Archive for the ‘Mobile Phones’ Category

K810i reviewed

Thursday, April 12th, 2007

After doing some SD cards research, I think this is the memory card I’ll buy for the external memory card slot of my N800. Not only is a well performing card, but also doubles as a USB adapter and a microSD adapter! Not everyone has a mini USB cable at home or at work, so this can be very useful to transfer information to a desktop PC if necessary. Also, this card type is being used in many mobile phone models, so carrying the adapter inside the N800 sounds convenient for me.

The manufacturer website is here, and a review for this particular SD card-adapter can be found here.

Nokia N95 reviewed

Sunday, April 8th, 2007

Seems that Nokia is already shipping the powerful N95! It has been already reviewed at “allaboutsymbian.com”, “mobile-review.com” (only music capabilities) and “mobileburn.com”. They were quite positive… although it’s not as good camera as a dedicated camera, as good mp3 player as a dedicated mp3 player, or as good GPS as a dedicated GPS, it packs a lot of functionality in a rather small package. Unfortunately, there’s is a big problem with this phone: the battery life.

As a power user, I would understand that using the many features of this phone will drain it’s battery fast enough, but having to charge it everyday sounds a lot like what people had to do with first generation mobile phones. It seems that the phone will use quite a lot of battery even while it’s not in use (”idle mode”), so hopefully things can improve with a firmware update. Anyways, if you buy this phone (or “multimedia computer” as Nokia likes to call it), never forget to charge your phone.

Nokia 8600?

Sunday, April 8th, 2007

Some spy shots have appeared showing an hypothetical Nokia 8600 in a forum. Well, it looks quite legit! It’s curious to see that they’re releasing “luxury” mobile phones based on Series 40 (read my article on “Why Nokia Series 60 suck”). The reason? Well, perhaps they think that kind of users would be more annoyed at phone software crashed than to lack of features. In any case, that phone looks quite neat, although not as gorgeous as the Nokia 8800.

Why Nokia Series 60 phones suck

Sunday, April 8th, 2007

Well, I don’t think they’re not that bad, but after being a Series 60 phones user since the beginning (I was a tester for the original Nokia 7650, “Calypso”), and having used that very same platform since then, I’m seriously considering a change.

I fell in love with the 7650 the same day it fell in my hands: it was the first camera phone in Europe (that wasn’t imported), and had a really nice color screen. It was a bulky phone, but  the overall experience with it was really nice. It had  a proximity sensor (so it would switch from speaker mode to normal mode if your ear got too close), and a light sensor. The phone was very responsive and quite stable.

After a while, I changed to a Nokia 6600 (”Calimero”) phone… In theory, it had a lot better specifications: based on a more modern Symbian version, it added important features, for instance themes and J2ME 2.0. However, the phone felt so slow. Applications took longer to start, and the overall feel was more sluggish. Also, Java support was buggy, and I lost all my information… twice!

Recently, a friend of mine bought a N70… I liked the phone aspect, but my good impression disappeared once I used the phone. Not only felt as slow as the 6600, but also it introduced some kind of weird “gallery mode”. The traditional “gallery” from older Series 60 phones always seemed fine to me, and the mode introduced in N70 was, in my opinion, a lot worse. Instead of a list of the files in the folder, with small previews of the photos, you get some kind of roulette of multimedia files. It’s so slow and pointless, and that feature should have never left the drawing board. Also, the software was, again, buggy, and that phone “died” after a month of use.

That same person got a Nokia E50, and the experience was a lot better in this case. Perhaps Nokia tries to push the “N series” multimedia features too much, and forgets about the basics: software should be fast and stable. Something that is slower and more unstable is worse, even if it includes more “multimedia features”. I hope they take that in account, and instead of adding features like crazy and produce “multimedia computers”, they produce more “usable phones”.