Nokia E5 Review
The Nokia E5 is an update of the Nokia E71 (some says that it is a budget version of the Nokia E72). The Nokia E5 is a very good phone, and a rival to the BlackBerry Bold range.
It is a business phone with smart looks, an excellent QWERTY keyboard, fast internet access, full email support, Wi-Fi, and plenty of memory. Attention: Watch out for freezing, switching off and loss of signal.
This phone isn’t quite as slim as the Nokia E71 or E72. It is slightly cheaper than the Nokia E72. It doesn’t have a front camera (no video calling) and the colours for the TFT display are reduced (262k instead of 16 million).
The best: a superb QWERTY keyboard!
It runs Symbian OS version v.9.3 with access to all the apps in the Ovi Store.
Features of the Nokia E5 include:
5 megapixel camera with full focus, LED flash and 3x digital zoom
VGA video camera with 3x digital zoom
Display: TFT, 256,000 colours, 240 x 320 pixels (2.36 inches)
Music Player (mp3, AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, WMA formats)
FM radio with RDS support
Speakerphone
MP3, AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, WMA ringtones / video ringtones
Voice memo recording
Messaging: SMS, MMS, email (POP3, IMAP4 and SMTP protocols), Instant messaging
Integrated A-GPS with Nokia Maps
Symbian and Java MIDP 2.0 applications
Attachment viewer for Microsoft Word, PowerPoint and Excel
Internet: Web browser, WAP, GPRS, EDGE, HSPA up to 10.2 Mbps download
Connectivity: WLAN 802.11b/g, Bluetooth 2.0 with EDR, micro-USB, 3.5 mm audio jack
Memory: 256 Mbytes plus 2GB microSD card (up to 32 GB supported)
Vibration alert
Quadband (850/900/1800/1900) plus triband 3G HSPA
Weight: 126g
Size: 115 x 59 x 13 mm
Battery: 1200 mAh Li-Ion
Talktime: 5 hours (3G) – 13 hours (2G)
Battery standby: 635 hours – 670 hours
Free download Nokia PC Suite
Nokia PC Suite is a software package used to establish an interface between Nokia mobile devices and computers that run Microsoft Windows operating system.
Download Nokia PC Suite FREE now!
Nokia Lumia 800 Review
The Nokia Lumia 800 is the first Windows Phone handset to spring from the Microsoft /Nokia
It shares its exterior styling with the previously substantially less hyped Nokia N9, a Meego-based smartphone, although the screen size is reduced from 3.9″ (854×480 pixels) to 3.7″ (800×480 pixels) to conform to the Windows Phone spec list.
The CPU was increases from the 1GHz ARM Cortex-A8 to the 1.4GHz MSM8255 Snapdragon/Scorpion which certainly helps add snap to the Windows Phone Mango OS.
The Nokia Lumia 800 shares the Nokia N9‘s 16-bit AMOLED ClearBlack display whereas the Nokia Lumia 710 sports a 24-bit ClearBlack TFT.
When you compare screen size you find the Nokia Lumia 800 is a little small with the HTC Radar and HTC Titan entering the fray with 3.8″ and 4.7″ screens respectively although all competitors are limited to the same 800×480 pixel resolution.
With its large 3.7-inch OLED screen pushed to the sides of the chassis and a cool curved polycarbonate shell gives the phone a very premium feel indeed.
Nokia has worked very hard on the unibody design, making the battery inaccessible and using top-mounted flaps to cover the charging port and SIM slot – intriguingl. The phone uses a microSIM.
The Nokia Lumia 800 and HTC Titan are equal with 16GB of fixed internal storage, with the Nokia Lumia 710 and HTC Radar weighing in with 8GB a piece.
Nokia Lumia 800 is intended to compete against the HTC Titan and the Nokia Lumia 710 with the HTC Radar.
The physical appearance of the Nokia Lumia 800 is a dream to observe and handle, with its smooth curves fitting snugly to the hand both with and without the protective case provided in the purchase packaging.
Nokia N8 Themes
Nokia 5800 Review
This is the first Nokia’s touchscreen phone. The headline features include the high resolution touchscreen with 16 million colours, the 3.2 megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss optics, 3G video calling, a music player & FM radio, GPS positioning with Nokia Maps, Wi-Fi, an excellent web browser with support for Flash, features, bluetooth and an 8GB memory card. It is available in black, blue or red. It belongs to Nokia’s XpressMusic range.
It’s a very stylish handset. It is sleekness! The Nokia 5800 is much narrower than the iPhone 3G (with it 52 mm ot width it is one of the narrowest touchscreen phones around).
The Nokia 5800 has a wide range of input options: finger touch, full and mini QWERTY keyboards and handwriting recognition, stylus and plectrum with a virtual alphanumeric keypad.
Nokia 5800 has a dedicated virtual media bar for quick access to music controls, as well as functions like the gallery and web browser and the display will rotate automatically when you turn the phone to landscape mode.
A 3.2 megapixels it isn’t the best camera phone by a long way, but it uses Carl Zeiss optics, has autofocus and a double LED flash and leaves the iPhone standing. It is a proper camera for a start.
The music player in the 5800 is excellent. The touchscreen controls are very easy here, and all the features that you’d hope for are here, including an 8-band graphic equaliser and a 3.5mm headphone jack. The 8GB memory card can store up to 2,000 MP3 tracks (or 4,000 in AAC format), and you can upgrade this to a massive 16GB.
The 5800′s big touchscreen is ideal for web browsing. With very fast download speeds thanks to the 3G HSDPA implementation and a quality web browser. The Nokia 5800 beats the iPhone here with support for Flash meaning that you can watch videos from YouTube and other sites on your phone.
GPS is included too, together with Nokia Maps as well as 3G and WiFi, the connectivity options include Bluetooth and USB, plus a TV-Out connection (cable supplied.)
It is important to say that the battery life in the Nokia 5800 is very good.







