Posts tagged Nokia N8
Nokia X7 smartphone with updated Symbian Software…
Apr 13th
With 2 new smartphones from Nokia, it is showing no immediate signs of letting up on its Symbian operating system.
The E6 and the X7, both announced today, will be the first smartphones to ship with Symbian Anna, the latest update to the mobile operating system, which is used primarily by Nokia. Earlier this year, however, Nokia signed a deal with Microsoft that will make Windows Phone 7 the principal operating system on its smartphones, with the shift the Microsoft OS starting as early as next year.
Nokia has officially taken the wraps off its new X7 smartphone – an entertainment and mobile gaming focused unit that packs a 4-inch, 16:9, AMOLED capacitive touchscreen, 8 megapixel camera and 720p video capture into nicely chiseled stainless steel casing that’s less than half an inch (11.9 mm) thick. Along with the (also freshly announced) QWERTY keyboard equipped E6, the X7 is the first Nokia device to run on the updated Symbian “Anna” platform which introduces a raft of enhancements including new icons, improved text input, faster browsing and a spruced-up version of Ovi Maps.
Though the 4-inch screen size trumps some of the obvious competition, the X7 still seems a little light on pixels with its 640 x 360 resolution. The 8 megapixel camera is enhanced by a face recognition software and a dual LED flash, with 2x digital zoom available for still images and 3x digital for video.
Under the bonnet there’s a 680MHz CPU with 256MB RAM and the phone will ship with an 8 GB microSD card (supporting up to 32 GB), includes GPS receivers, an accelerometer for screen orientation and gaming. There is also 802.11 b/g/n WiFi and a 3.5mm audio jack.
“With these new products and more Symbian devices and user enhancements coming in the near future, we are confident we can keep existing Nokia smartphone customers engaged, as well as attract new first-time and competitor smartphone users,” Jo Harlow, head of Nokia’s Smart Devices business, said in a statement today.
Nokia X7′s key specifications:
1. Size: 119.7 x 62.8 x 11.9 mm
2. Weight (with battery): 146 g
3. Screen size: 4″
4. Resolution: 16:9 nHD (640 x 360 pixels) AMOLED
5. 16.7 million colors
6. Capacitive touch screen
7. Orientation sensor (Accelerometer)
8. Proximity sensor
9. Ambient light detector
10. Integrated GPS, A-GPS receivers
11. Ovi Maps with free car and pedestrian navigation
12. Wi-Fi network positioning
13. Accelerometer for correct orientation of display
14. Talk-time (max): 6 h 30 min (GSM), 4 h 30 min (WCDMA)
15. Standby time (max): 450 h (GSM), 450 h (WCDMA)
16. 8 GB microSD card included, support for up to 32 GB with an external MicroSD memory card (with hot swap)
17. Bluetooth 3.0
18. Micro USB 2.0 connector and charging
19. 3.5 mm Nokia standard audio connector
20. FM Radio
21. Dedicated graphics processor with OpenGL 2.0 enables 3D graphics
22. Java games
23. Handwriting recognition for Chinese
24. Flash Lite 4
25. 8 megapixel camera
26. Fullscreen 16:9 viewfinder with easy on-screen touch controls
27. 3rd generation dual LED flash
28. Face recognition software
29. Focal length: 4.3 mm
30. Aperture: F2.8
31. Zoom up to 2x (digital) for still images
32. Zoom up to 3x (digital) for video
33. Video capture in 720p 25 fps with codecs H.264, MPEG-4
34. Shoots 16:9 videos in HD
35. Settings for scene, video light, white balance, color tone.
Nokia has also announced that the Symbian Anna update will become available as standard on for Nokia N8, Nokia E7, Nokia C7 and Nokia C6-01 devices.
Nokia X7 Price in India :
Price of Nokia X7 is Rs. 25,000 (380 Euros) approx. in India. Check other Nokia mobile phones, Click Pricesbolo.com.
Nokia: Some N8 phones have power issues
Nov 29th
The success of the N8 — Nokia’s first real challenge to Apple’s iPhone, more than three years after its launch — is seen as crucial to Nokia’s profit margins in the current quarter, analysts say.
Nokia sales chief Niklas Savander said “a limited number of N8 users” were facing the problem of their phones switching off, and they are not able to turn them on again.
A spokesman said the fault was due to a problem in production, which has since been fixed.
The fault in the power management stems from the way in which the engine component — which includes most of the technology in the phone, excluding covers and batteries — in the Nokia N8 was being installed.
“If you look at the total number it is a small number,” Savander said in a video on company website.
The N8, first to use Nokia’s new Symbian software, was originally scheduled to reach consumers in June. In April, Nokia warned the software renewal would take longer than expected due to quality problems, and said that the model would reach consumers by the end of September.
The model was finally in the shops last month price Rs. 22,999/-
A weak offering of smartphones and problems with software were seen as the main reasons for Nokia replacing Chief Executive Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo with Stephen Elop from Microsoft.
The N8 stands out among its rivals for its 12 megapixel camera, but has a slower processor than Samsung’s leading model, the Galaxy S, and Apple’s latest iPhone.
Nokia N8 in drop test
Nov 11th
The heartbreaking sight of a pair of Nokia N8s undergoing the infamous drop test, simulating your phone falling from the height of your shirt pocket onto a hard surface dozens of times.
The big review on Nokia N8
Oct 25th
Nokia to cut jobs as it tries to catch up to rivals
Oct 22nd
Berlin: Nokia, the largest cellphone maker in the world, said on Thursday that it would cut 1,800 jobs as it tries to streamline operations and speed up delivery of new software and better Web services for its besieged smartphones.
The job cuts, which amount to 3 per cent of the core work force, came as Nokia, the leader in basic cellphones and smartphones, reported third-quarter earnings of €529 million, or $742 million, a figure that was much better than expected.
Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg had predicted a profit of €182.5 million, after a loss of €559 million a year earlier.
Taking into account the non-controlling interests that Nokia holds in outside ventures, the profit was €322 million for the quarter.
Sales of Nokia smartphones rose 16 per cent, with strong demand from China, Latin America and North America. Overall sales rose 5 per cent in the period to €10.27 billion from €9.81 billion a year earlier.
In his first extensive public comments since being named president and chief executive, Stephen Elop said the job cuts were necessary as the cellphone industry goes through “a remarkably disruptive time.”
Recent results demonstrate “that we must reassess our role in and our approach to this industry,” said Mr Elop, the former head of Microsoft’s business software division. Mr Elop, a Canadian, became Nokia’s first non-Finnish chief executive on September 21.
Mr Elop said he intended to refocus Nokia to eliminate internal barriers that may have held up new features for the company’s handsets. Three former Nokia executives have publicly blamed the company’s formidable bureaucracy for stifling innovation.
“Nokia has been characterized as an organization where it’s too hard to get things done, whether internally or externally,” Mr Elop said. “But the board has vested in me the mandate to lead Nokia through this change. This marketplace is moving very rapidly and we as a company have to move even faster to ensure that we lead in this market environment.”
While he said the company was not likely to make major announcements before an investor’s conference in February, Mr Elop gave a glimpse into his leadership style, which appears to be marked by increased openness with investors and the press.
In the future, Mr Elop said, Nokia would no longer announce the introduction of new handsets until they were actually ready for delivery. The company seemed to create problems for itself this year by introducing the Nokia N8, its newest touchscreen device, and then finding itself forced to announced repeated delays for its delivery.
Along those lines, Mr Elop said Nokia would not be releasing its first phones using a new operating system it is developing with Intel, called MeeGo, until 2011. Nokia had previously suggested that the first MeeGo devices might be ready by Christmas.
Mr Elop said he also intended to make it a personal priority to bolster Nokia’s market share in the United States, which slipped to just 8.1 per cent in April, according to comScore, a research firm based in Reston, Virginia. That is down from 35 per cent in 2002.
Nokia, which is based in Espoo, Finland, has seen its share price decline by more than half since Apple introduced its iPhone in 2007, a device that set a new standard for touchscreen maneuverability that Nokia has struggled to match.
Sales of Apple’s iPhones are growing faster than Nokia’s vastly larger but less profitable line-up. That has caused some analysts to speculate that Nokia may even be considering abandoning its attempts to improve its own operating system, Symbian, in favor of systems developed by Microsoft or Google, the maker of the Android operating system.
But during the conference call, Mr Elop appeared to rule out that possibility, saying that the decision to use a third-party operating system from a rival would leave Nokia little room to differentiate itself from the competition and would cut off new sources of profit. As margins on mobile phones are squeezed, makers are increasingly relying on new revenue from software and services sold on smartphones.
“When you consider the other alternatives, it is so far unclear to me how we could maintain differentiation” by using a third-party operating system, Mr Elop said.
Mr Elop described the job cuts, which will target software development and Web services, as a way to improve the agility and responsiveness of those departments, which have been criticized for allowing Apple, Google and others to take the lead in innovation. Nokia’s Ovi Store trails far behind Apple’s App Store in the number and types of applications.
In a related announcement, Nokia said it would use a new software application development tool called Qt to speed the creation of applications for its Symbian and MeeGo handsets.
One analyst said that Nokia’s attempts to accelerate the development of its Symbian operating system and improve its Web business are key to defending its position.
“We have been waiting and waiting and waiting for Symbian to deliver something more compelling and this is a sign, I think, that Nokia is now willing to do anything it takes to make that happen,” said Carolina Milanesi, an analyst at Gartner in London.
Nokia N8 launch delayed till October to do some final amends
Sep 29th
Nokia N8 was earlier stated to be released by the end of this month but now a new launch date has been officially announced by Nokia and Nokia N8 will now be released in October. Nokia decided it by looking at the strong pre-orders demand they have received and also because they want to make some final amendments. Nokia N8 is allegedly strongest ever Nokia’s smartphone and no wonder people are excited to see as early as possible. According to some folks Nokia doing it because it might even be just the impetus they needed to hold out for the upcoming Nokia E7 that also is a class smartphone. Official wordings from Nokia are below.
The amount of preorders has exceeded our expectations and we are working hard to deliver the Nokia N8 to the market. In some markets, we had planned to start delivering the Nokia N8s to our pre-order customers by the end of September. To ensure a great user experience, we have decided to hold the shipments for a few weeks to do some final amends. We’re thrilled with the response that we’ve had to the Nokia N8 and assure everyone who’ve pre-ordered it already that it’ll be worth the wait! We expect consumers to get their Nokia N8s during October.




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