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20th
FEB
Nokia N900 mobile phone
Posted by mobile-geek under Latest Phones, Mobile Phones By O2, Mobile Phones By T-Mobiles, Mobile Phones By Vodafone, Mobiles Phones By Make, Nokia Mobile Phones, Reviews, SAFFtrack Mobiles Offers, Smart/PDA's Mobile Phones
Summary: The Nokia N900 features the new Linux-based Maemo operating system and is more of an internet tablet than a phone. Its outstanding features are its QWERTY keyboard, hi-res touchscreen, web browser and multitasking ability. Downsides are poor user-friendliness, size, weight and the very high price.
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Nokia’s N900 looks like a souped-up version of the flagship N97 smartphone. In a way it is, but in fact, under the bonnet lurks something new to the word of mobile phones. It’s Nokia’s new Linux-based Maemo operating system.
But the first thing you notice about the N900 isn’t the operating system. It’s the price. Wow, that’s a lot of money! The second thing you notice is the size. Wow, it’s huge! The third thing you notice is the weight. Wow, this is the heaviest phone on the market!
Haven’t put the phone back on the shelf yet? That’s good, because then you start to notice some good things. First the slide-out QWERTY keyboard. You begin to realise why the phone is heavy. It’s because a keyboard this big weighs a ton. But that means that it’s easy to use, and you can out-type even those BlackBerry guys. We think that the keyboard isn’t actually as good as the one on the N97, but that’s just a quibble. You’ll also notice the screen, and once again appreciate why the N900 is so big. This is a fantastic screen – Nokia’s best so far – measuring 3.5 inches across and with an incredible 800 x 480 pixel resolution. It’s a touchscreen of course. Shame that it’s resistive though, not capacitative, so you sometimes have to press it a couple of times before it responds, unless you use a stylus.
Features of the Nokia N900 include:
- 5 megapixel camera (2592 x 1944 pixels) with Carl Zeiss optics, Tessar lens, autofocus, dual LED flash, photo editor and geo-tagging
- Video camera: MPEG4 video capture at 800 x 480 pixels
- Front camera: VGA web camera
- Display: Resistive touchscreen, 16 million colours, 800 x 480 pixels (3.5 inches) with orientation sensor, proximity sensor and light sensor
- Digital music player (supports MP3/AAC/eAAC/WMA formats)
- Integrated stereo speakers
- FM transmitter
- A-GPS with Ovi Maps
- Speed dialing
- Messaging: SMS, Email (SMTP, IMAP4, POP3, Mail for Exchange)
- Viewing of email attachments .doc, .xls, .ppt, .pdf
- Memory: 256 MB RAM, 32 GB plus microSD memory card slot (up to 16GB)
- Connectivity: Bluetooth 2.1, USB 2.0, TV-Out, WLAN 802.11 b/g, 3.5 mm stereo headphone plug
- Internet: Maemo Browser with Flash video support, RSS reader, HSPA (10Mbps download, 2 Mbps upload), WLAN (up to 11Mbps/54Mbps)
- Quadband plus 3G
- Size: 111 x 60 x 20 mm
- Weight: 181g
The N900 also has a great camera. It’s essentially the same camera as the one on the N97 and N97 Mini, with 5 megapixels, Carl Zeiss optics, Tessar lens, autofocus, dual LED flash and geo-tagging. The video camera is outstanding, recording at an incredible 800 x 480 pixels. There’s also a front-mounted VGA web camera, though at the time of this review we weren’t able to establish whether this can be used for video calling. There’s a digital media player, with all the features that you’d expect, and an FM transmitter. Bizarrely, there’s no FM radio, although it is possible to install one using a third-party download. We know that a lot of people like their apps, but really some things should come as standard. Since when have phone manufacturers started treating their devices like flat-packed furniture? A-GPS with Ovi Maps is included, though.
Is there any reason so far why you should choose the N900 over the N97? We think not. The only reason then would be the Maemo operating system. We’re going to stick our necks out here and say something really unpopular. Whenever we say this kind of thing, we always get hate mail, so it would be nice if the haters just gave it a rest this time
OK, here goes: if you buy a phone with an untested operating system, you had better be prepared to roll your sleeves up and do some really hard work making your phone operational. It’s always the same. If you buy the N900 you’ll be a beta-tester for Nokia. Lots of stuff won’t work at first. Perhaps some things will never work. If you can live with that and like a challenge, go ahead. Otherwise avoid. We’ve already mentioned the lack of an FM radio and video calling. Other things that are missing include MMS, and there are few apps currently available from the Ovi store, although this will no doubt improve as time goes by.
But there are good things too. The Maemo OS is very fast, and is supported by fast hardware too, enabling it to deliver on its promise of genuine multi-tasking. The Mozilla-based web browser is superb, and as a mobile web browser the N900 is hard to beat, with its lightning-fast HSPA and WiFi support. Build quality is solid, there’s bags of memory (up to 48GB), and audio quality is excellent.
So, the N900 isn’t really an ideal mobile phone for many users, but for someone who really wants an internet tablet with calling features added, it could be just the thing.















