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Category: Nokia HD mobiles

Nokia 6303i Classic announced, ‘guarantees fun for a long time without charging’

If you were waiting for a mild refresh of Nokia’s 6303 Classic before taking the plunge on a new handset… well, you’re a strange character, but the good news is that your time has come at long last. The 2.2-inch QVGA display and 3.2 megapixel camera are both carried over; otherwise, you’ve got a micro-USB connector, 3.5mm headphone jack (good for the integrated FM radio), microSD expansion up to 8GB, Nokia Messaging, and up to a respectable 8 hours of talk time. Needless to say, this isn’t a high-end piece — it tops out with tri-band EDGE, but it’ll run just €105 ($144) unsubsidized when it hits “select markets” this quarter.

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Nokia N98 Leaked

The Nokia N98 has been leaked out and this new 4” smartphone is said to be scheduled for launch come the 2010 Holidays. The Nokia N98 comes with 32GB storage, touch screen and will be running on a S60 OS. Nothing much has been shared although pricing was rumored to be somewhere in the vicinity of $619.

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Nokia N900 micro-USB connectors prone to failure?

The N900′s well on its way to developing a solid reputation as a hacker’s dream, but here’s the thing: hackers need a way to charge their device. Actually, we all do, which makes a trending problem with N900s in the field particularly worrisome. It seems that the micro-USB connector’s surface mount design is causing it to become misaligned or disconnected completely, and affected users seem to be having mixed results getting the issue covered under warranty. One of the symptoms of a misaligned connector is that it’s unusually snug or difficult to connect, and thinking back to our review unit, we did have some minor issues there but didn’t really think anything of it at the time.

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Nokia 7705 Twist Cell Phone

The Nokia 7705 Twist features a 2.4 inch display with full QWERTY keyboard, voice command capability, speakerphone, USB port, 119 megs internal memory with support for up to sixteen gig, a battery capable of yielding four and a half hours of talk time on a single charge, hearing aid compatibility, Bluetooth connectivity, mobile email and web browsing, GPS, Nokia Maps, a 3.2 megapixel camera with video recording capability, support for multiple music and video formats, alarm clock, calculator, calendar, and sufficient phone book capacity for a thousand name and number records.

The twist design on the Nokia 7705 Twist doesn’t really help or hinder it–it’s really little more than an aesthetic choice.  The controls are pretty simple and there are more than enough tools here to make it a good quality model.

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Nokia Nuron 5230 XpressMusic coming to T-Mobile USA on March 17th

Available in Europe since November last year, the Nokia 5230 will be soon launched by T-Mobile USA as Nokia Nuron.

The Nuron has just appeared in some official photos, and it has T-Mobile’s logo on it.

In case you don’t know yet, the Nokia Nuron 5230 is a touchscreen phone with mid-end features, including: Symbian, a 3.2 inch display with 360 x 640 pixels, accelerometer, HSDPA, GPS, 3.5mm headset jack, stereo FM radio with RDS, and a 2MP camera. The handset also supports Ovi Maps 3.0 with free navigation.
T-Mobile USA should offer the Nokia Nuron starting March 17.

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Nokia 2720 Fold Brings Basic Features

Clamshells aren’t the most exciting handsets around, but the Nokia 2720 Fold isn’t half bad. Not only does it have some decent features, it comes with looks that does seem just a tad more attractive than other phones with a similar form factor.
Physically, you’ll most likely love the smooth lines, stylish appearance and glossy finish. While good-looking, the surface is an absolute magnet for fingerprints. Weight is extremely light, making it very easy on the pocket. Despite that, overall construction feels sturdy, with extra thick hinges to inspire further confidence.

The black and white external display measures 1.36 inches and displays only the most basic information. Flipped open, it shows off a 1.8-inch LCD, with 128 x 160 resolution and 65,000 colors. Both the T9-style keyboard and the navigation array are designed really well, making input largely trouble-free.
As a phone, the 2720 Fold makes for high-quality calls that are noticeably clearer and better-sounding than other handsets in the same price range. Callers, on the other hand, can detect some amount of sharpness, but reported excellent conversations anyway. Speakerphone was decent and usable, but is far from the best. Battery life is rated at three hours, which should make it good for a day or two of regular use.
You get a 500-entry phone book, Bluetooth, messaging capabilities (SMS, MMS, IM and IMAP/POP email), WAP browsing (Opera Mini) and PIM tools.
More advanced features include a 1.3 megapixel camera and a music player. The camera module barely offers any options, but manages average quality for such low-resolution hardware. Music player is basic, which is expected, but the 2.5 mm jack just makes it downright disappointing.

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N900 gains PS3 Sixaxis control over SNES gaming

Even if the N900 isn’t quite ready for mass market appeal, that doesn’t mean that it’s not the perfect device for many of the Engadget elite. With impressive power and out-of-the-box hackability, this QWERTY handset is a tinkerers dream. In fact, Tomasz Sterna has already recompiled the kernel to add joystick (and mouse) support. He then pieced together enough code to turn the N900 into a portable Sixaxis gaming console that brings SNES gaming to any TV. Fire up the N900′s Bluetooth, then kick back and immerse yourself in a land of 16-bit dinosaurs and chubby Italian plumbers — good times. See the finished product after the break.

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Nokia C5 3G S60 handset leaks ahead of MWC 2010

Nokia weren’t tipped to be announcing anything significant at Mobile World Congress 2010, but according to DailyMobile there’s at least one new handset on its way to Barcelona.  The Nokia C5 has leaked, a Symbian S60v3 FP2 device with HSDPA/HSUPA, a 3.2-megapixel camera and a 2.2-inch QVGA display.
As you might have guessed from the photos, you’re not looking at a particularly advanced phone.  Still, you do get GPS/A-GPS, a microSD slot (to augment the 50MB of integrated memory), an FM radio and a 3.5mm headphones jack.

Design-wise it’s hardly inspiring, but considering Nokia have been stomping down on their prices recently so as to leverage their market share we’re expecting the C5 to be at the affordable end of the spectrum.

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The Orion Concept phone is made for gaming

This is the Nokia concept phone known as the Orion that could put the PSP and DS out of business.

Actually, that probably isn’t the plan, but you have to admit that gaming on mobile phones is about as good as playing the Atari 2600. Not that it isn’t fun, but if gaming could be more on a mobile, let’s make it more.

Oddly enough, this has a QWERTY keyboard on the back of this, but I don’t understand how this can improve mobile gaming. That or how it can improve a phone.

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Nokia Custom Dictionary takes predictive text to the obvious next level

Nokia’s just posted its literally-named Custom Dictionary utility to Beta Labs’ hallowed halls of experimental wares, finally bringing what appears to be a thorough, editable predictive text solution to S60 devices so that you can use (in Nokia’s own words) friends’ names and nicknames, places, and “slang” (read: every four-letter word you know) with aplomb in the course of normal textual conversation. What makes Custom Dictionary cooler than the average predictive text system, though, is the fact that you can load, unload, and transfer custom word lists to and from your PC and between devices, making it easy to back up your nonsensical gibberish in the event you lose or change phones. As with anything in Beta Labs, you’ve got to proceed at your own risk — but the stuff’s available to download now. Follow the break for a video demo.

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