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Agentless Backup is Not a Myth

Photo opportunities

Alas, the camera doesn’t have the Carl Zeiss lens you’ll find on the pricier Nokia models but it does an okay job nonetheless. Colour balance is generally accurate (though it can get a bit saturated when using the flash) and images tend to be fairly sharp.

Sample Shots

Nokia C7

Click for a full-resolution crop

Nokia C7

Click for a full-resolution crop

Nokia C7

Click for a full-resolution crop

Nokia C7

Click for a full-resolution crop

It starts up fairly quickly, about four seconds, and the settings allow you to create your own default set-up for flash, sharpness, contrast and the like. There’s also face, but not smile detection.

Nokia C7

Customer Success Testimonial: Recovery is Everything

Next page: On display

Fixable versus built-in faults

Well, iPhone 4 was a near perfect execution, but with a fundamental design flaw that really couldn't be overlooked by any balanced reviewer. 75% is a fair reflection of this. With an adequate antenna design, it should have been a 90%+ product (I'd drop a few percent for the poorer ergonomics compared to the 3GS). Unfortunately, as a hardware flaw--- and a design flaw at that--- the phones are stuck with the problem. Yes, a silicone bumper fixes it, but it does dent Apple's reputation for being utter perfectionists.

The Nokia Symbian3 phones are the opposite - near flawless hardware design and execution, masked by a very dated user experience. 75% is a fair reflection of this too.. With a more modern and streamlined UI and shell, this would be a 90%+ product too.

The difference between them is that Nokia have an opportunity to fix their problem, and very importantly, to fix it for the people who have already bought these phones. They have promised a fully new UI in mid-2011 to coincide with (and copy the look and feel of) their MeeGo phones, but before that, in February, a new browser and other feature improvements are due.

Delivery has been a problem for Nokia before, though, so let's wait and see...

9
1

Symbian^3

Didnt want a droid or a money pit phone so went for an N8 fully aware of whats been written about the OS. Knowing the hardware itself is top drawer is not a bad place to start when looking for a reliable phone.

Re the connectivity pop ups, personally, I quite like knowing what my phone is doing data wise, and dont feel it encroaches on the experience at all.

My conclusion so far is that if you like playing with settings, S^3 is all good. Im looking forward to the Q1 update to see what that brings, but its not half as terrible as many reviews seem to make out. (already had a minor update a few days ago that makes the whole phone feel snappier).

Same as anything new to you SW wise, within a few days of using it, things become much easier / understandable once you know where to look.

Why no mention of the built in FM Transmitter? thats a very useful feature if your in the car a lot & no accessory required.

Opera Mobile / Mini for web browsing obviously, although the symbian version is flash enabled for the youtubes iplayer requirements.

Nokia are getting there again, their internal failings and odd management structure are well documented but once that starts getting fixed & its looking like it, I dont think I'll be going back to SE any time soon.

8
1

Isn't it the GUI not the OS you should be moaning about?

I have the Nokia N8 and think it's great. Out of the box, it is a bit, well clunky, but that's the GUI, not the OS.

I've also downloaded the SPB GUI app and it transforms the phone. Literally transforms it.

Up to 5 homescreens, individually movable widgets, far smoother scrolling. It is like having a totally different phone.

If a third party can deliver such a stunning interface, why can't Nokia?

At about £25 it's an expensive app, but worth it.

It shouldn't though, require an app...

7
0

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