Three Days with Nokia E71 - Hands on Review

June 15th, 2008 Rafi Posted in Mobile Phones, Three Days 2 Comments »

image047.jpgThree days passed very quickly with the E71. Before I share my experience and thoughts about the E71 I have to add a disclaimer - the unit I tested is not a production unit but a test unit I received for software testing from a friendly mobile operator. The main purpose of this “Three Day with a…” review is to share my experience using the phone on a daily basis. Still, if you need to see the full tech specs check out my previous post on the issue.

The E71 comes as a replacement for the E61i so it makes sense to see how the E71 compares with the E61i.

Screen Size and Resolution

I would like to start with some steam I need to release. I know that many people regard the E71 as the device which will “kill” the Blackberry and will provide the ultimate Eseries email experience for the business/corporate users - but exactly at this point which should be the highlight of the device, the E71 falls behind.

IMHO, the main problem of the device that prevents a decent email experience is the screen size vs. resolution. The screen used in the E71 is 320×240 pixel screen (same as the E61i). But its area shrank by about 30% to fit the new slim form factor. In order to make the text still visible Nokia had to increase the size of the fonts and reduce the number of text lines in the screen. So, while the E61i has 7 lines of text, the E71 has only 6 to use.

Nokia E61i screen

Nokia E71 Screen

The Nokia E61i has a 2.8″ screen while the Nokia E71 screen is only 2.4″. Just to illustrate the differences here is a comparison between the E61i and E71 screen sizes:

Nokia E71 screen size compared to Nokia E61

As a result, you can only get email notifications or only the last email compared to the E61i’s layout where you could get 2 last emails. I would expect Nokia to actually increase the height of the screen (something like the E51’s screen ratio) and allow flexible email configuration to set the number of lines used by the email screen plugin (Even if you set all the plugins off and keep only the email, you still see only one email header).

Camera

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The E71 is equipped with a 3.2MP camera and a LED flash. I know the E71 is not competing with the Nseries phones and its target users are different. But who says that business people should be punished with such a terrible camera? If I’m going to spend hundreds of dollars on a high-end smartphone, I expect it to have a decent camera. I would love to have the camera of the N82 inside the E71, but at least give us the camera from the N78. In any case, the E71’s camera is only good for …well…I’m not sure it is good for anything, maybe for MMS.

As may be witnessed from the sample pictures below which are less than impressive, the colors are washed off, the white balancing is not very accurate and the level of details is not that great. Event he E90 produced much better photos than the E71…what a shame - I really expected more from this device.

Form Factor and Design

After I released all the steam above, I can talk about the really good stuff - beginning with the phone’s design. It is absolutely gorgeous. It looks great, feels solid in your hand and the build quality is terrific. The device fits right to your hand and feels much more comfortable than the bulky E61i.

The keyboard is much smaller than the E61i’s. basically the keys are the same size but there is no space between the keys. All to all, the keyboard is usable and feels solid.

Messaging: SMS and Email

The messaging composer includes few nice improvements compared to the previous models. The most important ones probably are the spell checker and predictive text. When composing a message or email, the composer identifies words as you type them and you can auto complete the rest of the word. In addition, the spell checker automatically fixes any typos you have made. Both enhancements work very well.

Another nice enhancement is the ability to receive email notifications for two mail accounts. For example, I configured the first email to be use mailforexchange and the second to my gmail account.

Web Browsingimage000022.jpg

The E71 uses Nokia’s superb S60 Safari based web browser - not too much I can say about this other then, as with other S60 devices, using standard web sites with the Nokia S60 devices is almost livable and way better than the browser that comes with the Windows Mobile phones, for example.

GPS

Yes, the E71 comes with a built in GPS. The phone comes with the standard Nokia GPS applications: Maps, GPS Data and Landmarks.

Conclusions

The E71 is a good device. However, it is not perfect. It has a pitiful camera and the screen cannot display more than one email header. However, the form factor, the build quality and the daily usability are great. Would I replace my E61i with the E71? In a second. Would I buy this device? sure….at least until I can get my hands on a Blackberry Bold or a SonyEricsson XPERIA X1.

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Three Days with Nokia N78 - Hands on Review

June 10th, 2008 Rafi Posted in Mobile Phones, Three Days 1 Comment »

General Overview and first Impression

You can find the full specs and technical details of the phone in Forum Nokia. In general the N78 was positioned to replace the N73 and looks like the little fancy brother of the N82. It is based on Nokia’s S60 3rd Edition, Feature Pack 2 with a slightly redesigned stylish user interface.

In general the phone looks stylish and the build quality is very good. On the negative, I simply do not understand why Nokia insists on redesigning the keys every now and then. The keypad is simply terrible. First and foremost, it is simply inconvenient to dial with the keypad. Every line of keys is connected as one stripe, the keys are unpleasant to press and the numbers are completely invisible in daylight or when the background lighting is off. Only when you unlock the keys (with some guesswork since you don’t actually can see the soft keys) the background lighting lights up and you can see the numbers (again, in full daylight the numbers are not really visible).

Cool Features Added

The N78 includes two VERY cool features that I should highlight right away:

Navi wheel

The Navi Wheel allow scrolling around the menu items by moving the finger tips around the rim of the scroll key clockwise or counterclockwise. This is really nice and allows quick scrolling through picture, songs or menus. Nice.

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FM Transmitter

The FM transmitter allows listening to audio files played on the device through any standard FM receiver. This is fantastic when driving a car. I used this feature couple of times and it is just great.

Just go to Menu -> Music -> FM Transmitter, set your frequency and Voila. Tune your FM radio to the same frequency and listen to your music from the phone on your FM radio. Fantastic. Please note that the back cover of the phone is actually the FM antenna for the transmitter.

Note: my phone suffered from major stability issues with the FM Transmitter when I tried to skip to the next track. The phone just froze and had to be rebooted.

Setting up my phone

In general, the phone’s settings are similar to previous versions of Nokia S60 phones. However Nokia changed the way APNs are defined.

Trying to define an APN manually I couldn’t find the Access Point menu in the phone’s settings. Instead I tried to define Access Point with the “Access Point Control” menu item which requested a PIN2 code just to find out that Nokia decided to call the APN settings “Destinations”. Hence, In order to define APN in Nokia N78 you have to go main Menu -> Tools -> Settings -> Connections -> Destinations. Here you can set up both GPRS/UMTS APNs and WiFi APNs.

Sending and Receiving Messages

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Unlike previous versions of S60 based phones, it seems that Nokia decided to include a single composer for SMS and MMS messages. So when you want compose a new message you can select between composing a “Message”, email or Audio message.

When composing a message the phone automatically changes the message type when needed. Although I can understand the reasoning behind it, in practice I found it to be confusing and the few first times I tried sending SMS with a subject the messages were not delivered since the phone was not configured to send/receive MMS messages.

A simple solution for this problem will be to remove the CC and Subject fields from the message composer by selecting options -> Message header fields and unchecking both the CC and Subject fields. This way the message will remain a text message.

Camera and Pictures

The phone features a good 3.2MP camera with CarlZeiss optics which produces very good pictures. The flash is a Led Flash but I have to say that it is quite strong although not in par with its bigger brother - the N82.

You can find below few sample pics taken with the N78. I did not use any post processing other than resizing the photos and adding the gray border.

Web Browsing

The N78 uses Nokia’s superb S60 Safari based web browser - not too much I can say about this other then, as with other S60 devices, using standard web sites with the Nokia S60 devices is almost livable and way better than the browser that comes with the Windows Mobile phones, for example.

Stability Issues

Usually most phones are stable enough on daily usage. However, the N78 I tested suffered from few stability issues that I just couldn’t ignore:

Bluetooth Car Kit

Not sure why this happens but, when I connected the phone to my Bluetooth car kit I suffered from unacceptable rate of phone reboots when I disconnected a voice call from the handset. I do hope that this problem will be solved in the future firmware upgrades.

FM Transmitter

Every time (and I do mean every time) I tried to play music using the FM Transmitter, my phone just froze when I tried to skip to the next track. I had to take out the battery to restart the phone since nothing else worked.

This is very annoying given how great this feature could be if it just worked properly on my phone. I guess this can also be fixed in a firmware upgrade (I hope).

Summary and Conclusions

The Nokia N78 has a potential to be a great phone but few problems prevent it from actually being one. Problems like stability, annoying keypad and sometimes awkward behavior. I believe that all technical problems can be fixed in future firmware upgrades but for the time being they are just too annoying to dismiss…and the keypad, well - unfortunately this cannot be fixed in a firmware upgrade.

Final Verdict: 7

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Three Days with a Phone

June 4th, 2008 Rafi Posted in Mobile Phones, Three Days No Comments »

Playing around with quite a few phones, I realized that it takes no more than couple of days to really determine how good a mobile phone is for daily use. Therefore, I started a series of posts called “Three Days with a Phone”. The target is simple - use a mobile phone for three days as my standard phone. I have to admit that I’m a pretty heavy user so I suspect that I will cover most of the phones features.

I will try to cover at least the following:

  1. Daily phone calls
  2. SMS and MMS usage
  3. email (if the phone supports some kind of email connectivity)
  4. Web browsing
  5. Camera
  6. Downloading applications to the phone
  7. Media player functionality

Please feel free to suggest additional aspects you may be interested in.

Cheers,
Rafi

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