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Nokia N96 review

Our Rating :
Price when reviewed : £432
inc VAT SIM-free; £130 on £35 per month, 18-month contract

Specifications

Symbian 9.3, 2.8in 240×320 display

http://www.totalpda.co.uk

The N96 differs from many recent smartphones in having neither a touch screen nor a keyboard.

In fact, it’s not much different in design from its predecessor, the N95. Our main gripe with the N95 was poor battery life. Thankfully, the N96 is far superior in this regard, lasting an impressive 17 hours during testing.

This is the first mobile handset to offer video downloads from the BBC’s iPlayer. The iPhone can stream iPlayer content, but is unable to store it for later. This makes the N96 perfect for commuters, as you can download programs over WiFi at home and watch them on the move later. It also has a built-in Digital Video Broadcasting Handheld (DVB-H) TV tuner, although no mobile TV channels in the UK take advantage of this yet.

The handset has dedicated playback controls, and you can use your own headphones thanks to the standard 3.5mm socket. An in-line remote control lets you pause music or video when you take a call. It has 16GB of built-in memory as well as a microSDHC slot, so you can store plenty of downloaded TV. The 5-megapixel camera has a twin-LED flash and produces some impressive images.

The build quality is less impressive, however, and the plastic casing feels less rigid than the iPhone’s. The flexible plastic keypad has flat keys with little travel, and using alpha-numeric keys to enter text on web pages and emails is very slow. The inability to charge the phone over USB is also aggravating. One nice touch is the keypad locking switch, which is much more convenient than a key combination

The Nokia web browser renders pages quickly, but you can’t view it in landscape mode unless you slide the screen down, hiding the keypad. You can view office documents, but to edit them you need to buy a £23 upgrade for Nokia’s Quickoffice suite. Email is easy to set up for any popular webmail service, and supports POP3 email and Microsoft Exchange.

Nokia Maps shows your current location, and you can search for destinations and plan routes. If you pay extra for the Drive or Drive&Walk licences (around £25 and £65 per year respectively) you can use the N96 as a dedicated satnav. This provides voice-prompt navigation commands and icons for points of interest along the route. It’s useful but more expensive in the long run than buying dedicated satnav.

With its future-proofed TV tuner and iPlayer download support, the N96 is ideal for TV addicts. We can’t recommend it for most users over the iPhone, though, as it lacks its incredible build quality, growing software range and slick interface.

Details

Price £432
Rating ****

Hardware

Main display size 2.8in
Native resolution 240×320
Second Display No
CCD effective megapixels 5.0-megapixel
Flash 2x LED
Video recording format MP4, 3GPP, H.264, H.263, Real Video
Connectivity Bluetooth, WiFi, USB
GPS yes
Internal memory 16384MB
Memory card support microSDHC
Memory card included 0MB
Operating frequencies GSM 850/900/1800/1900, 3G 900/2100
Wireless data WCDMA
Size 103x55x20mm
Weight 125g

Features

Operating system Symbian 9.3
Microsoft Office compatibility Word/Excel/PowerPoint/PDF viewers
Email client POP3/IMAP
Audio format support MP3, WMA, AAC, eAAC+
Video playback formats MP4, 3GP, Real Video
FM Radio yes
Web Browser Nokia Web Browser
Accessories headset and remote, USB data cable, travel mains adapter, car charger, TV-out cable
Talk time 3.6 hours
Standby time 9.2 days
Tested battery life (MP3 playback) 17h 6m

Buying Information

SIM-free price $432
Price on contract £130 on £35 per month, 18-month contract
Prepay price $432
SIM-free supplier www.totalpda.co.uk
Contract/prepay supplier www.expansys.com
Details http://europe.nokia.com

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