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Posted on 22-04-2008
Filed Under (Reviews) by Junee

In terms of reviews, the Nokia N95 8GB is relatively simple to handle, thankfully. Not because it’s a simple or trivial product, but because the original N95 is so well known and has been written about so many times that there’s really little point in going over every function that’s common to both devices in minute detail.

Nokia N95 8GB Review

But a short summary is in order, at least. The original N95 was intended to be the last word in the classic S60 phone line, i.e. with a typical phone form factor, with (and I’m judging it by the last released firmware, v12 here):

  • S60 3rd Edition Feature Pack 1, with the combined Web/WAP browser and miniUSB connectivity
  • HSDPA, UPnP and Wi-Fi (all fairly cutting edge in a phone when announced but more commonplace today)
  • A largish, recessed 2.6″ screen
  • An utterly superb 5 megapixel stills camera with great optics, light sensitivity and options, protected by a physical shutter and spoilt slightly by slow image processing and slow camera startup
  • A great VGA-res video recorder (producing good video images but only mono sound)
  • A very full set of media software, with all audio and video codecs, video and image editing suites, online integration
  • The facility to work in portrait or landscape mode
  • A built-in low power GPS with ‘Assisted GPS’ for fast lock-on times
  • Great and tactile d-pad and button set
  • TV out for video echoing of any application or media item to a TV or other video equipment

It was quite a package for a ‘phone’, but despite the plus points above and even with latest firmware, two big negatives remained. The 950mAh BL-5F battery just wasn’t up to the job of powering all the multimedia and comms goodness, with power users of the Nokia N95 finding that the battery sometimes didn’t last the day and with casual users irritated by having to recharge every single night. Secondly, the free RAM after booting, around 20MB, while enough for lesser S60 3rd Edition devices, wasn’t really enough for a device of the Nokia N95’s ambitions and RAM was prone to run out while (for example) browsing a largish web page, prompting various ‘memory errors’.

Nokia N95 8GB Review

Nokia N95 8GB Review

Armed with feedback about the issues above and with one eye fixed firmly on the company’s new Ovi strategy, Nokia set about revamping the Nokia N95 and trying to fix everything in one go, to produce a worthy flagship phone for 2008. And now it’s here, with WOM World kindly sending me one of the very first production N95 8GBs in the world. How has Nokia done?

The Upgrades

Although much of the N95 8GB’s hardware and software are identical to that of the original, there are more changes than you might think at first glance.

- The microSD slot is gone, replaced by a fixed 8GB flash disk mounted internally. This appears to the smartphone as disk ‘E’ in the usual Symbian OS way and all programs should treat this just as if it were an 8GB microSD card. It represents 6 HOURS of video recording at full VGA resolution or around 30 hours of commercial movies at QVGA resolution or around 160 CDs worth of music (in WMA format at 64kbps).

- The system RAM has been doubled to 128MB, meaning that there’s now around 95MB of free RAM after booting. This figure is slightly higher than you might have guessed because the Nokia N95 8GB also features ‘demand paging’, i.e. only the bits of applications that are strictly needed are loaded into RAM, other bits are left on disk until needed. In summary, you’ll never run out of RAM with the N95 8GB, even on the largest web pages, while simultaneously viewing the largest image and keeping ten Java games running in the background.

- The back of the Nokia N95 8GB has been redesigned, with an extra millimetre or so of depth allowing the use of the BL-6F, rated at 1200mAh. This would appear to give 25% extra battery life, but in fact extra optimisations in the OS (and possibly the use of demand paging) mean that the real world increase is closer to 50%.

Nokia N95 8GB Review

- Allegedly as a result of the redesign, the old physical shutter in front of the camera lens has been replaced by a simple recess, with the camera now activated with a long press of the shutter button. It’s also worth noting that camera operation has been improved slightly, with 5 megapixel images now handled more swiftly (a second or so) and with a message telling the user what’s happening at each stage. Camera launching is still slow though, I really struggle to understand why this is still pegged at a full 3 seconds.

Nokia N95 8GB Review

- The screen is better in every respect. It’s larger, at 2.8″ diagonal, it’s clearer and brighter in all lighting conditions and it’s better protected, with a hard top layer that’s flush to the also-redesigned top slide, whose sides now encompass the Nokia N95’s edge better (with the side effect that less light ‘leaks out’ sideways). The d-pad and main controls have been squished slightly to allow for the larger screen but they still work well.

Nokia N95 8GB Review

- The multimedia controls (visible when the screen is slid down and the unit turned 90 degrees anti-clockwise) are now dimpled/contoured, making it easier to locate the right pressing point in the dark.

- The standby screen now has 7 quick-launch icon slots (versus 6), and there’s a new standby shortcut/strip, a whole new version of Nokia’s Mobile Search utility. v4 was supplied with the review unit, but it’s quite slow (seven seconds to start up) and I’d expect a few tweaks to this in the coming months. v4 appears to be a whole new rewrite of the old utility and in addition to new content types (Music, Bookmarks, Images, Video, Landmarks), there’s genuine quick matching of any text search string. Great stuff and genuinely useful. No doubt Search v4 will appear for older devices on the Nokia Mobile Search site.

Nokia N95 8GB ReviewNokia N95 8GB ReviewNokia N95 8GB Review

- The ‘multimedia’ key, which used to be rather irrelevant and annoying is now slightly less irrelevant and less annoying. There’s now an additional carousel of 7 panes, Music, Videos, Gallery, Games, Contacts, Internet and Maps, each of which lists various options, documents and shortcuts, as appropriate. And there’s an N-Gage Games icon on the main menu! Currently this has shortcuts to the placeholder URLs for the N-Gage home page and the N-Gage client download page, but these will become live in time. There are also two demo games, FIFA 07 and Asphalt 3, both of which play rather well (in portrait mode only) and bode well for the success of N-Gage in a few months time.

Nokia N95 8GB ReviewNokia N95 8GB ReviewNokia N95 8GB Review

- Other software tweaks include the removal of the built-in video editor, a huge shame, especially considering that there’s now enough RAM to allow editing full VGA videos. Internet connections are now handled better and if you’re already online with an access point, most applications don’t pester you with the big question or, worse, complain that the access point ‘is already in use’. Video centre is now promoted to position 7 on the opening icon menu, reflecting Nokia’s confidence in the importance of video. And they seem to have fixed the problems playing back YouTube videos from the latter’s mobile site. Finally, Share online is now in the firmware, which is good to see.

Nokia N95 8GB ReviewNokia N95 8GB Review

Conclusion

Quite a list of changes from ‘original’ to ‘8GB’. Most are very positive, but it’s also worth noting a few of the negatives, which may, just may keep people using the original design. There’s the lack of a physical lens shutter, which may be an issue if you’re rough with your smartphone, there’s the lack of a built-in video editor, the fixed flash memory, with no option to take out a card and stuff it into a printer (for example), and finally there’s the black finish, which is slightly less tactile than the original Nokia N95 and the Nokia N95 8GB model.

Nokia N95 8GB Review

But there’s no doubting, on balance, that the Nokia N95 8GB is ‘better’ than its predecessor. The improvements in speed, battery life, free RAM and screen size all stand out as highlights. Build quality on this production unit was excellent in every regard and some of the mechanical oddities of some batches of the original are nowhere to be seen.

Nokia N95 8GB Review

Is this the best smartphone ever made? Yes. You could even drop the ’smart’ bit and call it the ‘best phone ever made’, since this will be sold in High Street shops and picked up, as the original was, by people from all walks of life, most of whom have never even heard the term ’smartphone’.

For all reader and power user though, note that the form factor limits of the original Nokia N95 are still in place, i.e. the QVGA screen, placing real usability limits on which web sites can comfortably be browsed around, and the numeric keypad - going back from the Nokia E90 or E61i to a keypad is a real wrench. Still, the latter problem can be solved for some use cases with a Bluetooth keyboard.

A big thumbs up overall though. Nokia has listened carefully to the feedback coming from early Nokia N95 users and has addressed just about every criticism and done it in style. The original device enjoyed several major firmware updates and countless extensions via the Download! application and I’d expect this to see the same attention from Nokia.

[Reviewed by Steve Litchfield from All About Symbian.]

Here’s a video review of the Nokia N95 8GB by Rafe Blandford from AllAboutSymbian.com

 

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