Review: Nokia N95 smartphone
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Review: Nokia N95 smartphone

Boasting features such built-in GPS and Wifi Nokia's latest N-Series looks set to take the market by storm

What is this?
Recommended by PCW
Price: £129.99 with £35/month contract (alternatives available)
Manufacturer: Nokia
Technical specifications



Ratings
Overall rating: Overall rating
Features: Features
Ease of use: Ease of use
Value for money: Value for money
Rate this product
Verdict

Pros: GPS; Wifi; excellent design; multimedia features
Cons: Battery life; GPS time to first fix
Overall: It's an expensive piece of kit, but as far as smartphones go this is most definitely the current king of the hill


Will Stapley, Personal Computer World 11 Apr 2007

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Since firmly establishing itself as a major mobile phone manufacturer in the 90s, Nokia has been through some turbulent times and released its fair share of duff handsets.

Its feature-rich N-Series, however, has gained a loyal following, and the new N95 ticks more boxes than ever before with the likes of Wifi, GPS, HSDPA and a 5megapixel camera.

The silver chassis looks similar to other N-Series phones, with the 2.6in (240x320) screen taking up the majority of space on the front of the chassis.

Eight buttons and a four-way directional pad sit just below the screen. While many of the phone's features can be accessed using these controls, you'll need to slide the screen up to reveal the alpha-numeric keypad when bashing out text messages.

Highlighting the phone's multimedia capabilities, if you slide the display down (and at the same time tilt it to a landscape orientation) four music/video navigation buttons are revealed.

The sliding mechanism isn't spring-loaded, but has a solid feel and clicks into place when fully extended. A nice touch is the keypad lock automatically engaging whenever you slide the screen back to its home position, although it also means it unlocks when you open the screen up - something to be wary of when placing the phone in your pocket.

Situated just above the display is a 352x288 camera for video calls and an ambient light detector to automatically adjust the screen's brightness. Volume controls are located on the right side, along with camera shutter button and another to jump straight to the image gallery.

A microSD card slot joins a standard 3.5mm headphone jack and Infrared port on the left side of the phone. Meanwhile the power socket and USB port are found at the bottom, with the on/off control at the top.

Completing the line-up is the 5megapixel camera at the rear, complete with integrated lens cover, and an extra-bright LED illuminator. Take a look at our N95 digicam sample shots to see what the quality is like.

At 120g, the phone feels comfortable in the hand, but measuring 21mm thick it's a fair bit chunkier than most other phones on the market and you'll certainly notice it in your pocket.

Continue to next page for GPS and Wifi features...

See also:

Image of the Prada by LG mobile phoneA touch-sensitive mobile phone that’s available now and, no, it’s not the Apple iPhone.  12 Mar 2007
image: RIM blackberry 8800Stylish smartphone complete with built-in GPS  22 Feb 2007
Review: Nokia N800 web tabletOpen-source web tablet, video-phone and media player has potential - shame about the Vista-style mark-up  21 Feb 2007

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