two-way slider smartphone. The N85 features a 2.6-inch OLED display, a 5 Megapixel camera a front camera with 2x digital zoom for video calls,Bluetooth, integrated GPS, A-GPS, and Cell based navigation.


***
**
*

Nokia N96 Bruce Lee Edition

Nokia N96 Bruce Lee Edition






Nokia introduces the N96 Bruce Lee Edition in China. The limited Bruce Lee

Edition of N96 comes with a back cover with Bruce Lee’s face and signature, and

a Bruce Lee themed phone strap.

Nokia N78 - White

*
**
***

Nokia N78 - White









Those who have been using the Nokia 78 handset and are wishing to have a white version would be surprised to find out that there is actually a white N78 available in the market. Sadly, it is only available for sale in Spain. Our friends from Spain must be the special ones, as Nokia has only currently released it for them.

However, aside from the color we cannot envy our Spanish friends much because the newly colored white Nokia N78 doesn’t offer any new features from its black counterpart, which is available in other parts of the world. The N78 white features the same 3.2-megapixel camera, Wi-Fi, GPS, 3.5mm headphone jack and runs on the S60 mobile OS like the black N78.

But if you’re really interested in getting a hold of the white N78, you might as well ask your friends in Spain to buy one for you or use it as a good reason to schedule your next vacation to Spain. That is, if Nokia has no plans of releasing the white N78 internationally, and as of now nothing has been stated.



Nokia N91




*****
****
***
**
*

Monday, February 2, 2009

SoftWare For Nokia Mobil's






SoftWare For Nokia Mobil's
*****************************
محاذاة إلى اليسار


1- Nokia Software Updater Setup-ar.



2-Nokia Software Updater Setup-en.





Nokia-N97

Nokia-N97


Size

Dimensions: 117.2 x 55.3 x 15.9-18.3 mm .

Weight: 150 g .





Display

Type: TFT touchscreen, 16M colors.


Size: 360 x 640 pixels, 3.5 inches.

- Proximity sensor for auto turn-off.
- Accelerometer sensor for auto-rotate.
- Full QWERTY keyboard.
- Handwriting recognition
.




Ring tones

Type: Polyphonic (64 channels), MP3

Customization : Download
.

Vibration : Yes

- Stereo speakers .


Memory


Phonebook Practically unlimited entries and fields, Photocall
Call records Detailed, max 30 days
Card slot microSD (TransFlash), up to 16GB
- 32 GB internal memory.





Features



OS: Symbian OS v9.4, Series 60 rel. 5 .
Messaging SMS, MMS, Email, Push Email, IM.
Browser WAP 2.0/xHTML, HTML, RSS feeds.
Games Yes + downloadable.
Colors White, Brown.



Camera
5 MP, 2584x1938 pixels, Carl Zeiss optics, autofocus, video(VGA@30fps), flash; secondary videocall camera

- Built-in GPS receiver

- A-GPS support

- Nokia Maps 2.0 Touch

- Digital compass

- Java MIDP 2.0

- MP3/WMA/WAV/eAAC+ player

- MPEG4/WMV/3gp video player

- Stereo FM radio with RDS

- FM transmitter

- TV out

- 3.5 mm audio output jack

- Voice command/dial

- Document viewer

- T9

- Flash Lite 3

- Built-in handsfree





Battery


Standard battery, Li-Ion 1500 mAh (BL-4L).

Stand-by: Up to 430 h.

Talk time: Up to 6 h 40 min.


Saturday, January 31, 2009

New Nokia N95

Tips before you buy Nokia N95











Screen: The 240 x 320 pixels, 2.6 inch screen is bright and big, and in horizontal format, it can be used to watch video clips, or type out quick memos using the bundled Quick Office and a Nokia Wireless keyboard. The generous screen size is good for catching up on MLB scores, keeping tabs on GigaOM and checking out Digg.



Voice: If your primary concern is voice quality, the quad band phone gets very enthusiastic thumbs up from me, and it manages to pick up signals even in elevators.



Dialpad: The dial-pad is wide and evenly spaced and feels comfortable when thumbing out those text messages



Navigation & Media Key: The navigation keypad is also pretty easy to use and is clutter free, though “accept call” and “end call” keys are small. The Media key is finally doing what it says, and opens up a lush interface, which basically lets you navigate through most of the important apps – music player, FM radio, photo gallery and so on.



Camera: If you like taking a lot of photos, and don’t want to carry a separate digital camera, then the point-and-shoot features of N95 should suffice. The Carl Zeiss brand doesn’t really mean anything to me – I go by how the photos look to my naked eye. I find the quality of photos stunning. Camera is simple to use, and the built in Lifeblog software can get the photos to your Flickr account in a jiffy.


Video Recorder and Video Playback: I have been using Nokia N73 to do video interviews with Silicon Valley executives, and found that it sufficed my needs. The N95 however is a 2X improvement in video quality with better audio-pick up as well. Nokia has been smart in keeping the user interface consistent so there are no new tricks to learn.

The videos can be played-back on a regular television via a special cable that comes bundled in the box, and the quality of video is adequate, considering the source.



Music Player: This is the single best feature of Nokia N95. The sound quality is stable, smooth and not too loud, yet rich at the same time. Being one of those few who has tried I can safely say that Nokia N95 is their best music phone. Ever!


The big reason for that is the standard headphone jack, which allows me to plug in any one of my Ultimate Ears or Shure headphones/ear plugs. I simply hated the dongle-to-earphone hook-up. With this new standard audio jack, I can plug the headphones right into the phone.


WiFi and Networking: N95 is one of the most connected devices on the market at present. It has the usual laundry list of connectivity options including Bluetooth and infrared.

While the HSDPA 3G options are pretty much useless to those of us in the US, we can certainly appreciate the mini USB connector (what took Nokia so long to finally support this?) that makes transferring files from your computer to the device a breeze, especially on a Mac.

WiFi is where N95 shines, thanks in part to new software applications that Nokia is bundling with the phone. The home screen of the phone has a WiFi scan option that allows you to easily find and connect to WiFi networks. No mucking around with the connectivity menu and getting the WiFi to to work. Full marks to Nokia for getting this right.


Internet Telephony: I loved the VoIP calling features of N80i, even if I didn’t care for the phone itself. I am glad that the native VoIP support is built into this device. While I have not been able to make it work with my Asterisk set-up just yet, the Truphone app is ready to go on this device.

I got the SIPphone to work as well, by simply copying the set-up from Nokia N80i. My Gizmo account is working, so I guess this feature is getting my personal blessing.



Battery Life: If you are looking for a reason to not spend $750 on a phone, well here is a good reason. The battery on this device simply sucks. It doesn’t even last the whole day, and that is when you are using it in GSM mode, WiFi, Bluetooth, and GPS turned off. Nokia needs to fix this as quickly as possible otherwise, N95 could become a PR nightmare for them

.

Even light email usage and web surfing starts sucking N95’s battery like Nick Nolte hitting the sauce. If you still insist on buying this phone, then buy a few extra chargers and have them littered around your house, office and car.



No Mail 4 Exchange support: And lastly, what I really hate most about this phone is the terrible email support. I don’t care for Nokia’s internal email client. On my N73, E61 and E70, the Mail 4 Exchange software works flawlessly, syncing over the air with our company Zimbra server. No such luck with N95.

You can install the older version of Mail 4 Exchange client, which can sync your contacts, calendars and email, but when you try and open the email, you get an error message: Feature not supported. Other push email clients like Seven’s client doesn’t work either with this latest version of Symbian S60 operating system.

Your best option right now but it is going to set you back by about $99. But hey if you are going to spend $750 on a phone, what’s another $99.




Bottomline
: Despite all those fancy features, lack of Mail 4 Exchange support and terrible battery life are reasons enough for me to stay away from this so-called Multimedia Computer. A 2 GB micro SD card, $99 for RoadSync, a couple of extra batteries and chargers



Nokia 6700 classic








Nokia has just announced a new cell phone called the Nokia 6700 Cell Phone. This phone, combines smooth surfaces, rich materials and precisely crafted parts with a full metal keymat which completes the premium finish. Improving on all areas of its forerunner, the Nokia 6700 comes with a 5 megapixel camera, assisted GPS navigation with Nokia Maps, and high speed data access meaning sharing images or video is faster and easier than ever.



At an estimated retail price of EUR 235, before taxes and subsidies, the Nokia 6700 addresses the original Nokia 6700 customer need and aspiration level perfectly.