Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Nokia N97 review: Lock, stock and touch

Gsmarena have posted a review of the Nokia N97. Here are the key features, main disadvantages and final impression.

Key features:
Slide-n-tilt 3.5" 16M-color resistive touchscreen of 640 x 360 pixel resolution
5 megapixel autofocus camera with dual-LED flash and lens cover (VGA@30fps video recording)
Symbian OS 9.4 with S60 5th edition UI
Slide-out three-row full QWERTY keyboard
ARM 11 434MHz CPU and 128 MB of RAM
Quad-band GSM support and 3G with HSDPA support
Wi-Fi and GPS with A-GPS (plus 3 months of free voice-guided navigation via Ovi Maps)
Digital compass
Class-leading 32GB onboard storage
microSD card slot with microSDHC support
Built-in accelerometer
3.5 mm audio jack
TV out
Stereo FM Radio with RDS
FM transmitter
microUSB and Bluetooth v2.0
Full Flash and Java support for the web browser
microUSB v2.0 and Bluetooth v2.0
Good audio reproduction quality

Main disadvantages:
The S60 5th edition UI still has poor ergonomics and is not as thumbable as expected
Camera features are so two-thousand-and-late
No DivX or XviD support out-of-the-box
No smart dialing
Somewhat limited 3rd party software availability
No office document editing (without a paid upgrade)

It's an Nseries device we are talking about and we can't complain about looks. How's that for a nice start? Now seriously, the Nseries are back on track and we don't mean that as a mere comparison to the misfiring N96. All-in-one is the game and the N97 is ready to take charge of the Nokia multimedia squad. It has an arsenal full of (almost) all contemporary high-end weapons and Symbian smartness securing its rear.

Nseries used to stand for the ultimate in mobile technology but evolution has seen to it that if you want all the top features you're not to find them in a single device. And as things are these days - not in the Nseries. The best touch interface is elsewhere, higher-res WVGA screens are found elsewhere as well, there are better places to look for HD videos, and for 12 megapixel snapshots - you get our drift...

There was a time when being top of the Nseries pretty much equaled top of the whole affair. Well, no more - and it definitely isn't simply the N97's fault. We guess the Nokia Nseries need to come to terms with the evolving market, much like the Series 60 5th still need some time to come to terms with touchscreen. That's not necessarily bad news though. The news is never good or bad, it's what you make of it.

But there's no need to be too smart. Here's what we mean. Remember Nokia N95 and its 8GB offshoot? Well then, no need to tell you it used to be the sum of all fears. That's some weight to carry for its successors! No wonder the N96 crumbled. Well, the N97 is not crumbling; it just inherits a changed world.

All right, if that's how things are on the mobile market, we guess the Nokia N97 needs to have a lot of guts to get to grips with its inheritance and do its thing on top. And, here's another newsflash: the N97 does that alright. If a device can stand its ground against potent rivals like HTC Touch Pro2 and Sony Ericsson XPERIA X1, it can hardly be wrong. Not to mention the bold newcomer Samsung B7610 OmniaPRO.

So, the latest Nseries flagship is not a royalty but a focused and capable handset with a firm foot in the segment of smart QWERTY touchscreen all-in-ones. The ultimate device as we knew it is dead, Nseries live on.

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