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The Nokia N9 Review - Part 1

Discussion in 'Technology Advice' started by Micawber, Oct 26, 2011.

  1. Micawber
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    Micawber Renowned Lifetime Member

    The Nokia N9 is the most interesting phone that came out of the Finnish company in years. Not only because it comes with totally different OS but also because it represents what Nokia could have become if it had done this strategy way earlier.

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    The Nokia N9‘s design did not come as a surprise. Coming from the N-series line-up, the N9 looks pretty similar to the Nokia N8 — only a bit refined and uses a polycarbonate body instead of a sturdier aluminum.

    While a unibody polycarbonate (read: plastic) casing isn’t as solid and durable as an aluminum one, like in the N8, it gets the benefit of a lighter form-factor and smooth, matte finish. Nevertheless, the construction of the N9 still feels pretty good that you would not mind the polycarbonate body.

    [​IMG]


    The micro-USB port is hidden on the top by a small enclosure that pops up with a slight press on one side. The micro-SIM card slot is beside it with a cradle that pulls out after sliding the cover towards the left (you will need to open the USB compartment before you can do this). The 3.5mm audio port is posted on the other end.

    The volume control is placed on the right side along with the power/lock/wake button. Aside from that, there are no other ports or buttons on the device.

    The front-facing camera is oddly positioned on the lower right side of the front panel, a placement that indicates you’ll use the camera for video calls in portrait position and holding it with your left hand.

    [​IMG]

    The back side is flat and smooth with the 8MP camera right in the middle and surrounded with a metallic strip. The camera flash is beside it but a bit flushed to the left side.

    The display at the front is made of hard, solid glass which is slightly embossed or protrudes off of the body (curved edge). This was purposely done by Nokia since it is integral to the navigation of the UI (we’ll come back to that later).

    The display screen is gorgeous, deep contrast with clean and crisp graphics. AMOLED and Nokia’s own CBD (Clear Black Display) worked their wonders on the N9.

    [​IMG]

    This is the first time we’ve tried and seen Meego running on a phone. In the Nokia N9, it’s Meego 1.2 Harmattan. It’s got a pretty slick and simple UI. It feels like a combination of the BlackBerry Playbook OS, Android Honeycomb and Apple’s iOS.

    You get three panels — the Feed Stream, App Drawer or Launcher and the Running Apps Deck. You scroll thru the panels/windows by swiping left or right.

    There’s no physical buttons on the screen and all the navigation you need is via gestures from the edges of the glass display (the curved edges of the glass helps in providing some tactile feedback).

    [​IMG] [​IMG] [​IMG]

    All opened apps are displayed on the Running Apps panel and you can individually close each app by pressing down on a window and tapping on the close (x) icon. There’s a “Close All" button at the bottom if you want to flush all the running apps.

    Some of the more common gesture commands include:



    •Swipe up to return to home screen (app Drawer).

    •Swipe down to close app.

    •Double-tap screen to turn on display (instead of the lock button).

    •Swipe left or right to switch screen/window.

    •Tap top middle of display to show status and notifications.

    •Half-swipe upwards to show most commonly used apps/functions.


    Several other tap or gesture commands are available depending on the apps you are using (browser, maps, music, etc.).

    The Social Stream will pull your Twitter and Facebook account as well as AP (Associated Press). Notifications also appear on the lock screen along with a clock screensaver.

    [​IMG]

    Performance of the Nokia N9 is pretty impressive. The UI looks fresh and responsive, the screen reacts to gesture smoothly and fluidly and apps run fairly quick.

    Even after launching over half a dozen apps, you will not notice any lag. It’s when you hit over 12 running apps that responsiveness tend to degrade a little bit. For the two weeks that I’ve been using it, I never encountered that freezing moment that we’d normally experience with all Android handsets. As I said in my previous entry, the N9 has the energy of a WP7 phone, the flair of an iPhone and the genes of an Android handset.

    Most apps in the background aren’t actually running but are put in a Suspended State — camera goes on standby mode and games are paused (i.e. a thrown Angry Bird freezes in mid-air if you fire it and switched apps). Apparently, the built-in browser still load pages even at the background as well as music playback.

    The native browser is pretty basic and does not support Flash or Javascript. The default page looks pretty neat though — shows up all the recent sites and most visited pages in a tag cloud of sorts.

    [​IMG]

    We have to give props to Nokia for really optimizing Meego to run on the N9′s hardware specs even if it’s somewhat dated (same chip as the Galaxy SL and Optimus Black).

    Nokia N9 specs:
    3.9″ AMOLED screen @ 854×480 pixels
    ARM Cortex-A8 OMAP3630 1.0 GHz
    PowerVR SGX530
    1024MB RAM
    16GB and 64GB internal storage
    Bluetooth 2.1
    WiFi 802.11 b/g/n
    3G/HSDPA 14.4Mbps
    Near Field Communication (NFC)
    8MP autofocus camera with Carl Zeiss optics (f/2.2 aperture)
    720p HD video recording @ 30fps with stereo sound
    2 x LED flash
    2nd front-facing camera for video calls
    1450mAh battery
    Meego 1.2 Harmattan

    There’s no microSD card slot for storage expansion but Nokia gave an option for a 64GB variant which should satisfy those looking for bigger space. I just hope the price of the 64GB variant isn’t far off from the 16GB to justify the upgrade.

    Source:-
    http://www.gmanews.tv/story/236637/technology/nokia-n9-review
  2. Micawber
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    Micawber Renowned Lifetime Member

    The Nokia N9 Review - Part 2

    Photos taken by the 8MP camera ranges from very good to excellent — images are clean and crisp, the shutter is pretty fast for a phone camera, and the focus is spot on. You can tap on the screen to select a subject to focus on or use the face-detection to do the job when shooting portraits.

    [​IMG]

    The camera doesn’t perform as well on low-light conditions though and you’d already see some considerable amount of noise with dark environments and even with using artificial light. Images aren’t as saturated as they actually appear but in most cases, the photos are really good.

    [​IMG] [​IMG] [​IMG]

    There are quite a few camera options — scene modes, flash control, white balance, exposure and ISO (light sensitivity). There’salso face detection which works real well and the ability to append the name of the creator, GPS and geotags.

    [​IMG] [​IMG] [​IMG]

    You can check the raw images here.

    Video is equally great although it only captures up to 720p. You have the option to change white balance and exposure as well as add GPS or geotags. Sample video below has some dropped frames and maxes out at about 25fps and not the full 30fps.

    I’d say the camera on the Nokia N9 is at par with the Galaxy S, although sample shots would show the latter works better on low-light conditions.




    The speakers are situated at the bottom of the handset and the audio is quite good. Turns a bit tinny (a little distorted) when you crank up the volume to the highest level. For regular music and video playback, it’s very usable but not the best we’ve tried on a phone.

    Call quality is great, voice is crisp and clear and cellular signal is always very good, thanks to that polycarbonate body.

    Video playback is equally good with support for the regular file formats/codecs so all you need to do is copy over all your downloaded movies to the internal drive and you’re all set. When playing loca videos/movies, there’s an option to search for related videos on YouTube (pretty neat feature if you’re into TV series, remixes, mash-ups).

    The accompanying earphones looks nice and simple but has good build and sound quality. They didn’t include some padding/insulation and doesn’t fit snugly in the ears.

    [​IMG]

    Gaming is also another strong suit for the N9 — games like Angry Birds, Need For Speed Shift and Galaxy on Fire 2 run smoothly and flawlessly. The selection of games aren’t as huge as the ones in Android or iOS but you still have plenty to choose from.

    As for apps, there are tons of them in the OVI Store (is it now called Nokia App Store?) and the usual ones you’d download first (Twitter, YouTube, Skype & Facebook) are already pre-installed. WiFi hotspot is also present and pre-installed, c/o JoikuSpot.

    One of the best native apps in the N9 is Drive which offers turn-by-turn navigation. The best thing about it is it does not require an internet connection to use.

    [​IMG] [​IMG] [​IMG]

    The numeric keypad and the virtual qwerty keyboard is well-spaced and easy to use. Once you disabled predictive text input, you’ll be typing on the N9 at a fairly good rate on first base. The haptic feedback also helps with the pace.

    Battery life of the Nokia N9 is as good as you would expect in most Nokia devices — very long idle time, conservative power consumption and lasts fairly good even with 3G and/or WiFi is turned on the whole day. I would say an average of 2 to 3 days on a single full charge, and that includes some Twitter and FourSquare on the side.

    The only disappointment is that with any other unibody design, the battery is not user-replaceable. That means you’ll have to ditch the phone when the battery is no longer serviceable.





    For a first-time Meego device, the Nokia N9 is nothing short of impressive. Good build quality, nice simple design, great multimedia performance and a pretty capable shooter. And I have to admit, the N9 has certainly gotten my two thumbs up. I’d even dare to say that Meego works better than WP7 and they should just have used it for their flagship smartphones instead of partnering with Microsoft. That’s based from experience of using the HTC HD7 running Windows Phone 7 for a year.

    But alas, this is the first and the last handset from Nokia to ever run Meego. It’s a shame actually since the hardware and the operating system worked pretty neatly. Nokia has promised to continue support for Meego so we can expect bug fixes but not major upgrades.

    [​IMG]

    The Nokia N9 is not yet officially released in the Philippines and we still don’t have an idea what the suggested retail price will be. Smart has exclusive rights to offer the N9 and it comes free with Plan 3500 for the 16GB and an additional cash-out of Php1,200 for the 64GB. Seems a bit steep, IMHO.

    Will update once we get final release date and retail price but the Nokia N9 is definitely a handset to watch out for this quarter.

    Source:-
    http://www.gmanews.tv/story/236637/technology/nokia-n9-review
    Last edited by a moderator: Jan 19, 2014
  3. Micawber
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    Micawber Renowned Lifetime Member



    Could this be a collector's item in the making ? :rolleyes:
  4. Micawber
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    Micawber Renowned Lifetime Member



    And now for something completely different............ :rolleyes:

    Nokia unveils first Windows phones

    The world's largest cellphone maker Nokia unveiled its first phones using Microsoft software on Wednesday, hoping they will kick-start a rescue of its ailing smartphone business.

    The Finnish group, struggling to keep up with nimbler rivals in a hotly contested industry, unveiled the lumia 710 and lumia 800 in London and priced them at 270 and 420 euros respectively excluding taxes and subsidies.

    Crucially, the lumia 800 will include the full and free navigation service users crave.

    The phones will be available in European and other markets around the world by the end of this year and in the United States in early 2012 and into mainland China in the first half of 2012.

    Left in the dust by Apple and Google in the booming smartphone market, Nokia decided to ditch its aging Symbian platform in favour of Microsoft's software in a risky deal in February that spooked investors.

    Nokia has not rushed with the new phones. Nimbler rivals HTC , Fujitsu and Samsung Electronics have beaten it with models using the latest Windows software, Mango.

    Nokia and Microsoft have said they will focus on close co-operation with operators to support the platform.

    "Operators really want to have another company on the scene: they don't want Google and Apple to rule the mobile universe," said Magnus Jern, chief executive of Barcelona-based mobile app development firm Golden Gekko, speaking ahead of the launch.

    Lumia Has Dark Background

    Nokia's market value has halved since February as investors are unsure whether it can ever regain the market share it has lost.

    Its third-quarter results beat low expectations, sparking hopes that the company can survive a painful revamp, but smartphone sales still dropped 38 percent from a year ago.

    With Microsoft software, Nokia hopes to gain the kind of attention Apple and Google have attracted from software developers that enrich their devices.

    Research firm Strategy Analytics expects Microsoft to double its share of the Western European smartphone market during 2012 to 12.3 percent, helped by the Nokia partnership.

    The 12.3 percent forecast for Microsoft's software refers to its use across several mobile phone makers and compares with the much higher market share Nokia's Symbian platform alone previously enjoyed -- it controlled 41 percent of the West European market as recently as the first half of 2010.

    The annual Nokia World media and industry event in London on Wednesday includes speakers from the world's largest carriers: China Mobile , Vodafone , Orange and MTN .

    Source:-
    http://www.gmanews.tv/story/236654/technology/nokia-unveils-first-windows-phones
  5. oss
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    oss Somewhere Staff Member

    Yep probably.


    The Lumia 800 looks almost identical and I think that Nokia have simply re engineered this N9 model to work with WP7 Mango and ported their application codebase to work on Mango

    http://www.nokia.co.uk/gb-en/products/phone/lumia800#

    I quite fancy one as the spec looks very nice compared to the HTC's lots more RAM and better processors and a very nice software bundle with Nokia Drive which apparently offers GPS Nav in the Phils for free, now that is pretty unique!
  6. oss
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    oss Somewhere Staff Member

    Nokia has rushed!!!!

    Very much so.

    They were very much in the deep deep doo doo a few months ago, to turn around and produce a platform that could take WP7 in just 9 months is stunning, really well done to them and they must have started from scratch as you don't have a back burner WP7 project or even Windows Mobile 6.5 project kicking around the back office when you have entire development teams dedicated to your own Symbian operating system that you have been preaching about for donkeys years.

    This is quite an amazing feat of re-engineering, not so much the hardware as they must have been on ARM processors already but in the combination of hardware and software redevelopment, really impressive!
  7. Micawber
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    Micawber Renowned Lifetime Member

    Hmmm! I read your link oss cheers, that Lumia does look good.
    I was always a Nokia fan but moved on as they lagged behind.

    My wife has the iPhone4 in white, but I suspect only for the fashion and logo. Although she does now use more of it's capabilities.................which are pretty good.

    Trouble is the phones these days are so expensive.

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