Nokia 7710 |
| Mobile Phones - Nokia | ||||
| Sunday, 01 June 2008 20:28 | ||||
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The Nokia 7710 widescreen smartphone is certainly one of the most innovative PDA-phones. It includes a 1 megapixel camera, FM radio, Bluetooth, Web browsing, email and organiser functions. However, at 189 grams and measuring 128 x 69.5 x 19mm, don't harbour any illusions about carrying the 7710 in a pocket; we found it difficult enough to carry around in one hand. Using all the non-phone functions of the 7710 involves holding it horizontally, much like a portable game console, and entering data using the supplied stylus and buttons on the front. To make a call, you rotate the 7710 vertically and use the dedicated call start and end buttons on the top of unit. The main beneficiaries of the large size of this unit will be multimedia fans, who will delight at the 65,536-colour, 640 x 320 pixel display. It's not the clearest display ever seen, and it does have a slight off-white tinge, but its large size doesn't make the content feel cramped. This makes functions such as editing documents, watching videos or browsing the Web much more pleasant. Running the Symbian 90 operating system, the 7710 displays a bewildering array of menu options on startup. Nokia could have organised these menu options much more logically, rather than simply dumping every available option on the main menu. The Nokia could have also used a more powerful processor, as this unit is noticeably slow when opening or closing applications. The sheer variety of options on the 7710 is impressive. The usual organiser functions are included, as well as support for creating and editing documents, spreadsheets and presentations. The handwriting recognition makes many of its competitors look bad. Whenever you click on a text field, a small popup window is displayed where characters are written. For the snap happy, a 1 megapixel camera is provided as well as video capture, but the quality of photos or the video resolution aren't very exciting. The 7710 includes 90MB of memory, and an MMC slot is also provided, where memory cards up to 1GB can be added. Cards can be hot-swapped. Other multimedia features include a photo editor, MP3 player, RealPlayer for video clips, Web access and an FM radio tuner. Sound is played out of two speakers, one on the right of the device (which is also used for making calls) and one on the back. The resulting sound quality is average. With changes like a processor upgrade, more ergonomic design and the inclusion of Wi-Fi, Nokia could be onto a real winner.
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