Tag Archives: launch

MIR Show – Nokia N86 8MP – First look & opinion

We were invited to the launch of the new N86 8MP yesterday and were amongst a small group of blogs given first access to it.

N86 First Look At The Launch Event from Mobile Industry Review on Vimeo.

Flickr Photo Download: N86 86 8MPDuring filming we noted the handset was labelled as ‘N85 8MP’ and speculated whether that was a late change in naming (extending the N85 range like the N95 did with several variants) or just a disguise or an error. Having spent some more time with the device and noted the ‘N85′ term cropping up in some of the software config (the Exif camera data – other areas use the anonymous ‘NXX’).

We now think a late branding change is the most likely explanation – possibly to extend the life of the current N85 and highlight the sheer number of differences between the two devices (which go beyond just the imaging components).

Nokia 5800 ‘The Tube’ Launch Event

As promised, James and I braved the rain on Friday to attend the launch event for Nokia’s first Symbian touch-driven device, the Nokia 5800 Xpressmusic – also often still known by its pre-launch name ‘The Tube’.  Available exclusively via Nokia’s two flagship stores in London’s Regent Street and Heathrow Terminal 5 plus the Nokia online store (at least that’s what the press release says – the online store is still only offering a ‘pre-order’ option right now), it will also be available from all of the major UK network operators (with the exception of Three) starting Friday 30th.

Priced at £249 SIM-free, it’s expected to be free with contract on most tariffs and – we’re all agreed – is pretty exceptional value, although some are dissappointed it’s not a ‘Comes With Music‘ handset yet.  Nokia shifted 500,000 of these things in 30 days of sales, with over a million sold even before the UK launch.

At the event James reprised his ‘normob walkabout’ role in the queue of eager first-customers, we spoke to Mark Loughran (Managing Director, Nokia UK and Ireland), got a demo of the device and even managed to get ten minutes with friend-of-the-show Rafe Blandford from the excellent AllAboutSymbian.com.

A 5 minute extract of the Mark Loughran is available on YouTube or the full show is embedded below and hitting the podcast feeds right now.  Take a look:

Nokia 5800 ‘Tube’ Launch at Nokia’s Regent St flagship store from Ben Smith on Vimeo.

‘Just for fun’ there’s also a brief outtakes reel for the people who have drunkenly told me ‘they were the best bit’.  Feel free to ignore it if you’re a sensible person…

Nokia 5800 Launch – Out Takes from Ben Smith on Vimeo.

The Nokia 5800 ‘Tube’ launches today

Smith and Whatley at Regent St Nokia Shop 5800 launchFrom a distinctly soggy Regent Street we were delighted to jump the queue of the hundred or so keen customers at Nokia’s flagship retail store in central London this morning to attend the launch of the 5800 – Nokia’s first S60 Touch handset which, unusually, Nokia is still refering to by its internal code name, the ‘Tube’.  Perhaps they’re getting a sense of humour about all the leaks…?

Anyway, there was a load of dancing and loud music there which we ignored, but you can read more about (remixes, dance floors, music tours, some ‘fella called ‘Bimbo Jones’) at www.nokiatubedance.com.  But we did manage to chat to a few early customers, interview Mark Loughran (UK and Ireland Nokia, Managing Director) and do a live unboxing with friend of the show Rafe Blandford from the excellent AllAboutSymbian.

Watch out for our video footage and write-up coming tonight… In the meantime you can get a SIM-free 5800 for an impressively low £249 from Nokia’s online shop (yes, we know it still says ‘February’ there right now, but their press release says it’s today… honest!) or its stores in Regent Street or Heathrow Terminal 5.  All the major UK networks except Three will have it from Friday 30th.  Personally, I’d recommend waiting (if you can) for the ‘Comes With Music’ version which, although not announced yet, is as pretty much a certainty and will add a year’s free downloads from the Nokia Music Store for a small premium.

Say hello to the Nokia E63 (again…) [updated]

After a false start yesterday, the Nokia E63 device that Womworld sent me can finally see proper light of day.  Launched today Mobile Industry Review are one of the lucky few to receive the handset for a first hands-on.

Full photo set here

The initial temptation is to dismiss this handset as ‘just a plastic E71′ – it certainly shares much of the E71′s design and is intended to be sold at a lower price point, but I’m not convinced that’s fair:

E71_10MIR-E63-7

The main differences appear to be:

  • The E63 has a coloured plastic shell versus the E71′s metal one.  The front is a metallic-finish, whilst the back cover is a soft-touch finish – both attract far few fingerprints than the E71′s.
  • The E63 is nearly identical in dimensions to the E71 except for the depth – the E63 is around 1.5 times the depth of the E71.
  • The E63 has a 3.5mm jack on top versus the E71′s 2.5mm jack on the side.  This appears to be the first E-series to have a standard headphone socket – something normally saved for N-series.
  • The E63 has no side buttons for volume or voice recording.  It’s also missing the E71′s IR window.
  • The E63 has a revised keyboard layout, adding a ‘/’ button on the lower row, shortening the space bar.
  • The E63 appears to have a slightly smaller dimension screen although it is the same 320 by 240 pixels as the E71.
  • The E63 lacks internal GPS.
  • The E63 does not support HSDPA data.
  • The E63 has the same 110 meg internal memory, but is shipped without an additional memory card (although a slot to add one is present).
  • The E63 has a 2MP camera versus the E71′s 3.2MP and has a fixed focus.
  • The E63 adds a flashlight function that allows the camera’s LED flash to be used as a torch.
  • The E63 lacks the E71′s faux-leather slip case.

And whilst it is clearly a cut-down model – I don’t find any of these differences make the E63 a bad device.  The camera particularly is little sacrifice as the E71′s unit, regardless of resolution, was dire and the E63′s one appears no worse for its lower res.  I’d even take the slight size increase and plastic case without too many complaints – in use a smudged and smeary E71 doesn’t look that much better than the E63.

But lets be clear – consumers aren’t the target market here – businesses are… and the key business features are all still here:

  • WiFi
  • 3G (there had been some rumours this was 2G only)
  • Microsoft Exchange sync via MailForExchange
  • Expandable memory
  • Fast operation and stable S60 3rd Edition FP1 OS
  • Pre-installed QuickOffice
  • E-series security and encryption functions
  • Huge 1500mAh battery

…and now all of these things can be obtained from Nokia without also incurring the cost of high-end cases and GPS.  The executives may still have the E71s but the rest of us will get the E63s… Looking at the popularity of the lower-spec Blackberry devices around the large corporates I know (where they’re deployed in the hundreds or thousands) this is a smart move.

What Nokia have to do now is price this correctly relative to the E71 – nothing’s been announced so far… Watch this space, but I’d guess (and it is just a guess) at pricing around 60% of the E71. (see below for update)

Nokia-E63_05_lowresI’ll be testing the device out over the next few days and we’ll have it on the show early next week.

As ever – post your questions below and I’ll do my best to answer them.

Update: It will be available in blue as well as the red pictured above for €199 pre-tax SIM-free (which will typically equate to £199 in the UK once taxes are included).  Full press release here.

Nokia launch a consumer e-mail config wizard

News just announced at the Nokia E-series event: an e-mail wizard tool that will hold the configuration of over 1000 ISPs. Users will just enter the e-mail address and password for the account to be setup on the device. The settings will be maintained centrally by Nokia keeping it up to date and expanding it over time.

Live from the Nokia E-Series Event

Right now I’m sat on the 29th floor of a building over-looking the Thames… A very snazzy venue for a Nokia E-Series launch. I’m with the WOM World team (Nokia’s blogger relations guys), Jon Jensen and Rafe and Steve from AllAboutSymbian, but am mostly surrounded by mainstream media.

View from the 29th Floor

As you’d expect with an E-Series event the focus is on mobile e-mail.

Ready to go

They’re launching the E66 (announced first) – shame he’s calling it the ’6600′. Not a Steve Jobs presentation!! It’s the first E-series announced with a full suite of entertainment services (from Ovi) [note: later clarified to exclude N-Gage], has screen auto-rotation and auto-silences by being turned over.

E66

They’ve also just announced the E71 – ‘an un-compromising e-mail experience’.  Specs are as widely leaked – the form factor is clearly something they’re very keen on as it’s being discussed a lot as well as the speed of the device. ‘World leading in this size’ – the thinnest device in this class ever.

E71

Both ship in July for around €350 unsubsidised.

They’re both S60 ‘open platform’ with over 10,000 applications available for them.

—-

Update: There’s now a a full review of the E71  by the AllAboutSymbian guys, I have posted some first pictures and videos and covered the blogger Q&A.

Nokia launch today! Questions?

I’ve been invited to a ‘mystery’ Nokia launch today, although it appears to be an open secret that it’s the E66 and the hotly-anticipated (at least by the SMS Text News team except Ewan) E71. I’ll be live-blogging as much of the say as I can here with video and audio…

Drop me a question in the comments if there’s something you’d like asked of the Nokia big-wigs or about the devices.

Launch: Jawbone ‘Noise Assassin’

Popped into the launch event this evening. Thanks to Alex and the team from Aliph for laying on a top night – ‘New Young Pony Club‘ were about to DJ as I made an exit… no reflection of their prowess, but it is a school night :-)

The headset’s about half the size of the well-received original and is available in the UK from today online and from Carphone Warehouse* stores for £79.99. Judging by the number of ‘trendy’ sorts (not me) and life-style brand types there tonight it’s going down well in the styling-stakes as well as for its technical wizardry.

We’ll have a proper review in the next week and may even (hint) have an *ahem* mystery gift to give away. We’ll get our thinking caps on about the how and where. In the meantime here a few snaps and a Qik of the launch presentation. I’m hoping to start a new trend in unboxing images with this post: unboxing on public transport… if you jump over to my Flickr set you can even see where they were taken on the way home!

Created with Admarket’s flickrSLiDR.

*Not a warehouse, doesn’t sell carphones.

T-Mobile launch Mobile Jukebox

T-Mobile Jukebox - Music that stays with youIt’s been a long day, but this is just too exciting not to post before bed. News just in from T-Mobile:

T-Mobile today expands its Mobile Jukebox service by offering albums to download, from only £6. The albums will be accessible on over 50 handsets to both pay as you go and pay monthly customers. Over 100,000 albums will sit alongside the 1.2 million singles on offer. Using the 3G network albums can be downloaded within one minute.

To celebrate the launch of album content, T-Mobile is offering a free album download from Mobile Jukebox when customers join, renew or upgrade their contract. The offer is available from T-Mobile stores and online between 2nd June and 31st July 2008.

Mobile Jukebox albums and single tracks are ‘dual download’, so there are two versions of each music file for the price tag. T-Mobile sends one version – compressed for a fast download – to the mobile phone (AAC format), and the other to the customer’s PC (WMA format) to store, burn to a CD or swap onto an MP3 player.

At last! A way to download songs electronically to my telephone for about £1 a track or £6 to £10 per album! It’s IE-only on Windows and uses Microsoft DRM. Thank goodness no-one else thought of doing this – especially not any other network operators.

If you must: https://www.music.t-zones.co.uk/