The best smartphone in the world? Just about
It's not quite all in the name. Nokia's revamped version of
its successful N95 do-it-all smartphone may trumpet its extra storage in its
moniker, but the N95 8GB brings more than simply more tune space to the table.
Nokia
has reworked the look of the N95, introducing a slick black casing and
enlarging its display, but at the same time Nokia has enhanced the GPS
capability of the handset, upgraded the software onboard, and boosted battery
life by adding a higher capacity power pack.
Sure, the timing of the Nokia N95 8GB's release, alongside
the N81 8GB, may suggest just a touch of iPhone-awareness in its launch
schedule. But much of the N95 8GB's appeal comes from a hefty bunch of core
features that Apple's iPhone doesn't touch on.
Once again, the new N95 comes with a benchmark-setting
5-megapixel camera, utilising Carl Zeiss optics for high quality imaging, and
is equipped with a built-in GPS receiver for satellite navigation
functionality.
This now supports A-GPS (Assisted-GPS), which uses satellite
location, in conjunction with mobile network information when necessary, to
help pinpoint the phone's location more accurately - and more speedily.
Users have the option of using the N95 8GB's 3G HSDPA mobile
data connectivity or Wi-Fi for browsing or downloading content at high speed.
As one of Nokia's flagship music player mobile phones, it's one of the first
models to arrive with support for the Nokia Music Store over the air music
download application installed.
This Symbian S60 smartphone is also geared up for Nokia's
Ovi platform of services and applications, including Nokia Video Centre access
for downloading and streaming video from a variety of sources.
Nokia's newly
revamped N-Gage gaming platform is included here too - one of the first Nseries
phones to support it. Our sample came
with demos of the sophisticated games N-Gage promises, although at the time of
writing the launch of the interactive service - which features social
networking elements as well as advanced graphics - was still delayed.
Much of the software improvements that come with the N95 8GB
are also available in the latest firmware updates available for the Nokia N95,
but there are other significant improvements here. Of course, the 8GB of
internal flash memory is a huge upgrade to the original N95's 160MB of storage.
The N95 8GB sacrifices MicroSD card expansion, which is a shame, although
there's an additional 100MB of internal dynamic memory reserved for messages,
images, contacts and other stuff.
One of the impressive improvements Nokia has made
to the design on the N95 8GB is with its larger display. Already big for an S60
smartphone, the N95's 2.6inch display has now expanded to a 2.8inch QVGA
(320x240 pixels) screen.
This 16.7-million colour display is a rich, bright
platform for appreciating the phone's impressive imaging, multimedia and
mapping capabilities. To demonstrate the
screen in its full glory, Nokia is supplying the N95 8GB pre-loaded with the
full movie version of Spider-Man 3.
It may not be your cup of tea as a film,
and you may not be convinced about movie watching on a phone's display, but we
couldn't help but be impressed with the smoothness and clarity of the playback
The overall dimensions of the N95's case haven't altered
despite the screen gain - it's a slightly bulkier 128g, measuring a
pocket-bulging 99(h) x 53(w) x 21(d) mm. Despite its size, its feels good in
the hand, with the slider mechanism particularly more-ish.
Naturally, the
two-way slider mechanism employed on the original N95, has been retained; slip
the phone one way and the phone's numberpad is revealed, the other way and a
panel of music player control keys emerge. Similarly, a secondary camera for 3G video
calling still sits above the display. What has changed is the control buttons under
the screen.
The navigation pad and surrounding keys have been reduced in size
to compensate for the added screen footprint. Side by side with the original
N95, they look kind of squashed, but in reality they're no more difficult to
use. We'd rather have the bigger screen than larger keys, that's for sure.
The
phone's numberpad is a simply arranged in a standard grid formation, and
individual keys are slightly rounded to make them stand out from each other,
making for a digit-friendly text tapping experience.
Sliding out the media
player buttons tray immediately rotates the display through 90 degrees, making
its suitable for landscape viewing of content, the browser or just the menu
system if you prefer operating it like this.
N95 owners will notice a small but
possibly significant change on the back panel of the phone - no lens cover, and
the LED flash has rotated through 90 degrees too. Although this exposes the
lens to potential scuffing, the trade-off is that the camera is can no longer
be accidentally (and battery-sappingly) engaged in your pocket or bag by a
rogue sliding cover.
The side of the phone that's the top when held like a
camera is home to the camera activation button, zoom/volume control and gallery
access keys. The other side contains an infrared port plus a standard 3.5mm
headphone jack socket.
That means you can easily upgrade from the earphones
supplied to a higher quality set of your own. And if you prefer to share your
music collection with others, the N95 8GB has stereo loudspeakers on the sides
of the phone too.
The Symbian S60 3rd edition smartphone
platform offers a flexible number of ways to access the multimedia goodies
onboard. Shortcuts at the top of the
display give you quick accesss to several features, while the phone has the
regulation Symbian menu button to take you into the full spread of applications
and features available.
A multimedia key flanking the D-pad provides a fast
route to recently viewed content, web addresses, contacts and maps, presented
in an attractive carousel of frames for each category. You can slip into the
tune player from here, too.
The increase in storage capacity for the N95 8GB
inevitably shifts attention firmly onto the phone's music player credentials.
The Nokia music player software employed on the N95 8GB has a very presentable
user interface -clear, relatively simple and easily usable.
Cover art is
supported, and tracks are organised into familiar categories - playlists,
artists, albums, genres and composers. The intuitive interface employs either
the D-pad as the control panel, or when slipped out, the dedicated music player
buttons come into play.
Playback quality
is impressive, and with plenty of detail
and tonal range, the N95 8GB produces a lovely audio performance. The supplied
earphones are pretty decent too, although you can up the quality further by
upgrading the headset to quality phones.
Our reference Sennheiser and Bose sets
made an appreciable difference. Nokia
has also included an FM radio - supporting visual radio too - as part of the
music app suite.
Stacking up tunes in the phone's 8GB memory is pretty
straightforward. Connect it to a PC with the supplied USB cable, and you've the
choice of syncing tracks and video content with Windows Media Player 11, using
supplied Nokia Nseries PC Suite software to manage tracks or simply drag and
dropping tracks with the phone in mass storage mode.
Bluetooth swapping of
tracks is also possible, As we've mentioned, you can also indulge in
downloading tracks from the Nokia Music Store, or any other compatible music
download service, including mobile operator's own-brand services.
As well as the cost of the tracks, it's worth
noting that Nokia Music Store downloads will also incur network data charges if
you're not on a flat rate data deal. You can download using Wi-Fi, however, if
that's a more cost effective option.
The improved A-GPS system used in the N95
8GB is welcome too. It's quicker to locate your position from start-up and is
as accurate as you need for navigation. The interface has been improved too,
and again is pretty intuitive, with 2D and 3D mapping and easy to use location
search options.
Nokia Maps software is loaded onto the N95 8GB; you get maps
for the whole of the UK and Ireland pre-loaded into its memory, so looking up
locations, points of interest and directions is more fluid than on the original
N95, where the Nokia Maps implementation required over the air updates of
mapping information via the mobile network.
You still need to upgrade the service if you
want to add turn-by-turn voice guidance for navigation, or add extra maps for
additional countries, travel guides and so on. Without a MicroSD card slot,
changing software to another third party Sat Nav system is more difficult than
simply slipping in another memory card, however.
Imaging is another strong suit for the N95
8GB. The 5-megapixel camera inside this phone is one of the best around, using
Carl Zeiss optics too to add a bit of extra quality. The shooter here has a wide range of settings
adjustments for refining shots.
There's a responsive autofocus system onboard
too, with a two-step capture button to ensure you're happy with the image.
The
macro facility also allow you to get crisp close up shots too. As a result, the phone can produce high
quality images, delivering plenty of detail and rich colour, while the
automatic settings adjust well for different lighting conditions even before
tweaking; we were suitably impressed.
Even with other mobile makers adding
extras like optical zooms and face detection technology to their 5-megapixel
models, the N95 8GB is still one of the best cameraphones around.
As well as
producing high quality images, the N95 8GB delivers some of the highest quality
video footage we've seen recorded by a cameraphone. Shooting in VGA quality at
30 frames per second, recordings are terrific compared to most other mobile
efforts.
Thanks to a set of TV-Out AV cable supplied with the N95
8GB, you can play back captured video directly on your television - and it
still comes across impressively. Incidentally, the TV-Out cable can be used to
view most of the phone's content and apps such as the web browser, games, video
player, and even face-to-face video calls on your TV screen.
Nokia has tuned into the online sharing potential for the
excellent quality images and video footage, by providing options to upload
video or still straight to Vox or Flickr accounts.
On the phone itself, there's Nokia's Lifeblog application
that can store all pics, video clips and messages in a blog-alike timeline,
which you can post online or archive.
As we mentioned, video playback on the phone itself is
stunning - downloaded or sideloaded footage plays extremely smoothly and the
large display makes it highly watchable.
It's a shame we weren't able to test the N-Gage games
platform on our review sample. The demos supplied - FIFA 07 and Asphalt Street
Rules 3 - look great and are addictively playable, but the resurrected N-Gage
platform promises a lot more interactivity, social interaction and sampling
before you buy.
With 3G HSDPA and Wi-Fi onboard, you can expect a good
quality browsing experience on the Nokia N958GB. It comes with a full Nokia Web
Browser, with Mini Maps overview of pages to help you navigate and scroll
around, and Flash support has been added.
The N95 8GB has a wealth of applications pre-loaded to keep
you busy, and more can be easily downloaded to this Symbian-powered smartphone
to customise its features rundown. Push email is fully supported, plus
Quickoffice and Adobe document reader apps allow you to read attachments or
files in a range of standard formats sent or copied on to the phone.
Nokia, as usual, supplies this Nseries phone with quality personal information
management software, including calendar, notes, to-do lists and a contacts
list, which are sychronisable with PCs using Nokia Nseries PC Suite software.
Stereo Bluetooth is naturally part of the spec, and there's a WLAN wizard with
a quick link on the standby screen that makes logging on to a Wi-Fi network a
breeze.
Nokia seems to have covered nearly all bases with the N95 8GB's
feature rundown, giving it plenty of all round appeal to a variety of users.
Although call quality often an overlooked item for multimedia smartphones, it's
worth noting that the N95 8GB is excellent in this respect, with a faultless
performance on voice calls.
Battery life on this upgraded N95 has been extended, with a larger capacity
battery offering up to 5 hours talktime on regular GSM networks or 3.5 hours on
3G.Standby is quoted by Nokia at up to 280 hours.
These figures represent
optimum performance without using the extensive features - an unlikely scenario
with such a temptingly specified handset. Nonetheless, the benchmark battery
life delivers up to 40 per cent more standby on 3G, and up to 25 per cent
better talktime than that quoted for the original N95, so the new power pack
gives the 8GB version a much welcome juice boost.
The Nokia N95 8GB undoubtedly packs in a
heavyweight rundown of features that few smartphones can match; its hefty size
is a reflection of what you get inside.
Far
from being a superficial upgrade to the original N95 with more memory, Nokia
has addressed some issues, refined the designed and significantly improved what
was already a formidable smartphone. This is one superb multimedia mobile.
Score
For
- Wi-Fi and 3G/HSDPA connectivity
- 8GB internal storage
- Integrated GPS antenna and onboard maps
- Sophisticated multimedia functionality
- Large, colourful 2.8-inch display
Against
- Large size
- No memory card support
- Full voice-operated satnav costs extra
- No Qwerty keyboard
Verdict
A true heavyweight in every sense of the word, and a hugely impressive smartphoneSpecification
| 3G | Yes
|
| E-mail Client | Yes
|
| GPRS | Yes
|
| HSDPA | Yes
|
| Internet Browser | Yes
|
| Playable Formats | eAAC Plus MP3 WMA AAC AAC Plus eAAC
|
| Video Capture | Yes
|
| WAP 2.0 | Yes
|
| WiFi | Yes
|
| Connectivity | USB 2.0 Infrared Bluetooth
|
| Infrared | Yes
|
| PC Connectivity | USB 2.0
|
| Smartphone OS | S60 Platform
|
| Handset Only Price | 500 GBP
|
| Built-In Camera | Yes
|
| Camera Features | Video record Auto focus
|
| Camera Resolution | 5.0 MP
|
| Digital Zoom | 10 x
|
| Memory (GB) | 8 GB
|
| Memory Card Included | No
|
| Mobile Phone Camera Type | Carl Zeiss Optics
|
| Audio Recording | Yes
|
| Speakers | Stereo
|
| Mobile Phone Frequencies | 3G/GSM850/GSM900/GSM1800/GSM1900
|
| Phone Form Factor | Candybar
|
| Quoted Standby Time | 280 Hours
|
| Quoted Talk Time | 300 Minutes
|
| SAR Level | 0.58 W/Kg
|
| Dimensions | 99 x 53 x 21 mm (w x h x d)
|
| Weight (g) | 128 g
|
| Touch Screen | No
|
| RAM Type | SDRAM
|
| Flash | Yes
|
| Expansion Slots | None
|
| OS Requirements | Symbian Series 60
|
| Operating System | Symbian OS
|
| Colour Depth | 24-bit
|
| Display Resolution | 240 x 320
|
| Display Size | 2.8 inches
|
| Display Type | LCD
|
| Max No of Colours (million) | 16 million colours
|
| Memory Card Compatibility | None
|
| FM Radio | Yes
|
| Alarm | Yes
|
| Bluetooth | Yes
|
| Handsfree Speakerphone | Yes
|
| MMS | Yes
|
| Phone Features | Calculator Built-in Microphone Bluetooth Clock/Alarm Wi-Fi WAP 2.0 Visual Radio Video Streaming Video Playback Video Capture TV over mobile (DVB-T) Time and Date Tasks Screensaver Predictive Text Photos Phonebook Organiser Music Tones Music Playback MP3/Polyphonic ringtones Games FM Radio Downloadable Games Contact List Calender
|
| Ringtones | Downloadable MP3 polyphonic
|
| SMS | Yes
|
| Touchscreen | No
|
| Vibrating Alert | Yes
|


