Since its announcement last September, the Nokia N95 has been eagerly
awaited.
Its specifications were outstanding and it was a reasonable size for an
N-series phone.
Earlier N phones had threatened to tear your pocket apart at the seams, but
not this one.
The N-series is the bells-and-whistles range from
Nokia
that is so advanced the company bills this model not as a phone but 'multimedia
computer'.
The N95 certainly crams a lot into a small slider-phone case. And even the
slider has a trick up its sleeve.
First, though, there’s that camera. At five megapixels, it’s the most
powerful yet seen on a mobile phone in the UK (the
X-Cute phone also on sale uses
a three-megapixel camera and guesses what the in-between pixels would be – so
calling it a six-megapixel camera isn’t quite right).
The
Nokia
N95 still doesn’t have an optical zoom but at least the lens is courtesy of
Carl Zeiss, and is auto-focus, rather than fixed focus. Sony Ericsson’s earlier
flagship cameraphone, the 3.2-megapixel
K800i,
was let down by an erratic lens cover which tended to pop open and drain the
battery.
This phone’s lens cover solves this by swivelling open. Images were sharp and
detailed, but there’s some shutter lag – the time between pressing the trigger
and the shot being taken – which can be annoying when taking spontaneous shots.
Since this is a 3G handset, there’s also a camera peeping out next to the
screen, ready for video-calling. Don’t all rush at once.
More interesting is the aforementioned slide mechanism. Push the screen up to
reveal a decently-sized backlit keypad with regular keys that are ridged to make
them easy to hit. Slide it back and it clicks back into place satisfyingly.
However, slide it further down and dedicated Play/pause, Stop, Next track and
Previous track buttons are revealed at the top end of the phone. The screen
image reformats to landscape and you’re into the multimedia menu.
Along with the music player, you’ll also find the video player, and on this
screen, capable of displaying 16 million colours, video really shines. The
multimedia menu also gives access to the internet, blogging software and a demo
level of a fast-moving 3D space game, System Rush.
Then there are the maps. Phones with satellite-navigation capabilities are
still rare. Nokia’s maps are bright, detailed, clear and, most importantly,
free. They cover 100 countries, some in great detail. You can use them to plan a
route, with maps or turn-by-turn written directions.
The maps don’t update quickly enough to make them a credible driving tool,
mind. Voice directions are possible, but you have to pay for them. In short,
it's not going to replace your
Tomtom.
There’s also Wifi, accessed with consummate simplicity from the main screen –
just one click to switch it on and off. The large screen is ideal for surfing
the internet and the only thing missing is a Qwerty keypad, which would make
text entry that little bit easier.
The
N95
is a spectacular piece of mobile technology. Nokia’s right, 'phone' doesn’t do
it justice. It’s not perfect, though; phone operation and menu navigation is
generally excellent, but, be warned, closing the slide mechanism doesn’t hang up
a call, as you might expect. This can’t be configured to do so, either.
Of course you can get used to this and, if you're web surfing or using sat
nav while you're making phone call you can close the slide to switch to
landscape view without ending the call, though it's still irritating.
That aside, it’s certainly the most satisfying, advanced, good-looking
N-series device yet, and its range of features, mostly brilliantly executed, is
deeply impressive.
Vista compatible: N/A
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