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Cell phones > Expert reviews > Nokia N810 Silver
Nokia N810 Silver Review - Design & Features
Editor Rating: N810 is fashioned primarily from metal, finished in a smooth two-tone grey color scheme, and is a sharp looking piece of hardware an understated, luxurious sort of way. By way of comparison, the device measures up at 72 x 128 x 14 mm and 190g, or slightly larger and considerably heavier than an AT&T Tilt, which is just about the bulkiest smartphone currently offered by a US carrier. But N810 has a 4-plus inch screen and remarkably slim profile, and so the overall effect is that of a device that packs a lot into a small space, and carries with it the heft of a well-built machine. The tablet exhibited no creaks, loose joints, or flimsy parts of any sort in my testing. Kudos to Nokia’s industrial designers in that regard.
With the QWERTY board slid shut, N810 is basically a web tablet built around a 4.13” WVGA touchscreen display. The screen’s 800 x 480 resolution yields more pixels than all but the most exotic of smartphones - far more than iPod Touch’s 480 x 320 display - and provides ample real estate for full-on Web browsing and video watching. For some reason the panel tops out at 65,000 colors and not the 262k or 16 Million afforded by some of Nokia’s phones. The 65K limitation resulted in color banding across gradients, but only once in a great while. Display brightness is regulated by an ambient light sensor located on front panel just above a VGA camera designated primarily for Web conferencing applications. There are two buttons on the front of the device and four more - along with a sliding lock switch, multi-function indicator light and stylus slot - along the top panel. These six keys control volume, zoom/full screen image modes, power on/off, and some navigational features. Most of what you’ll do with the N810 you can do via the touchscreen; the buttons are mainly there as hardware shortcuts for oft-used tasks, like switching between full screen mode and the application menu. The full screen button, in particular, was super-responsive and handy for reading long blog posts and articles on the Web without any screen clutter from the OS’s menus. The bottom panel of the device houses a spring-loaded battery latch and a miniSD memory card slot protected by a tethered plastic cap. On the N810’s sides you’ll find a 3.5mm headphone jack, miniUSB and AC adapter ports, and side-firing stereo speakers, and there’s an integrated microphone hidden in there somewhere. Front-firing speakers would have provided a better stereo audio experience, but the side-mount design is a decent compromise between form and function. An integrated kickstand props the tablet upright on a table at your choice of three viewing angles (great for watching videos) and folds flush against the back panel when not in use. N810 comes pre-loaded with a suite of applications that make good use of its efficient hardware design. The Mozilla-based Web browser can handle full Flash 9 and Web 2.0 content, so you can watch YouTube videos, check your Gmail, and otherwise do most of what you’re used to doing in a desktop-class browser. A Skype client makes use of the Webcam, microphone, and speakers for Web-based voice and videoconferencing. Nokia Maps utilizes the internal GPS chip, and a car mount is included so you can dock N810 on your dashboard and use it like a standalone GPS unit, which is a thoughtful touch (Wayfinder navigation works with the device but requires a paid subscription). The preloaded media player can handle almost all varieties of audio and video tracks and streaming content, and if the 2GB of internal memory isn’t enough for all of your multimedia content, you’ve got that miniSD port at your service. Really, the N810 packs an enormous amount of functionality into such a small device. About the only thing missing here is a cellular radio, though Nokia makes it clear that the N810 was made to tether via Bluetooth to your 3G-enabled Nokia cell phone for Net access without a WiFi connection. Again, geeky-cool but not necessarily for Joe Consumer. The N810’s $479 MSRP price tag slots it somewhere in the neighborhood of high-end smartphones and ultraportable notebook computers like the ASUS eePC.
Reviews by manufacturerVerizon Wireless, Sprint PCS, Nokia, Samsung, Sony Ericsson, Motorola, LG, Sanyo, HTC, Palm, BlackBerry, Sharp, Pantech, BenQ, Apple, Eten, o2Thursday, August 14, 2008
HOW MUCH IS THIS PHONE !! Thursday, August 07, 2008looks like an ipod touch alternative. i still choose the touch cause no stylus and there is an accelerometer :). Tuesday, August 05, 2008The N810 it not a phone. Friday, June 27, 2008did you talk to sprint about the instinct browser an email that sucks, whats up with that Friday, June 27, 2008hi...can email attachements be viewed on the Instinct? how about the Iphone? thx. Friday, June 27, 2008love your site, great to learn more about everything, thanks for being there. i found you by accident. Friday, June 27, 2008You can do custom ring tones thru 3rd party services such as Myxer.com. There are already Instinct Support Forum sites that have sprouted up prior to the Instinct's release ie: instinct-samsung.com.
You can customize the wallpaper on the clock page while the phone is locked.
Just a few added notes... Friday, June 27, 2008hey i like ur video it showed me alot and now i want to buy it
but the only thing that i did see is if that how many channels dose the instict sprint tv have ??
if u could send me the answer or but a video on it i will appriciate it Friday, June 27, 2008Noah-great info and reviews. Q: Iphone and Instinct-can you view emial attachements on both-such as word docs or pdfs? thx Monday, June 16, 2008how much is this phone Tuesday, May 13, 2008HOW MUCH IS THIS PHONE !! IS IT WITHCENTENNIAL |
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