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| Posted: 24 Mar 2009 10:04 AM PDT This review of the Nokia E75 is the first par of the entire review of the phone and focuses on Form Factor/Design and Keypad/Display of the phone. Before going through this review, you might want to check out the Unboxing of the E75, E75 Gallery and the First Impressions about the E75. Form Factor/Design - As highlighted earlier, the Nokia E75 feels sleek, heavy and solid in hand as compared to the E71. The device is not as broad as the E71 but takes more of its shape from the E65 slider that also belongs to the Nokia E Series. E75 is sleek and you will be surprised that the body houses two keypads, one alphanumeric and one QWERTY, that slides out from the side of the phone.
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| Nokia 5800 XpressMusic: Unboxing cum Live Pics Posted: 24 Mar 2009 09:51 AM PDT Got this today from Nokia India. Better late than never. I am still in the process of reviewing my Nokia E75 and today I got the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic. The phone I was waiting to review. Wont give much details on the phone as you guys must have already read a lot about it. So just enjoy the pics and a detail review will follow soon. Also, keep an eye on the Nokia E75 review, which will be coming soon.
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| Samsung Launches Cute and Environmental Friendly Phone, Samsung Tobi Posted: 24 Mar 2009 06:30 AM PDT
Samsung Taiwan has launched a new cute looking phone, the Samsung S3030 a.k.a Samsung Tobi. The slider phone is made of anti-allergic non toxic environmental friendly acrylic material. The cartoon charecter on the back can be changed. The phone has a SOS alarm, support for Bluetooth chat room, 1.3 mega pixel snapper, built-in FM radio, MP3 playback, built-in mobile phone tracker and 15MB built-in memory expandable up to 8GB. The phone is targeted at 8 year old kids. The phone will be available in Cool Green (green black), Flying Blue (blue), sweet red (red and white) colors. The SOS feature on the phone lets the user activate a very loud alarm when he or she is in trouble, guess that is why its for kids as they can use the phone to protect themselves. Check out the launch pics below. [Via]
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| Video: Samsung Beat Music Phone Demo on Big Screen Posted: 24 Mar 2009 03:23 AM PDT Samsung launched the Beat Disc Music phone at the Mobile World Congress 2009. The video below highlights the DJ features of the phone on the big screen. Enjoy!! |
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The phone's design feels good in hand as its edges are rounded off.
The stainless steel battery cover adds some bling to the E75 and also makes it look good and pricey. The QWERTY keypad slides out smoothly from the side and if you are holding the phone for the first time, you will hardly realize that there is a second keypad, as the thickness of the phone does not give away its secret keypad housed below. The backside of the phone has a 3.2 mega pixel snapper, there is also a small speaker at the backside adjacent to the camera. The volume and camera button on the right handside are easy to find and operate. The left hand side of the phone has provision for memory card and the microUSB port. The microUSB port is easy to open but the memory card slot's cover is a tough nut and you feel as if you will break it while opening. This time Nokia, has kept the top and bottom of the phone clean with just a 3.5 mm standard head phone jack on the top and a charging socket at the bottom. The power button has been removed from the top and it is coupled with the "Call Reject"/"Call over" button on the main key pad.
Keypad/Display - The alphanumeric keypad of the E75 is the one you will be using by the time you get used to the QWERTY keypad. I found the main keypad a bit disappointing. There is no gap between the Keys and you will end up pressing the wrong keys at times. The D Pad is also ok and not that great, feels less responsive at times when you are using it, makes you feel if you have actually pressed it. Unlike the E71, where the keys are a bit elevated, the keys on the alphanumeric keypad of the E75 are flat. Some functions like Call key and Calendar; Email and Call reject share same keys, which is a bit annoying at times. Overall, the main alphanumeric keypad is ok and nothing great. Once you get used to it, you might feel comfortable in using it. This is just my take on the E75's keypad, some people might find it easy and handy to use as compared to the keypads of their previous phones.
Coming to the QWERTY keypad, I think that, Nokia has really worked on getting the QWERTY keypad into the daily use of mobile phone users. This one slides out from the left side of the phone and once I was used to this keypad I found it really handy and was not able to imagine the E75 without it. The QWERTY keypad on the E75 is broad and the keys are big as compared to the QWERTY on the E71 or the E63. Big keys and broad size make the keypad really handy and easy to use when it comes to typing messages, emails, browsing Internet and editing documents. I think, Nokia E75's QWERTY keypad will be its main USP when it reaches to an enterprise mobile user, especially if he/she is annoyed with the cramped up QWERTY keypads you get on most of the enterprise phones these days. The QWERTY keypad of the Nokia E75 simply rocks!!!
Nokia E75's display is crisp and clean. The 2.4 inch QVGA screen does a real good job when it comes to brightness. The brilliant screen of the E75 will be its other USP apart from the ROCKING QWERTY keypad. The E75 is the first E Series device with S60 V3 FP2 and the battery back up is also impressive, though the phones churns out such high resolution screen graphics. You can also switch the phone into a power saver mode to retain the battery life at times when charging seems a distant dream.






















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