|
One of Nokia’s most successful handsets of the years gone by is the 6610i, which offered a very modest set of features in a very understated design, making it the choice of entry-level executives in the city. As time passed and cameras leaped megapixel counts, the 6610i lost it’s charm, but there was nothing in Nokia’s portfolio that could have been considered a worthy successor. While Motorola and Samsung went on the Atkins diet, Nokia just went in the opposite direction with fat and sluggish phones that just turned me off. Design I love the way it fit in my hand. The positioning of the keys and the screen and all that was just right. I’m not a huge fan of joy sticks, thanks to the uncomfortable designs of most phones such as the 3250, but I really think they got it right with the E50’s joystick. With sufficient room around it, the usage was simply. The keys are well sized, but they do feel a little flimsy, and I expect them to lose their coating very soon. Even then, the tactile feedback is good and overall I was quite satisfied. However, I can’t say the same about the Menu and 'C' keys which are small and set inside the 'yes', 'no' and the two soft keys. I had to nail-type these keys, which is not good because it makes it difficult to use the phone without looking at it. Mostly the phone is made of steel. Be careful with the rear battery cover, you may just end up cutting yourself with it! The side trims are rubbery. It comes in a silver/gray combo and also a fully black one, that’s very Nseries Music Edition-like. I prefer the more business-class silver/gray combo, though. If I could just choose one thing that I singularly lust in this phone, it’s the display. The phone isn’t too big, so the display is also not unusually large, but it still is proper QVGA (240x320), so it looks so, so crisp and fine, I was sold right there. The new Series 60 3rd Edition UI really shines on this display, allowing the most use of features like font-smoothing and scaling. There were times when I’d just stare at the beauty of each element on the screen — be it text, an icon or the background art! It comes with an ambient light sensor that automatically adjusts the display brightness based on the surrounding light. Even in bright sunlight, the display wasn’t entirely unreadable. A little turning is required to get the glare away, but that’s it. |
Tags: Nokia E50 , smartphone
How to Root and install Custom Recovery on any Android phone
Ahead of MWC debut, HTC Ville images leak again
Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1N, Galaxy Nexus evade German ban
HTC Ville captured on cam running ICS and Sense 4.0
Ban on Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1, 8.9 in Germany stays
Samsung Galaxy Y (GT-S5360) Review


















Mixx
Facebook
Twitter
Digg
delicious
reddit
MySpace
StumbleUpon
LinkedIn



































































_011517074205_160x90.jpg)


















