Friday, March 4, 2011

Nokia E75


The Nokia E75 is a smartphone from the Eseries range with a side sliding QWERTY keyboard and also front keypad.
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 too.

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.

Nokia E72


The Nokia E72 is a smartphone from the Nokia Eseries range that manufactured in Finland. It is the successor to the Nokia E71 and is based on a similar design and form factor, and offers a similar feature set. The Nokia E72 is an enterprise-based smartphone (as it is a Nokia Eseries device) and has standard features including mobile email, calendar and instant messaging amongst many others.
The Nokia E72 has a new Optical Navi Key feature as opposed to the standard D-pad used on many other Nokia devices including the Nokia E71 - this is said to improve the ease of scrolling through menus, emails, Internet browser, and images as it is an optical sensor rather than a series of closely-spaced buttons. In comparison to its predecessor, the Nokia E72 is said to have a higher level of performance (likely due to the faster 600 MHz ARM processor) and also includes a 5 Megapixel AF camera. Other changes and improvements are software-based including changes to the user interface and built-in messaging application amongst others.
The Nokia E72 was announced on June 15, 2009 at the Nokia Connections 2009 event in Singapore.
The Nokia E73 Mode is a USA version of the E72[citation needed] for T-Mobile USA, with support for T-Mobile's UMA service and Band IV support for 3G.
The current firmware of this device is 053.001 published on 26NOV10 (to check the current firmware *#0000#).

Nokia E71


The Nokia E71 is a smartphone from the Eseries range with a QWERTY keyboard targeting business users worldwide. It runs on Symbian OS v9.2, with a Series 60 3rd Edition, second generation Feature Pack 1. The Nokia E71 succeeded the Nokia E61/61i models, building on the base design and form factor but enhancing on the feature set. The Nokia E71 was superseded by the Nokia E72.

The E71 received positive critical reception with awards including:
*Editors' Choice, Readers' Choice and 8.9 out of 10 rating on CNET.co.uk (as of June 2008)
*Phone of the Year and the Best Smartphone at the 2008 Mobile Choice Consumer Awards
*Wired Magazine's 2008 Best of Test
*Highly Commended in a category of Best Mobile Handset or Device at the GSMA Awards 2009

The E71 currently being sold in mainland China does not have Wi-Fi 802.11b/g WLAN networking or a back mounted camera. 3G was also excluded, because licenses for 3G in mainland China were only approved in early 2009.
There is no reduction in price for phones lacking these features and a firmware update will not bring them back because the hardware itself is missing. The E71 sold in Macau and Hong Kong do not lack these features. The software bundled with the Chinese version is slightly different, as it also has a QQ client, along with some other Chinese specific programs.

Nokia E70


The Nokia E70 is a candybar/fold keyboard type smartphone from the Eseries range, announced in October 2005 and released in May 2006 at a cost of approximately $500 with prices in July 2007 around $345. There are two models of this phone, the E70-1 for the world market with tri-band (900, 1800, 1900 MHz) GSM and UMTS, and the E70-2 for the Americas with tri-band (850, 1800, 1900 MHz) GSM and EDGE packet data capability. Both models use the S60 platform 3rd Edition on top of Symbian OS version 9.1.
The E70 is the successor to the Nokia 6800 series (6800, 6810, 6820 and 6822).

The Nokia E70 is aimed at the high-end professional market. The 16 million color screen has a 352×416 pixel (totalling 146,432 pixels) resolution, and the E70 is capable of GSM, WiFi and Bluetooth connectivity. The SIP VoIP functionality will currently not work through a firewall or most router configurations. Nokia has made a statement that they are working on implementing STUN (originally planned for 2006 but only available for E70-1 as of June 2008), TURN and ICE (also planned for 2007 but not available as of June 2008).
As well, the advanced Bluetooth capabilities of the phone, capable of connecting to up to six devices simultaneously, lacks A2DP support.

This phone comes with a battery of 1150 mAh Li-Ion battery, letting a talk time of 7.30 hours and lasts in standby around 224 hours. Its creators added a 75 MB memory, enough to use! In addition to its internal memory you can add external memory through miniSD memory cards. An attractive feature of the Nokia E70 is the speaker phone, which is always useful in loud places! The screen of this cell phone is capable of setting wallpapers of 352 x 416 pixels. Nokia has created the E70 with 48 polyphonic tones, ready to add all the ringtones you wish. If you like to customize your phone you will be happy to know that E70 has included personal profiles.

The range of games included in the Nokia E70 runs on J2ME, having interesting small games to keep you entertained! Not surprising, considering that these services are standard in all phones E70 enables both SMS and the EMS sites. Additionally, supports sending MMS pictures and other media files! E70 phone allows media streaming based on the technology RealPlayer / 3GPP / H.263 Video / MPEG-4 / AMR. Data transfer technology GPRS (Class 10) / EDGE. E70 is also equipped with an infrared port for all your data transfers. phone can be connected to a computer via a cable to exchange information. We believe the Nokia E70 is a fantastic cell phone and we are happy to suggest it to anyone interested in a good phone!

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Nokia E66


The Nokia E66 is a slider smartphone in the Nokia Eseries range, a S60 platform third edition device with slide action targeting business users. It is a successor to the Nokia E65 with which it shares many features.
E66 has similar features to the Nokia E71 handset, but lacks the larger capacity battery and full QWERTY, however the E66 is smaller in size and weighs less. The E66 also includes an accelerometer and new animations and transition effects, which are lacking in the E71.

Features :
*Quad band GSM / GPRS / EDGE: GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
*Dual band UMTS / HSDPA: UMTS 900 / 2100
*FM Radio 87.5–108 MHz with Visual Radio
*3.2 megapixel camera (2048 × 1536 pixels) with Self-portrait mirror, autofocus and LED flash
*110 MB Internal user storage, support up to 8GB MicroSDHC memory card
*Video: 320 × 240 (QVGA) at 30/15 fps, 176 × 144 at 15 fps (QCIF)
*Front facing camera for video call
*2.36 inch QVGA (320×240) landscape screen
*Modes: Define user preset standby screens for different times of the day
*Accelerometer and Light sensor
*OS: S60 3rd Edition, Feature Pack 1 (Version 3.1), with Symbian OS Version 9.2
*In-Box Colours: grey steel, white steel, black steel and red steel

The 2.5 mm (3/32") audio port is not suitable for traditional 3.5 mm (1/8") headphones plugs.
The microUSB port cannot be used to charge the mobile.

Nokia E65


The Nokia E65 is a smartphone in the Eseries range, a S60 platform third edition device with slide action targeting business users. It was followed fairly quickly by the E66, which was very similar but gained an FM radio, a newer release of S60, A2DP bluetooth, GPS and 3.2 mpixel camera.
Slider handsets can be very small and light — indeed, this is part of the appeal of the format. This is not the case with the Nokia E65. It weighs in at 115g, is 49mm wide and 15.5mm thick. Most notably, it's quite a tall handset, in fact almost as tall as an ordinary candybar phone at 105mm. When the slider is opened to reveal the number pad, it grows to 135mm tall. The 2.25in. 240-by-320-pixel screen supports up to 16.7 million colours. Nokia has chosen a rather dull grey background to its theme, but there is nothing to stop you downloading and applying an alternative.

The E65 ships with a soft slipcase, PC connectivity software and a USB cable, a mono earbud, a printed quick-start guide and a printed user manual.

The Nokia E65 is a quad-band GSM phone with 3G support. It lacks a second camera for two-way video calling, so use of 3G is limited to activities such as mobile email and web browsing. As well as catering for POP, SMTP and IMAP4 email, the handset supports the popular push email services. It includes readers for Microsoft Word, Excel and PowerPoint documents and for PDFs, and has a Zip file manager among its other preloaded applications.

The Nokia E65 includes infrared, Bluetooth 1.2 and 802.11b/g Wi-Fi. The presence of Wi-Fi in mobiles is less rare than it once was, but the E65 goes a step further than other Nokia handsets we've seen in terms of making it usable. There is a Wi-Fi 'sniffer' on board, which can be set to check for networks in the vicinity at set intervals. A notification of Wi-Fi status can be placed on the handset's main screen. Effectively this can be used to ensure that you are always aware when Wi-Fi is available, and it takes only a couple of key presses to join a network.

Nokia E63


Released late in 2008, the Nokia E63 is marketed as a budget business phone. It is based on Symbian's S60 platform. Although it looks very similar to E71, its body is made of plastic and not steel as in E71. Also its keypad is made from a different material and is laid out slightly different from that of the E71. Many of the specifications are identical to the E71 except for the lack of GPS and Infrared, lack of HSDPA and lower quality camera with a fixed focus lens. The E63 does come with the ability to use the camera flash as a light which is not present in the E71.

Specifications:
*Form: Monoblock with full Qwerty keyboard
*Dimensions: 113 x 59 x 13 mm, *Weight: 126 g, Volume: 87 cc
*Display: 320px X 240px, Size 2.36", Colors 16Million
*Operating system: Symbian OS9.2, S60 3.1 Edition
*Data: CSD, HSCSD, GPRS class 32, EDGE class 32, 3G 384/384 kbps, WLAN IEEE 802.11b/g, TCP/IP support
*Connectivity: Micro-USB connector, 3.5 mm Audio jack, Bluetooth 2.0
*Memory: Phone ~100MB free, MicroSD card up to 16 GB verified (32 GB unofficial)
*Software: PDF viewer, Quick office (word / excel / powerpoint editor)
*Camera: 2Mpx (without autofocus), video recording @ 320x240px

Operating frequency:
*E63-1 Quad-band EGSM 850/900/1800/1900, WCDMA 900/2100
*E63-2 Quad-band EGSM 850/900/1800/1900, WCDMA 850/1900
*E63-3 Quad-band EGSM 850/900/1800/1900, WCDMA 850/2100

Nokia E62


The e62 is keeping other smart phone designers awake at night — and for a good reason.
The e62 was created for the user who is always on the run — for the person who needs first class access to their e-mail, appointments and documents in a portable device of manageable size.

As for size, the e62 is a little larger that Verizon/Motorola’s Q phone but a lot smaller, thinner and lighter than any Palm Treo.  And forget about comparisons with most other smartphones.  The Nokia is smaller (4.61 by 2.76 by 0.63 inches) and lighter (5 ounces).

The e62 is a quad band, GSM/GPRS/EDGE world phone which utilizes the 850/900/1800/1900 MHz bands. It comes with a big, hi-res color screen (320 by 240 pixels) and a full QWERTY keyboard on the front. It also has a dedicated e-mail button and flashing message light.

Nokia says talk time is between 4 to 5.5 hours with a stand-by time of up to 14 days. As for connections, there’s the now ubiquitous Bluetooth 1.2 and a USB port. Internal memory runs 90 MB plus there’s a miniSD card slot for as much as 2GB of expansion.
The e62 deals with multimedia files by utilizing Real Video, MPEG4, 3GPP formats for video and MP3, Real Audio and MPEG-4 (ACC) for audio. Saved MP3 files can double as ring tones. A suite of office programs should be able to handle any documents you thrown at this device.

Nokia’s e62 is the first smartphone which runs on the Symbian (formerly known for Psion PDAs) operating system (S60, 3rd Edition) and the first that can handle nearly any type of push e-mail you can throw at it. The e62 comes with software that lets it communicate properly with Microsoft Exchange servers, plus Blackberry Connect, Intellisync Wireless Email, GoodLink, Seven Always-On Mail and Visto email technologies. That’s in addition to the standard POP, IMAP and SMTP formats.

The e61 can handle WCDMA connections. That’s the high-speed data technology used in Europe, Africa, and the Asia-Pacific region and will soon be rolled out in the United States.  WCDMA is called EV-DO by Verizon and Sprint. The best the e62 can do is EDGE — fast but not really fast.

The e61 also can do Wi-Fi. That means it can do lots of things without having to connect to a cellular phone network. What some carriers fear most is the e61’s ability to handle VoIP calls when you’re near a friendly wireless network. That’s why we won’t see Wi-fi on the e62.

Nokia E61i


With the largely metal body, large 2.8" screen (only rivalled recently on the Nseries by the N95 8GB) and full qwerty thumb keyboard, the E61i should have been just about the perfect smartphone for an awful lot of people.

Running S60 3rd Edition, all the core S60 components are here: Contacts, Calendar, Notes, Web, Messaging, Converter, Zip manager, and so on. Some applications are in fact enhanced over the Nseries software package, with Messaging gaining an active standby screen plugin, and with Quickoffice being the editing version by default, so you can do basic edits without having to pay a little extra.

The fact that this is S60 3rd Edition without the 'Feature Pack 1', as seen on most recent Nseries devices and the newer E90 and E51, doesn't make that much difference in practice, although I suspect there's a slight speed penalty and the likes of the N80 and E61/E61i aren't noted for being speed demons in the first place. Still, by using the Symbian/S60 multitasking properly, speed should rarely be an issue.

Pimping the E61i

Making more of the limited RAM. After booting, an E61i should have around 24MB of RAM free. While not exactly abundant, this is still fine for almost everything you'll want to do on a smartphone, provided you don't let anything unnecessary auto-start. If something's loaded in RAM then you want it to be something you asked for an use all the time. You might want to avoid Java-hosted apps like GMail: not only do they take an eternity for the Java runtime to load (10s or so), they also use 10MB or so of RAM on their own. With GMail, incidentally, you're better off setting up your built-in Messaging to use Google's new IMAP4 servers.

Make the most of the limited processor power. The E61i is optimised for battery life. Which it has in spades. But in order to minimise delays while applications are started, keep all your most used apps running in RAM by using the Menu/S60 key to switch away to something else rather than hitting 'Exit' all the time. This is especially important if you used to be in the habit of turning your smartphone off at night - DON'T DO IT. Symbian OS and S60 have around 100 background processes that need starting when you power up, with more that gradually load as you use the device. If you want a responsive E61i then keep Symbian OS ticking away, with all the little bits it needs and don't keep powering the hardware off!

Web is a potential problem, with no WAP capability, meaning that many mobile sites will need accessing in the seperate (pre-FP1) Services browser. Still, it's only a minor inconvenience and you'll probably find that the free Opera Mini 4 works better still for general browsing, especially on the landscape screen of the E61i - make sure you install this (though see the caveat above about Java-based apps - close Opera Mini after use!).

Steer clear of push email, at least until you've got a feel for your E61i's normal performance and battery life. Then you can introduce 'push' if you really, really want to (e.g. Mail 4 Exchange, Visto) and monitor the (usually pretty heavy) impact. If you want most of the benefits of push without the hassle or processor hit, just set Messaging to auto-retrieve emails in the background (every 30 minutes, between the hours you specify).

With the largely metal body, large 2.8" screen (only rivalled recently on the Nseries by the N95 8GB) and full qwerty thumb keyboard, the E61i should have been just about the perfect smartphone for an awful lot of people.

Running S60 3rd Edition, all the core S60 components are here: Contacts, Calendar, Notes, Web, Messaging, Converter, Zip manager, and so on. Some applications are in fact enhanced over the Nseries software package, with Messaging gaining an active standby screen plugin, and with Quickoffice being the editing version by default, so you can do basic edits without having to pay a little extra.

The fact that this is S60 3rd Edition without the 'Feature Pack 1', as seen on most recent Nseries devices and the newer E90 and E51, doesn't make that much difference in practice, although I suspect there's a slight speed penalty and the likes of the N80 and E61/E61i aren't noted for being speed demons in the first place. Still, by using the Symbian/S60 multitasking properly, speed should rarely be an issue.

Pimping the E61i
Making more of the limited RAM. After booting, an E61i should have around 24MB of RAM free. While not exactly abundant, this is still fine for almost everything you'll want to do on a smartphone, provided you don't let anything unnecessary auto-start. If something's loaded in RAM then you want it to be something you asked for an use all the time. You might want to avoid Java-hosted apps like GMail: not only do they take an eternity for the Java runtime to load (10s or so), they also use 10MB or so of RAM on their own. With GMail, incidentally, you're better off setting up your built-in Messaging to use Google's new IMAP4 servers.

Make the most of the limited processor power. The E61i is optimised for battery life. Which it has in spades. But in order to minimise delays while applications are started, keep all your most used apps running in RAM by using the Menu/S60 key to switch away to something else rather than hitting 'Exit' all the time. This is especially important if you used to be in the habit of turning your smartphone off at night - DON'T DO IT. Symbian OS and S60 have around 100 background processes that need starting when you power up, with more that gradually load as you use the device. If you want a responsive E61i then keep Symbian OS ticking away, with all the little bits it needs and don't keep powering the hardware off!

Web is a potential problem, with no WAP capability, meaning that many mobile sites will need accessing in the seperate (pre-FP1) Services browser. Still, it's only a minor inconvenience and you'll probably find that the free Opera Mini 4 works better still for general browsing, especially on the landscape screen of the E61i - make sure you install this (though see the caveat above about Java-based apps - close Opera Mini after use!).

Steer clear of push email, at least until you've got a feel for your E61i's normal performance and battery life. Then you can introduce 'push' if you really, really want to (e.g. Mail 4 Exchange, Visto) and monitor the (usually pretty heavy) impact. If you want most of the benefits of push without the hassle or processor hit, just set Messaging to auto-retrieve emails in the background (every 30 minutes, between the hours you specify).


Nokia E61


The Nokia E61 is a smartphone from the Eseries range, a Series 60 Third Edition device with a QWERTY keyboard targeting business users in the European market. As of Q4 2006 Cingular and Rogers Wireless have deployed a similar yet restricted version designated the Nokia E62 in the North American and Brazilian markets. The E62 is substantially similar but without an 802.11 WiFi chipset or W-CDMA (UMTS) 3G support. E61 supports 900/1800/1900 bands, while E62 can operate in 850/900/1800/1900 in order to support American networks.

The Nokia E61 is a S60 platform third edition device with qwerty keyboard and "blackberry look" targeting business users in the european market. In september 2006 Cingular announced a similar device, the E62 for the US market (without WiFi and 3G?). You should be able to use the E61 with a US GSM provider like Cingular and T-Mobile.

Nokia E61 in Business use
The E61 has a large QVGA display, QWERTY thumb keyboard, solid smartphone OS, WiFi (WLAN), Bluetooth and push email that support BlackBerry Connect, GoodLink, Seven and Visto.

Software on the E61 includes a Office suite that allows you to view, edit, and create Word documents, Excel spreadsheets (with charts), and PowerPoint presentations.

The phone also has some pre-installed basic GPS application named the Positions, Navigator and Landmarks applications that gives you location, speed, altitude, and basic trip data when paired with a Bluetooth GPS device.

Nokia E60


The Nokia E60 is a traditional candybar style smartphone from the Eseries business phone range, a S60 platform third edition device.

In terms of design, the Nokia E60 comes with a somehow classic design. It comes with a “candy-bar” case made of resistant plastic and some chrome insertions which grant it some extra style. The case measures 115 x 49 x 17 mm in dimensions and has 117 grams in weight, good values for a business handset. With this simple design and these values, the Nokia E60 feels very comfortable and fits very well in any pocket without any discomfort. On the front side, the E60 hosts a TFT display and a standard numerical pad. Between the display and the numerical pad some navigation keys are placed, including two soft keys, the Call and End keys and a 5-way joystick, a Clear key, a Menu and Edit buttons.

Even if this handset has support for 3G, it lacks a secondary camera for video calls. Above the display an ear-speaker and an ambient light sensor are placed. On the right side of this cell phone a memory card slot and a loudspeaker are placed. On the left side you will notice a volume rocker, a voice memo recorder button and an infrared port. The top part of this cell phone offers an eyelet for attaching a wrist strap and a Power On / off button while on the bottom part a Pop-port connector and a charging port are placed.

The Nokia E60 comes with a TFT display. Measuring 2.1 inches and having a native resolution of 352 x 416 pixels, this display is one of the strongest points of this handset. Supporting 16 million colors it will offer you excellent quality images with sharp colors and a great contrast. The images are visible even in a powerfully lit room or under direct sunlight. Placed below the display, the numerical pad will make you fall in love with typing messages or writing other texts. The keys are flat with good sizes and being very responsive, they will offer positive feedback. Writing on these keys is very comfortable so even if you are a fast writer, you will love this numerical pad. A negative aspect for this cell phone is that it lacks a camera. Without it you will not be able to take any photos or record clips, a usual feature in our days.

For connectivity, the Nokia E60 comes with all high-end features. It offers Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Infrared, USB and support for all kind of networks.

Nokia E55


Nokia E55 is a mobile phone in the business segment, intended to be compact, yet suitable for writing e-mails and other longer texts on. This is accomplished by a so-called compact QWERTY keyboard with two characters per key. Designwise, the Nokia E55 is almost exactly identical to its twin, the E52, and both phones feature exactly the same specifications. The only difference lies in their keypad layout.

The E55 has 20 keys arranged in the standard QWERTY layout, but because each alphabet is not assigned its own key, typing is achieved either by using the predictive text input (where each key is typed once per word and the software automatically guesses the word you type using an internal dictionary) or using multitap. This form factor is relatively uncommon, with most modern mobile phones employing traditional T9 text entry or a physical or virtual full qwerty keyboard. The Blackberry Pearl range of devices share this keyboard form factor.
The phone was announced on February 16, 2009 during the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona.

Nokia E52


The Nokia E52 is a smartphone from the Nokia Eseries range, a Symbian OS v9.3 device with a 240x320 screen. It is available in Black, Black Aluminum, Metal Grey aluminium, White Aluminium and Gold. It comes with a 1GB MicroSD memory card, but it supports MicroSD cards with up to 16GB memory. It also has 60MB free user memory. It is an update to Nokia's successful E51 model. It was released concurrently with E55, which is physically and functionally identical, except for the traditional T9 keypad as opposed to compact QWERTY keypad in E55. Latest firmware version is v052.003 released on the 29th October 2010.

FEATURES :
*Accelerometer Sensors (Automatic *Landscape/Portrait View)
*One-Touch Keys
*USB Charging
*3.5mm Standard Audio Connector
*TCP/IP support
*Serves as a Data Modem
*Bluetooth 2.0 EDR, A2DP
*3.5G Support
**WAP 2.0/XHTML, HTML Browser (Flash Lite 3.0 Support)
*Digital Home Support
*Push To Talk (PTT)
*SMS, MMS, Email Support
*Stereo FM Radio with RDS
*Printing to File (Remote), using LPR or USB PictBridge-compatible printer
*MTP (Mobile Transfer Protocol) support
*Java with MIDP 2.1 and CLDC 1.1,[3] JavaScript 1.3 and 1.5 browser support
*Voice Recorder
*Voice Command Capability
*Smart Dialing
*Text Message and Email - Audio Reader
*8 Hours Talk Time
*23 Hours Music Playback (depending on the battery, if its new its 23 hours)
*23 Days of Stand-by Time
*PDF Reader
*Remote Lock/Wipe Over-The-Air
*Quick Office Viewer/Editor - Word, Excel, PowerPoint Support (Free Update for Office 2007 formats support)
*Power Saver Mode

Nokia E51


Nokia E51 is a Symbian OS smartphone by Nokia. It's the second Nokia UMTS / HSDPA dual band mobile. The phone is available with a black, silver or bronze-coloured border and backplate. A version without the integrated camera also exists.
The Nokia E51 is possibly the most attractive E series phone to date, because it is a small, lightweight, candy bar style mobile phone, housing some sophisticated software. It looks quite simple, but it is a really cool phone.

The quality of communications provided by Nokia E51 is simply great - comparable with the latest standards in the field of mobile technology. The sound volume of the polyphonic speaker is loud.

The nokia E50 was the most compact smartphone of those days, hence its high popularity. The balance between the set of features and the price played a major part in its way to the bestseller status. Similarly, the Nokia N51 is today’s most compact and slimmest smartphone available on the market, it now has full Wi-Fi support, a full set of telecom features that are seen as necessary for a modern smartphone and a high quality of build and materials.

Switching to Nokia E51 from the good old E50 is more than justified. The E51 might look slightly bigger and narrower than the E50. But in fact this difference can hardly be felt, the nokia E51 is very comfortable to hold.

Nokia E50


The Nokia E50 Business Device is a bar-style monoblock quad-band smartphone from Nokia announced May 18, 2006[1] as part of the Eseries, intended primarily for the corporate business market. It includes sophisticated e-mail support for Nokia’s Intellisync Wireless Email, BlackBerry Connect, Visto Mobile, Activesync Mail for Exchange, and Altexia, along with the ability to view Microsoft Word, PowerPoint, and Excel attachments, and PDF documents but it cannot be used for editing these. Device to device synchronisation is possible with Data transfer application. Features include EDGE, Bluetooth 2.0, a 1,280 × 960 pixels (1.3 megapixel) camera, a MicroSD memory-card slot, and digital music player functionality. This unit does not support UMTS, Wi-Fi, or FM radio.

It uses the third edition of the Series 60 user-interface (S60v3) and the Symbian operating system version 9.1. It is not binary compatible with software compiled for earlier versions of the Symbian operating system.
My system to determine Nokia E50 ringtones compatibility linked above uses common knowledge on Nokia phones to evaluate your chance of getting free Nokia E50 ringtones, but it is not absolutely accurate.

Nokia C7-00


The Nokia C7-00 is a family of smartphones powered by the all new Symbian platform which brings significant enhancements in speed and ease of use. Among the new smartphones is the Nokia C7. The new Nokia C7 device, which is tightly integrated with enhanced Ovi services and apps, reinforces Nokia's vision of a mobile industry that is increasingly being defined by socially connected, location-based devices and experiences. The Nokia C7 joins the previously announced Nokia N8. Beside the C7, Nokia has also announced the Nokia C6 and Nokia E7 to form a family of Symbian products.

The C7-00 display features a 3.5-inch (89 mm), 640 x 360 pixel capacitive touchscreen. The smartphone was released in Q4, 2010 for €335, excluding taxes and subsidies.

Nokia C7 social networking smartphone 
The Nokia C7 is a beautifully crafted, sleek social networking smartphone. Get live updates from social networks such as Facebook and Twitter and keep track of new email from your Yahoo! or Gmail accounts directly on the homescreen. The Nokia C7 features a 3.5-inch AMOLED display and a stunning combination of stainless steel, glass and soft edges. Estimated retail price is EUR 335, excluding taxes and subsidies.

Nokia C6-01


The Nokia C6-01 is a Symbian^3 smartphone from the Nokia Cseries. The C6-01 display features comes with a 3.2in AMOLED (640 x 360-pixels) display with capacitive touchscreen capabilities and Nokia's ClearBlack technology for improved outdoor visibility. The smartphone is released on November 4, 2010 for €260, excluding taxes and subsidies.
the Nokia C6-01 sort of follows on from the original Nokia C6, but the newer handset lacks the slide-out QWERTY keyboard, although the C6-01 does have an improved operating system and camera. The C6-01 is also a more expensive proposition than the C6, pitched at €260 before tax and subsidy. The existence of two similarly named and similarly specified devices could lead to confusion among customers.
The most prominent feature on the C6-01 is the 3.2" 360 x 640 pixel AMOLED capacitive touchscreen. On the back is an 8 megapixel camera with dual-LED flash and 720p HD video capture, and inside the C6-01 supports 3.5G data and 802.11b/g and n WiFi.

Multimedia support is what you'd expect from a relatively high-end Symbian device, with support for a wide variety of media formats and also an FM radio. Output is via the familiar 3.5mm AV connector that is common on these type of Nokia phones.

GPS is included, and the Nokia C6-01 also supports Ovi Maps Navigation. Other software includes social networking and webmail support, plus a web browser and a wide range of applications that can be downloaded.

The C6-01 has a microSD slot with a 2GB card included in the standard sales package, it also supports Bluetooth 3.0 and USB 2.0 connectivity. A stereo wired headset is included in the box.

The 1050 mAh battery is quoted as giving up to 4.5 hours talktime on 3G and 15.5 days standby time. The Nokia C6-01 weighs 131 grams and measures 104 x 53 x 14mm. It's quite a bit smaller, thinner and lighter than the original C6, and one easy way to tell the handsets apart is that the C6-01 and C6 have a slightly different button arrangement on the front.
This looks like a very capable touchscreen phone, and the improved Symbian^3 operating system and relatively high resolution display should make it an attractive proposition.

Nokia C6-00


The Nokia C6-00 is a smartphone and portable entertainment handheld cellular device by Finnish communications company Nokia, running the Symbian^1 operating system. It was announced on April 13, 2010. It is the third Nokia Symbian^1 smartphone featuring a full slide-out QWERTY keyboard. Its software and hardware specifications resemble the N97 mini in most ways. One of the differences is that the sliding in this phone is flat, unlike the upward angled in the N97 mini, hence allowing a four row QWERTY keypad, bringing a slightly enhanced typing experience to the table.[4] The phone has a 5 megapixel camera, though unlike the N97 mini, it does not have Carl Zeiss optics.[4] It also has a secondary camera in front for video calls. The Nokia C6-01 is the successor to the C6-00 featuring a major step-up with the new Symbian^3 operating system, Ovi Maps 3.0 and such.
All application and games for similar handsets like the N97, the N97 Mini, the 5800 Xpressmusic, and the 5230 will be compatible with this handset.

Cnet UK wrote that 'The C6 suffers from the worst excesses of the N97's software, without the saving grace of its solid hardware, resulting in a phone that's disappointing at any price. Cnet Asia wrote that though the user interface is slow and outdated. However, they like the improved connectivity features, free real-time navigation with Ovi Maps and the generally well-built chassis.
T3 magazine said that 'This is a decent phone, but unlikely to convert anyone to Symbian, making it a handset for Nokia fans, with the priority of texting and emailing'. while techradar.com gave it three out of five stars and stated that while the phone had useful widgets and a nice screen that those features were countered by general usability frustrations. Stuff.TV also gave the phone three out of five stars and said that the C6 was an 'efficient enough phone' but felt outdated. Electricpig gave the phone two out of five stars and wrote that loved the sturdy nature of the phone and Nseries specifications but that they hated the unresponsive screen and bad button design.