Thursday, June 18, 2009

Nokia E75 Review


Nokia E75 comes in the design of a slide with a full keyboard. It weighs only 139 grams and has a volume of 69 grams only. It has a number key and a QVGA display.
It’s a dual mode business Smartphone with a QWERTY keyboard and a sliding hardware interface. The high end model incorporates WCDMA/HSDPA for its business efficacy. At the same time, there is the added WLAN feature which makes internet available extremely fast. It has a 2.4 QVGA screen. This enables quality videos and graphics. Though this is no music edition and is primarily meant for business yet the facility for music is quite good, Talking of camera, the 3.2 mega pixel thing takes photographs beautifully and includes the feature of auto focus. Do not look for image stabilization or HD clarity here but the pictures certainly do not stretch.
The QWERTY keyboard is better than its tiny T9 counterpart. It lacks the definition of raised keys, but makes up for this with impressively wide buttons. Each individual key is almost twice as large as keys found on competing phones. The E75 charges using a Nokia charging pin charger, and connects headphones via a standard 3.5mm socket located on the top of the headset. On the side of the handset you find two separate ports, one for USB connections and another for microSD cards. A 3.2-megapixel camera is located on the back with an LED photolight and a self-portrait mirror.
Processing is excellent, jumping in and out of different menus and accessing the various apps is punchy and without visible lag. Opening the slider turns the screen to landscape view mode and even this transition is quick enough so that you never feel like you're waiting for the phone to catch up with you.
Battery life is the let-down. In fact, let-down is too soft a term to use for our experience. The E75 comes with a 1000mAh battery, which is only two-thirds the capacity of the battery in the E71. Charging the phone to full and activating push email for one MS Exchange account and one infrequently used private account was enough to drain the battery in less than 24 hours. If you're in the habit of charging your phone overnight you'll find it back on the charger each evening, otherwise you'll find the phone powers down before you get home.

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