Showing posts with label .Nokia Asha 303. Show all posts
Showing posts with label .Nokia Asha 303. Show all posts

Dec 26, 2012

Nokia Asha 303 Software Review, The Stylish Entry

The Nokia Asha 303 made a commendable impression on me hardware-wise, its attractive, fashionable and solid, anybody holding it up close won't suspect that its an entry level phone, it feels premium and expensive. To read my full hardware review, CLICK HERE.


Touch and Type UI

The phone is currently the flagship device of the Symbian Series 40 Operating System (OS) running the Touch and Type User Interface (UI). The difference between this platform from older Series 40 versions were that its fully suited for finger touch, had a fully refreshed icons, bunch of added optimization setups, newly created interface commands like side swipes on the menu page, among others.

Being one of the recipients the earliest version of the UI, the phones touch system was yet inept. It wasn't as fluid and smooth like the Nokia Belle devices but more likely similar to the touch responsiveness of low grade versions of Android-running entry level devices, and that its more stable and responsive. The Asha 303 make use of capacitive touch technology mechanized by a 1Ghz processor.

Another drawback of the UI is the absence of multitasking support. Users need to close currently running application in order to use another. This doesn't apply though to the music player since it can be played on the background while using other features. Yes, the phone had some shortcomings but it is core-rooted on a prime and mature Symbian Series 40 thus inheriting the system's simple yet reliable performance.

Homescreen

The Homescreen was typical among all mobilephone platforms, it is full of command shortcuts that can be customize, but unlike others, only one is available for use on the phone, no left or right side swipes. Other prominent features of the Homescreen are the shortcut buttons which by default were assigned for for "Go To" and Names (Contacts) functions. "Go To" brings out another shortcut page to applications that can be modified.
 
Main Homescreen
As I mentioned earlier, the new UI got an icon rehashed, it now had the same design that of Symbian Anna and Belle. I actually like this move of Nokia, aside from platform uniformity, the new icons looks youthful and full of life, more fitting to the market bracket its being positioned to.

"Go To" Page
 Menu

The main Menu is typical among colored Symbian Series 40 variants, its icon base in a Grid format with no option to change its view to Single or List or arranged it to preferred order.

Main Menu
Another outstanding new feature of the Asha Touch UI is the side swipe in the Menu page. Users can now side swipe left or right to bring out two more additional screens. By default, the left screen draws out a Homescreen-like page where users could add application icons, reminders or contacts while the right screen is the application folder. These left and right swipe commands can be change to users preference.

Call and Messaging

Contacts is yet usual on the Asha 303 except that their was now an option to add images as part of the information list aside from the usual names, number, postal or email address, birthday, nickname, among the rest of the possibly needed details for contacts specification. Pressing one of the contacts displays the following options; call, message, email and go to web. The latter will allow users to search information online about the contacts saved webpage data, smart!


Of course, users can fully utilized the mechanical call and shortcut keys, on top of the QWERTY keypad. Pressing the call key will bring out the log file of the phone for easy access to received, dialed and missed calls.


Messaging on the other hand is the strongest feature of the phone being fully design for one. The phone, as mentioned on my Hardware Review, is one of the best mechanical QWERTY set up on its class. Writing messages on the phone is glorious that I just want to text everyone, important or not.


The inbox by default shows a conversations mode but can change to folder mode in the options. Text editor is rather easy to configure and with its lower screen being added with virtual keys for the letter case, left and right arrows and symbols. The arrow keys were very helpful actually since users could precisely point the courser on the writing space where its wanted as compared to Android system where you can only move the courser through thumb, I actually hate this system of Android.

Their is also a shortcut mechanical key for the messaging feature on top of the QWERTY keypad. Nokia didn't leave any stones unturned here for the phones messaging feature, everything is covered.

Web and Email

One of the main selling points of the new Asha range is its web and email connectivity. Nokia created the could-based Xpress Browser which is said to provide a higher speed and more affordable access to the Internet through its compression capability of up to 90% per page. It's very capable indeed in rendering full web pages and navigable enough but I still prefer to use Opera Browser being faster.


Nokia Email works ideally on the phone. Users can add any email accounts on it from different networks like Yahoo, Gmail, Ovi, etc, and it can support multiple accounts. It also supports push eMail. Overall, its not the best but very much capable.

Nokia recognized the growing trend of web connectivity towards social networks and with it a fully configured applications dedicated to such, the Nokia Social and Nokia Chat. The Nokia Social allows users to connect to Twitter or Facebook all under one Social account and all at the same time. Users don't need to log-in or log-out to this social network site every time they'll used one or another. I actually find this very useful being a Twitter fanatic, my problem with this app is its sluggish interface and limited functionality. Nokia Chat on the other hand combines all chat networks into one Chat account but unlike Social, the app supports every possible chat sites from Yahoo@ Chat, Google Talk, Facebook, Ovi Chat, Windows Live Messenger, MySpce IM, etc.


Users can make fully make use of these internet features and functions via the phone's built-in WIFI or through HSDPA, EDGE or GPRS.

Music and Radio

I've used several Symbian Series 40 devices in the past and its nice to discover that Nokia made a massive improvement of the music player on the new Asha Touch UI. One of the prominent is the ability to adjust sound equalizers, preset or not. Then theirs the ability to shuffle songs and repeat songs as part of the options, and the re-sized album image that makes use of the majority of the music player space. The Music Player can play MP3, WAV, WMA and AAC files.


One of the music players biggest drawbacks though is its inability to copy playlist from the Nokia Suite. Users will need to manually create playlists and add or remove songs on it.


Radio player is casual, its capable of detecting and playing stereo FM stations with RDS support. Finding and saving these stations is just a few press away but like any other mobilephone phones at the market at the moment, it wont work without the headset, lame!


Videos

One of the few surprises for this phone is its wide range of video support codecs. It can play MP4, H.264, H.263, WMV player and believe it or not, DivX and Xvid files. Then again due to the phones limited screen, watching video on it is not ideal as compared to tablets or full touchscreen devices.

Camera and Photo

As a still camera, the phone's 3.2MP can take casual images best preferably under bright lighting conditions. It produces the type of images clear enough for Twitter or Facebook uploads. Though camera features were limited being only fixed focus, compared to the previous versions, the Asha 303's overall camera set up was greatly improve with the current one tailored to look like its Nokia Belle siblings. The rest of the phone camera's feature includes face detection, self timer, effects (Greyscale, Sepia, Negative, Solarise) and white balance (Daylight, Incandescent, Flourescent), among others.


Camcorder is capable of capturing VGA of up to 15 frames per second.

                                           Sample images below

Port Pilar, Ozamis City, Philippines
Birhen Sa Cotta, Ozamis City, Philippines
Cotta Beach, Ozamis City, Philippines
Games

Being a phone positioned as an entry level device, majority of its market will be adolescents and young professionals making the Gaming features crucial in the competition. Nokia clearly recognizes this thats why their throwing quite a bunch of premium games with it. Out of the box, it had a full version of Climate Mission and Gedda Heddz and a trial versions of the following games, Angry Birds with 10 Free levels, Asphalt 4 Elite, Brain Challenge 3 and Bubble Bash 2. Tons of free games can also be access and downloaded via Nokia Stores.

Angry Birds

Asphalt 4 Elite

Brain Challenge 3
Concluding Thoughts

The Nokia Asha 303 has a lot of first on its belt, the very first Nokia Touch and Type device with a QWERTY mechanical keyboard, the first entry level device to have a capacitive touch among Nokia breeds and the first to offer the touch optimized Asha Touch UI on top of the Symbian Series 40 platform. I find it more fitting to be called an experimental device in terms of market positioning, an experiment that paid off wholesomely. The device became a benchmark for all entry level devices, that its possible to create a modest device that is hardware adept  and software efficient without compromising much thats why I'm giving it a go recommendation.

Also, the users mobilephone habit also plays a vital part on my overall assessment, the phone is best fitted for people who wants loves texting, chatting and all sociably driven matters with its QWERTY keyboard, on the other hand its not for those who wants bigger screens for playing games or video watching. Balance is key, it just so happen that I like enjoy both worlds.

Dec 23, 2012

Nokia Asha 303 Hardware Review, Stylishly Solid

Asha is generally defined as the cosmic principle of order, justice, righteousness, and truth, not far fetch from how Nokia depicts its current line up of Asha phones, they're bold, solid, honest and fair just like the Nokia Asha 303, the most beautiful and stylish entry level phone to date.


The phone is one of the few touch and type form factor with a full QWERTY in the market, not very customary but I consider it the best by far specially in terms of writing messages and overall usability. Nothing can beat mechanical QWERTY just yet, not even the best virtual keypad at the moment.

One of the strongest feature of the phone is its unique design and construction, the upper part is the all deep black glass apportioned with a 2.6 inch capacitive touch panel while the lower part are the glossy plastic mechanical call, message, music and end buttons clefted by 4 line mechanical QWERTY keypad at the bottom.


This QWERTY buttons were metallic and convex, and just like Nokia's early keypad versions, it's a working masterclass offering the best QWERTY set up ever created for mobilephone. The buttons are well marked and well lighted and has an excellent tactile feedback making it fun and comfortable to use, though there bit cramp and narrow for people with by thumbs, lucky I don't have one.
 
Anyways, on the right side of the phone are the volume rocker and the lock and unlock key. They're made of glossy coated plastic and very comfortable to press. No camera button on this side, quite understandable I believe because it will really feel weird taking landscape images on this phone.


The left side offers nothing more than the lanyard inlet.


On top of the phone are the 3.5mm audio jack, the microUSB port and the charger connector. The microUSB port is also capable of charging and support USB on-the-go (OTG) but with purposes totally defeated by the absence of USB and USB OTG connector out of the box.


Bottom side of the phone is purely featureless.


At the back of the phone are the 3.2MP camera, the curvy metallic battery cover and the stereo speaker which is by the way very loud. The battery of the phone is 1300 mAh BP-3L Li-Ion that could last accordingly, up to 8 hours and 10 minutes of talk time and 720 hours of standby in 2G networks or 7 hours and 10 minutes of talk time and 840 hours of standby in 3G networks and a whooping 47 hours of music playback. Base on my regular use of WIFI connection every now and then, frequent calls and text, a few games and picture taking every now and then, the phone lasts for about 3 days.


The rest of the its framework is made of moderate grade plastic but even so, the phone is very solid and classy to hold as if made with high grade materials. Its also lightweight and well contoured giving an excellent grip impression.


Overall hardware-wise, the phone is a runaway winner, I could surelt say that its the best on its class, but its not all hardware, software is also equally important. Find out how it faired on my full review on the software side of things coming up next, stay tuned!

Nov 28, 2012

Get The Perfect Christmas Gifts With Nokia’s Pre-holiday Sale

Just in time for the holiday season, Nokia is announces a pre-holiday sale with up to 50% off on 9 phones from December 1 to December 2, 2012 in select Nokia Flagship Stores.

Selected phone models starts from the entry-level Nokia 1280 which is geared for consumers that need a basic, no-frills mobile phone.

Next on the list is the Nokia X1-01, a slightly higher upgrade that provides the same simplicity but with an option to expand the memory up to 16GB with a microSD card.


Also included are select models from the Asha line, all with Easy Swap Dual SIM functionality like the entry model Asha 200 that features a full QWERTY keyboard and the Asha 202 with an intuitive touchscreen and the Asha 305, a full touchscreen phone with 40 free EA games ready for download from the Nokia Store.


A Nokia Belle full touchscreen device with 1Ghz processor, the Nokia 500 is also on the list. It has a 3.2 inch, expandable memory up to 32GB via a microSD card and 5MP camera plus all the Nokia Belle exclusive apps like Nokia Maps and Nokia Drive.


In the high-end phone segment, the Nokia Pureview 808 which boasts of a 41 Megapixel camera using Carl Zeiss optics with autofocus and xenon flash that can capture both photo and video at 1080p, is among the elite pre-sale list. The Pureview 808 also comes with 16GB internal storage and can expand its capacity to store media files up to 32GB via microSD.


Lastly, the Nokia’s Windows Phone 7.5 devices, the Lumia 800 and 900. Both models have the same unibody design with the Lumia 900 boasting a bigger 4.3” AMOLED ClearBlack display and 1.4 GHz processor.  They come in black and white and standout colors like cyan and magenta


The 2-day sale happens only in Nokia Store SM Mall of Asia, Nokia Store Festival Mall and SM Dasmarinas. First come, first serve rule applies and strictly no reservations allowed.  The sale is open for cash or straight card transactions and only those lining up in stores are entitled to avail the promo.  For more details,go to http://www.facebook.com/NokiaPhilippines.

Mar 13, 2012

Dear Graduate, would you rather QWERTY or Touch?

Celebrate your successful finish in the academe with the best reward possible: a Nokia handset! For this year’s graduates, the global leader in mobile communications presents the latest mobile offerings to help you get started in the professional world, keep you connected to the things that matter most to you, and will suit your preference and budget.

Explore your horizons with touch screen smartphones
Aim for success with Nokia 700, the most compact touch screen monoblock smartphone in the world, with 1 Ghz processor, 3.2-inch AMOLED screen ClearBlack display, 2GB of internal memory, HD video capture and a 5 megapixel full focus camera with LED flash. It is also Nokia’s most eco-friendly smartphone, which boasts of a long battery life and uses eco-friendly materials and features to minimize battery consumption. It is priced at PhP13,450.

Get a head start at work without the high price with the Nokia 500. For only PhP8,290, this entry-level colorful smartphone offers high quality and fast performance thanks to its 1 GHz processor. It also boasts of a 5-megapixel camera, HD video, great music and entertainment experiences with HD TV connectivity, preloaded Nokia Maps, and free turn-by-turn navigation.

Take a chance with a QWERTY-Touch smartphone
At only PhP6,290, you can get the best of both QWERTY and touch with the Nokia Asha 303. Enjoy a full QWERTY keyboard for fast texting, chatting and typing in your social networks, and breeze through the web and access your apps with its exceptionally responsive touch screen. Experience fast and convenient connectivity with its 1 GHz processor and the latest 3.5G and Wi-Fi support that allows you to access your social networks, chat and mail more easily. And with its dedicated music key for instant access to playlist, and preloaded apps like Angry Birds Lite, you will always be entertained.

Gear up with the latest QWERTY phones
Stay social and connected with the new Nokia Asha 302, a premium quality QWERTY phone that offers great functionality and powerful performance at only PhP5,290. It supports Mail for Exchange and other great messaging features to help you manage your email, calendar and contacts wherever you go. You can also connect to popular social networks like Facebook, and chat through WhatsApp and other IM services. You can also enjoy faster, better and more affordable access to the Internet with the Nokia Browser.

Enjoy the freedom and convenience of staying in touch with the Nokia Asha 200. Type with ease using its QWERTY keypad and access your favorite email accounts, chat quickly and update Facebook and other social networks, and download music, apps and games directly to your phone. Conveniently change SIM cards with the Easy Swap Dual SIM feature for maximum network coverage. You can do all these for only PhP3,500.

With these great new smartphones and feature phones from Nokia, you will definitely have the best commemorative gift for your educational achievement.

Mar 11, 2012

Do the QWERTY dance and win a new Nokia Asha 302

Show your love for the QWERTY this time by dancing! With Nokia’s “Do the QWERTY” Facebook promo, Nokianatics get a chance to win the new Nokia Asha 302 by doing their own version of the ‘Do the QWERTY’ Dance as shown in the Nokia TVC.


The contest is open to all Nokianatics with a Facebook account. All you have to do is make a short video of yourself or your friends showing your own Do the QWERTY Dance based on the TVC. Your video should be 30 to 90 seconds long only and must be in MP4, AVI, MOV, WMV, or 3GP format.

Go to https://facebook.com/nokiaphilippines and like the page in order to access the promo upload page. You can then upload your video entry after providing your full contact details. There’s no purchase requirement; all you need are those infectious dance moves that show just how much you love to ‘Do the QWERTY’ with Nokia!

Entries will be judged according to: Creativity – 30%; Originality – 40%; and Energy, fun and humor – 30%. Deadline of submission of entries is on March 30, 2012 at exactly 11:59 p.m.

Three entries with the craziest, funniest and most creatively choreographed QWERhttp://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gifTY Dance will be picked as winners. Winners will be announced on the Nokia Philippines Facebook Page on April 4, 2012.

The three lucky winners will each receive the latest Nokia Asha 302, which allows users to stay in touch with their friends easily via their favorite social networks like Facebook and Twitter through 3G and Wi-Fi connections. With its fast 1GHz processor, it’s easy to browse the internet to stay updated and connected. It’s also preloaded with Angry Birds Lite so you’re always entertained even on the go. With quick access to the web, you can choose from thousands of apps available on Nokia Store. All these great features in one sleek stainless steel casing that boasts of precision crafting and design.

Dance your way to a new Nokia Asha 302 now and join Nokia’s “Do the QWERTY” Facebook promo! For more information, visit https://facebook.com/nokiaphilippines.

Jan 28, 2012

1.5 Billionth Nokia Series 40 Mobile Phone, Sold

The landmark device has been purchased by a female consumer in the Brazilian city of São Paulo, (How I wish it was me so I get the spotlight!) which Nokia regards as one of the most significant milestones in its history.

The 1.5 billionth phone was a Nokia Asha 303, a stunning touch screen handset with QWERTY keypad designed for web browsing, social networking and gaming, that features pre-installed entertainment and applications such as Angry Birds Lite.

The device was purchased from a Magazine Luiza store in São Paulo by Mayara Rodrigues, a 21-year-old who loves staying in touch with friends and family through social networks.

The first Series 40 phone was the Nokia 7110 developed in 1999. Since then this family of phones has evolved to such an extent that they are considered ‘Smartphone Lite’ thanks to the innovations of the new Nokia Asha range.

Series 40 phones now blur the line between feature phones and smartphones. With recent innovations including Nokia Maps for Series 40, Nokia Browser and Web Apps, Nokia Money and Nokia Life Tools, millions of consumers have enjoyed easy and affordable access to the Internet and information for the first time, with locally relevant apps and content.

Mary McDowell, Executive Vice President for Mobile Phones at Nokia, said: “We are incredibly proud to reach this milestone. Having 1.5 billion Series 40 devices sold is a hard-to-reach mark, let alone one attainable in a single line of products. At a time when we are maintaining our commitment to connecting the next billion customers around the world – it is gratifying to consider how Series 40 devices have made mobile technology accessible and help continue to change people’s lives for the better.”

I would probably become the 2 Billionth, or maybe you, in a 500 millionth chance, so continue buying Nokia Symbian 40 phones, who knows!

Jan 6, 2012

Asha's on the rise!

Two months from its announcement at the Nokia World 2011, the Asha family surmounts in full scale invading the midrange mobilephone market in the Philippines. Available nationwide for more than 2 weeks now is Nokia Asha 303 Touch and Type that cost PhP6,450.00 and just recently, the Nokia Asha 200 that cost PhP3,500.00 on retail stores. Both phones are on are now up for grabs across the country on different color variants.

The Nokia Asha 303 lands second of my list as the best mobilephones for 2011 being no less than the most value mobilephone handset in the market at the moment. For its affordable price, Nokia manage to squeeze in powerful specs and features such as the 1Ghz processor, 2.6inches TFT capacitive touchscreen, full QWERTY keyboard, WLAN, 3.2MP camera, MP3 and MP4 player, popular games among others. Its almost a smartphone "per se" with only a few feature missing like multitasking and document viewer, other than that its the most outstanding smartphone on its class. Do I need to mention that the phones design is one of my favorite as well? Without a single doubt, this phone is one of my most recommended mobilephone of all time.

The Nokia 200 on the other hand is the first QWERTY Dual SIM phone from Nokia. It cannot be denied that Dual SIM devices are now becoming a mainstream with more and more people using more than just one SIM. The phone simply completes the crave of this users who prefer to enjoy two worlds at a time under one simple device that can do intelligent stuffs. On the specs sheet and feature beside its very affordable price are the 2.4inches, 256 Thousand color resolution screen, 2MP camera, Nokia Browser with Adobe Flash Lite, Bluetooth, Stereo FM with RDS, MP3 and MP4 player, popular games among others.

Asha is on the rise! Be part of the trend.

Dec 31, 2011

Top 10 Mobilephones of 2011

It’s time ladies and gentlemen for the dreaded yearly countdown of the Top 10 best mobilephones of the year. Last year was unexpected because my runaway winner is a mid-range device with a not so powerful specifications. What it has is the total packaging from being useful to being the most affordable without sacrificing to much features. You can read the blog post HERE.


So which phones will make it to the elite this year? Could it be as mentally challenging or emotionally disturbing just like last year? Read on…

10. Cheery Mobile Magnum HD

This is a living proof that high spec's phones should not be expensive and unreachable for the mass market. For just PhP15,600, you will get the following, 4.1 inches TFT WVGA Capacitive screen, Android Gingerbread, 1Ghz processor, 5.0 MP Camera with Flash, 720p HD Recording, WIFI among other specs that you can find in a PhP27,000 Android devices, but less the hardware of course being not so reliable with a possibility of a broken signal or a broken phone itself in 6 months or less. Ask the Cherry Mobile owners, they knew better.

9. Nokia E6

I have been very vocal about the phone being my dream form factor, QWERTY plus capacitive touchscreen, and up to now it still is but the problem with the phone was that, it doesn’t have the jest or the "buy me" factor that’s why it’s almost on the bottom of my list. First and foremost, the screen lacks the size that I would have wanted it to be, 2.46 inches is way off the normal screen size. It would have been better if it has the least 3.0 inches with a 360 x 640 pixels so it’s compatible to all applications for Symbian Anna. Secondly, it has a sub-par camera with its 8MP and Full Focus feature taking regular photos only, but nonetheless, it has a superior hardware cover, the best business apps in the market and the best value price. Nokia just have to add a few tweaks here and it will be perfect.

8. Sony Ericsson Xperia Arc S

If we talk about the looks, this phone is the runaway winner! It really look beautiful but holding the phone and using it speaks the other way around. It’s uncomfortable to use and Timescape User Interface (UI) on top of the Android Operating System is rather confusing than helpful. In fact among the Android phones, Sony Ericsson’s UI implementation is the most boring and unattractive. Have anyone even care to tell them that it’s the main reasons why they lag behind in the Android race? But nonetheless the phone has the following specs to brag about, 4.2inches LED-lit capacitive screen, 1.4Ghz SnapDragon Processor, 8MP autofocus camera with HD video recording, WIFI with DLNA among others. And it cost a fortune as well.

7. Motorola Droid RZAR

Yes it’s the RZAR branding alright, that’s why it made it to my Top 10 list. I never question the hardware of a Motorola phone, it will definitely last long unlike any Samsung devices. Motorola made it sure that the phone inherits the character that made the RZAR line-up famous a decade ago, thin dimension yet very solid. And rather, Motorola phones must be the only choice for anybody getting an Android device because it’s now own by Goggle and if there’s one company that Goggle favor in the future, it will be their own.

6. Nokia Lumia 800

This phone is indeed the first real challenge to the Apple iPhone and Androids because the fanboys did all it best to discredit the phones presence. Come to think of it, they belied the phones sale standing, they tried to inculcate the thought that it’s uninteresting and they want it to be dead before it gets even release worldwide, how stupid was that? Maybe they just can’t accept the fact that it’s better than iPhone when it comes to user experience and Android when it comes to system implementation. I’m not fully sold to the phone rather being a copycat to Nokia N9’s hardware design but I’m interested in getting one being very much talked about. Agree?

5. Samsung Galaxy Y S5360

The phone has the unreliable Samsung hardware that might broke after 6 months of use but hey, its is dead cheap for a device with the following specs and features, 3 inches capacitive touchscreen, 860Mhz ARM processor, Android Gingerbread, 2MP camera, WIFI among others. I call it the first touchscreen phone that is truly for the masses. But again as mentioned earlier, buy in your own risk.

4. Amazon Kindle Fire

Will it’s not a true phone in real sense but you can call anybody using the device via Skype or other social applications so its phone in technical sense. Confuse, I am too but it made it as far as number 4 on my best lists for the year. The baseline is of course the price being affordable but it gained more weight being technically good and feature-riched. It has the specs that most of the tablet costing PhP27,000 or more with only a quarter of its price. Just count the difference!

3. Apple iPad 2

That’s a tablet to, moron! But again it’s a phone base on my definition. So why the iPad2 then? Well among the tablet in the market at the moment, this device is no less than the crown jewel being unchallenged by let say Samsung Galaxy Tab or Acer Iconia or Blackberry Playbook when it comes to user experience and features and you know the most hilarious thing about these competing tablets? They are priced the same as that of the iPad2 even if they are less in everything else! How stupid was that?

2. Nokia Asha 303

The phone made it almost to the number one spot by simply becoming the phone that Nokia E6 should have been hardware-wise, a bigger screen and undoubtedly stylish. Its the phones hardware and form factor that made this phone outstanding and the specs and the price were just supporting attributes even though it only cost PhP6,400 and has the following features to brag about, capacitive touchscreen, I GHz of processor, 3.2MP camera, WIFI among others. It must be further improved by adding more size to the screen, like .4 inches more?

1. Nokia N9

Yes, ladies and gentlemen, I’m still bounded by the charm of Nokia N9 two months since my free trial with it ended. It just proved how alluring the phone is because it continuously hunt me with its enigma; the superior hardware, unibody design, curve glass display, the bright AMOLED screen with ClearBlack Display technology that makes the icons looks afloat, the three panel system that’s so easy to use, among others, it’s like a phone that was made almost to perfection, only that its running Meego, the Operating System that will cease to exist in two years’ time or more. But I don’t care if it does, as long as I get satisfaction I need when I’m using it. Would that be the best thing that matters most?


Comments and violent reactions are welcome.

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...