Nokia Lumia 800
Nokia Corporation is the world's largest manufacturer of mobile phones, with a worldwide market share of about 27 percent, far surpassing the number two player, Ericsson, which has about 17 percent. About two-thirds of the company's net sales are generated by the Nokia Mobile Phones business group.
Nokia's other main business group is Nokia Networks, which is responsible for about 30 percent of net sales. Nokia Networks is a leading global supplier of infrastructure for mobile, fixed, broadband, and Internet Protocol (IP) networks. With a sales network that spans 130 nations, Nokia Corporation generated more than half of its sales in Europe, a quarter in the Americas, and about 22 percent in the Asia-Pacific region. Over the course of its more than 135 years in business, the company has evolved from a concentration in pulp, paper, and other basic industries to a focus on telecommunications.
Nokia's other main business group is Nokia Networks, which is responsible for about 30 percent of net sales. Nokia Networks is a leading global supplier of infrastructure for mobile, fixed, broadband, and Internet Protocol (IP) networks. With a sales network that spans 130 nations, Nokia Corporation generated more than half of its sales in Europe, a quarter in the Americas, and about 22 percent in the Asia-Pacific region. Over the course of its more than 135 years in business, the company has evolved from a concentration in pulp, paper, and other basic industries to a focus on telecommunications.
Nokia launching a new generation Lumia series smart phone called Nokia Lumia 800 is same as its feature and specifications on previous mobile phone. The phone has 3.7 inches of AMOLED touch screen display that support the 3D graphics, screen is clear black, Multi-touch input, Proximity sensor, Accelerometer sensor , Touch-sensitive controls that delivers a clear and high resolution graphics contents. First Nokia mobile with Windows Phone OS, Large , Bright full touch screen display, 8MP camera, smooth single-piece body, Powerful processor, Long battery backup. A fully charged Lumia 800 only took 4 hours and 7 minutes of refreshing web pages with our automated script to deplete its battery.
Nokia Lumia 800 has installed a Microsoft windows 7.5 (mango) operating system and powered by 1.4 GHz processor with 512 MB RAM. Consider on camera options the phone has upgradable 8 mega pixels of Carl Zeiss lens camera that facilitates for capturing a high resolution of images in every conditions with the features of auto focus and LED flash. The internal storage capacity of smart phone provides a 16 GB and also free 25 GB sky drive space, card slot is not available on this phone. The phone has a 3G, Wi-Fi, GPRS and EDGE internet connectivity which are accessing for web browsing and social networking applications. Cell Phone is equipped with turn by turn navigation system and GPS system is also there. The Bluetooth, USB port is available for connecting to other devices and this smart phone is available in black, cyan and magenta colors. Nokia Lumia Price: RS. 28,000.
Nokia with Windows Phone combines the best in stylish hardware with the best in stylish software. What you get are colourful touch screen phones that not only look great, but also keep you close to all the important things in your world. Comfortable to hold and endlessly touchable, the phones are made for whatever the world throws your way. Take the Clear Black display technology. It gives you the benefit of a super bright screen for greater visibility when you’re out and about that clear picture shows you all the things that matter. From your friends and family, to music and movies, to the web, the wider world and your work.
The Nokia Lumia 800 shares its exterior styling with the previously substantially less hyped Nokia N9; a Mega based Smartphone, although the screen size is reduced from 3.9" (854x480 pixels) to 3.7" (800x480 pixels) to conform to the Windows Phone spec list. The CPU, however, increases from the 1GHz ARM Cortex-A8 to the 1.4GHz MSM8255 Snapdragon/Scorpion which certainly helps add snap to the Windows Phone Mango OS. The Nokia Lumia 800, although being the more expensive of the two Nokia Windows Phone offerings (the other being the budget Nokia Lumia 710) shares the Nokia N9's 16-bit AMOLED Clear Black display whereas the Nokia Lumia 710 sports a 24-bit Clear Black TFT. This being said, even though the colour depth is theoretically deeper than in the Nokia Lumia 710, AMOLED screens are seen as better than the older TFT technology due to the more vivid colors and better contrast ratios. Moving away from Nokia comparisons, the Lumia 800 also has to compete with the likes of the HTC Titan and HTC Radar Windows Mango phones. When we compare screen size we find the Nokia Lumia 800 feeling a little small with the HTC Radar and HTC Titan entering the fray with 3.8" and 4.7" screens respectively although all competitors are limited to the same 800x480 pixel resolution.
Obviously the iPhone has managed to be a success with a smaller screen at 3.5-inches, but the trend towards bigger displays is increasing all the time, and we have to say we're fans of those over four inches thanks to the improved internet and media experience. This means that the pixel density on the Lumia 800 is a little sharper, but in our side by side comparisons we noted very little difference between the three, and even the Lumia 800 displaying text with a little less clarity. When it comes to internal storage the Nokia Lumia 800 and HTC Titan are equal with 16GB of fixed internal storage, with the Nokia Lumia 710 and HTC Radar weighing in with 8GB a piece.
Based on the two manufacturer's product specs it soon becomes apparent that the Nokia Lumia 800 is intended to compete against the HTC Titan and the Nokia Lumia 710 with the HTC Radar. When compared dimensionally with the HTC Titan (131.5mm x 70.7mm x 9.9mm and 160g) we note that the Nokia Lumia 800 (116.5mm x 61.2mm x 12.1mm and 142g) cuts a very slim profile, with a lighter yet reassuring weight. The physical appearance of the Nokia Lumia 800 is a dream to observe and handle, with its smooth curves fitting snugly to the hand both with and without the protective case provided in the purchase packaging.
First impressions of the phone are mixed. If you're used to handling the current crop of super slim handsets doing the rounds in today's phone shops, you can't help but feel the Lumia 800 is a little on the chunky side, even compared to the iPhone 4S thanks to it being around 10% thicker. However, that's not to say it isn't an attractive device, with its large 3.7-inch OLED screen pushed to the sides of the chassis and a cool curved polycarbonate shell gives the phone a very premium feel indeed.
Nokia has worked very hard on the unibody design here, making the battery inaccessible and using top-mounted flaps to cover the charging port and SIM slot - intriguingly, we're seeing a microSIM here, which seems to be the fashion for the next wave of Smartphone’s. It's a slightly odd system, and one that some will find a little bit difficult to get used to - but it does lend certain sleekness to the design. One area we can see getting consumers annoyed is
on the back panel - as you can see the demo sample we tried was already scratched up, and the same thing has already begun happening on our review model.
After using the Lumia 800 for several weeks, it’s hard not to imagine where Microsoft and Nokia are headed. For years, it seemed like Nokia, despite all of its hardware expertise, couldn’t create a high-end Smartphone to compete with the likes of Apple and Android phone makers.
But that was the Symbian-era Nokia. Now, thanks to the Windows Phone platform, Nokia can focus on developing its killer hardware without worrying about managing an operating system of its own.
And of course, Windows Phone once again gives Nokia a gateway to the US phone market. Nokia has been struggling to land phone deals with US carriers since before the iPhone was released, and the advent of Apple’s uber-popular smartphone certainly didn’t help things. As the premiere Windows Phone maker, carriers will be fighting tooth and nail for Nokia’s phones.
For Microsoft, the Lumia 800 proves that it chose wisely by teaming up with Nokia. Even though it’s already working with popular phone makers like Samsung and HTC, Microsoft’s partnership with Nokia is unprecedented, and it will open doors for Windows Phone internationally.
Ultimately, the Lumia 800 is fetching and capable enough to sway many consumers, including those not even considering Windows Phone. While there have been several Windows Phones with better hardware, the Lumia 800 will, for many, be the first must-have device on the platform.
GENERAL | GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 | |
HSDPA 850 / 900 / 1900 / 2100 | ||
2011, October | ||
Available. Released 2011, November |
SIZE | 116.5 x 61.2 x 12.1 mm, 76.1 cc | |
142 g |
DISPLAY | AMOLED capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors | |
480 x 800 pixels, 3.7 inches (~252 ppi pixel density) | ||
Yes | ||
Corning Gorilla Glass | ||
- Nokia ClearBlack display - Touch-sensitive controls |
SOUND | Vibration; MP3, WAV ringtones | |
Yes | ||
Yes |
MEMORY | No | |
16 GB storage, 512 MB RAM |
DATA | Class 33 | |
Class 33 | ||
HSDPA 14.4 Mbps, HSUPA 5.76 Mbps | ||
Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n | ||
Yes, v2.1 with A2DP, EDR | ||
Yes, microUSB v2.0 |
CAMERA | 8 MP, 3264x2448 pixels, Carl Zeiss optics, autofocus, dual-LED flash | |
Geo-tagging | ||
Yes, 720p@30fps | ||
No |
FEATURES | Microsoft Windows Phone 7.5 Mango | |
Qualcomm MSM8255 Snapdragon | ||
1.4 GHz Scorpion | ||
Adreno 205 | ||
Accelerometer, proximity, compass | ||
SMS (threaded view), MMS, Email, Push Email, IM | ||
WAP 2.0/xHTML, HTML5, RSS feeds | ||
Stereo FM radio with RDS | ||
Yes, with A-GPS support | ||
No | ||
Black, Cyan, Magenta | ||
- MicroSIM card support only - SNS integration - Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic - MP3/WAV/eAAC+/WMA player - MP4/H.264/H.263/WMV player - Document viewer/editor - Video/photo editor - Voice memo/command/dial - Predictive text input |
BATTERY | Standard battery, Li-Ion 1450 mAh (BV-5JW) | |
Up to 265 h (2G) / Up to 335 h (3G) | ||
Up to 13 h (2G) / Up to 9 h 30 min (3G) | ||
Up to 55 h |
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