Thursday, December 3, 2009

Nokia E72

  The E72 is certainly a handsome handset, and reasonably compact for something offering a full QWERTY keyboard. It measures in at 114 x 58.3 x 10.1 mm and weighs 128g, and Nokia have been lavish with their use of metal trim: both the fascia surround and the battery cover are fingerprint-collecting chromefeatures:




Features

     Quad-band GSM support
     3G with HSDPA 10.2Mbps and HSUPA 2Mbps
     Landscape 2.36" 16M-color display of QVGA resolution
     Comfortable full QWERTY keypad
     Optical trackpad on the D-pad
     Symbian 9.3 OS, S60 UI with FP2
     600 MHz ARM 11 CPU and 128 MB of SDRAM
     5 megapixel auto focus camera with LED flash
     Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g, UPnP technology, DLNA support
     Built-in GPS receiver, A-GPS support, digital compass
     Accelerometer for turn-to-mute
     250 MB of internal memory, microSD expansion, ships with a 4GB card
     Standard 3.5mm audio jack
     Bluetooth v2.0 with A2DP support and microUSB v2.0
     FM radio with RDS
     Remote Wipe
     Great battery life
     Office document editor (including MS Office 2007)
     User-friendly Mode Switch for swapping two homescreen setups
     Smart dialing
     Full Flash support
     Great audio output quality
     Lifetime Nokia Messaging subscription




Display
Nokia E72 features a 2.36" 16M-color QVGA display.The screen performance is still great, with excellent contrast and vivid image. Sunlight legibility is not an issue for Nokia E72 display ranking it among the best of its class


Keys
The Nokia E72 QWERTY keyboard is an almost complete replica of what we had with the E63, some changes notable compared to the E71. Despite the few minor tweaks, the overall usability is intact. The space bar on the E72 is smaller, leaving room for two extra keys. One of them is particularly useful: the Symbol button will toggle Bluetooth on and off upon a long press.


Camera
The 5Mpx camera is featured with autofocus, it seems similar to that of Nokia modern device like Nokia 6720 Classic.




USB and Bluetooth
Using USB connection you can work on 3 modes:

 Data Transfer (Mass Storage USB), has rate of 2 Mb/c.
 PC Suite
 Image Print
The Bluetooth version is 2.0 and support for EDR.





-ve
 Optical trackpad is not as handy as we'd like
 Limited camera features, no geotagging, video recording maxes out at VGA@15fps
 No DivX or XviD support (can be enabled, possibly requiring a purchase)
 No TV-out functionality
 No dedicated camera key (trackpad compensates for that)
 Poor loudspeaker performance

Labels: ,

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

nice post

December 3, 2009 at 1:30 PM  

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home