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A smartphone is always a compromise between size and usability – but the N80 manages to provide a huge variety of super-smart features without hogging valuable pocket space. It does this by providing a host of entertainment features – MP3 player, FM radio, high-res camera – and excellent synchronisation software so you can have all your work documents plus diary and contact information at hand.
Sweet, sweet synchronisation
In other words, you do your hard work on a PC or Mac, and the N80 just lets you carry that information around with you. Rather than struggling to type on a tiny keyboard, you take photos and emailing them, or browsing your music collection via Wi-Fi – all thanks to the beautifully realised new version of Nokia’s Series 60 software.
This isn’t a radically new idea, of course – but the execution is exquisite. First of all, the ’N80 features pretty much every flavour of wireless you could want, from GPRS and 3G to Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. Secondly, it has the finest mobile-phone screen we’ve ever seen.
Nokia has managed to cram an incredible 150,000 brightly coloured pixels into the N80’s 2.1in screen, which means you simply don’t see the dots, no matter how close you get. Run the excellent new Nokia Series 60 browser – based on Apple’s Safari – and you can fit a good deal of a web page onto the postage-stamp sized screen. Scroll around, and a semi-transparent map of the entire webpage is overlaid to show you where you are. It’s gorgeous eye candy, and it really works.
Similarly, the N80 is great for viewing high-quality images and videos taken with the built-in 3megapixel camera, or rendering maps such as the excellent A-Z street plans.
Of course, when it comes to composing emails or writing notes, you’re somewhat limited by the N80’s slide-down numeric keypad. But habitual texters will be able to T9 almost as quickly as they can write on a Blackberry’s full keypad.
More disappointingly, the N80 lacks support for the A2DP protocol, which means you can’t stream stereo music via Bluetooth. But the phone’s real Achilles heel is battery life – spend more than a few minutes surfing via 3G or Wi-Fi and you’ll need to recharge before the day is out. Frankly, we’ll forgive the N80 its lack of battery power, because it’s so powerful elsewhere – and so much more fun than every other smartphone we’ve come across. Until the similarly sized, GPS-enabled N95 is launched in early 2007, that is…
Tech Specs
- Bluetooth
- Yes
- Dedicated MP3 player software
- Yes
- Digital zoom rating
- 20x
- FM radio
- Yes
- Main camera resolution
- 3
- Memory card slots
- Yes
- Memory card type
- miniSD
- Operating system
- Symbian OS 9.1
- Optical zoom rating
- n/a
- Quad band
- Yes
- Screen resolution
- 325x416
- Standby time
- 192
- Storage
- 128MB
- Supported music formats
- MP3, AAC
- Talktime
- 3
- Video resolution
- 2048x1536
- Wi-Fi
- Yes
- Xenon flash
- No














Comments
cnlfailure
5 years ago
I'm now at 16 months of 18 under contract on this little bast and I can't wait to be rid of it. Yes, it does what it says on the tin very nicely, however it's what the tin doesn't mention that makes this phone loathesome to live with. First and foremost, the fact that it unlocks itself it is slides open by a fraction of a cm, and given that it doesn't even soft-lock physically means that it's unlocking itself constantly. It's favourite passtime is to then either log on to the internet, fire up the mp3 player or start taking photos of the inside of your pocket thereby ensuring that it's feeble battery life is expired 20 minutes later. Next up is the oh-so-handy bottom connector for the mp3 player. This connection also does not lock in place, so the slightest movement on your part means the connection comes lose and the rest of the British public can listen to whatever you were doing. The only way to avoid this is to hold the phone in your hand. The frequency at which the connector comes off means that it's buggered within a week - like mine was - rendering it useless, and since the proprietory connection is not friendly to the other pairs of headphones you have cluttering up the place, it means that its time as an MP3 player is effectively over. My last major grievance is with the way it send text messages. While this could be a network issue (although if it is it should be fixed) the phone has taken to freezing for 60-90 seconds after I press send to fire of a txt. Utterly infuriating. The phone has plenty of features, true, but a complete lack of any kind of usability testing. And it corrupted the 2GB memory card I bought for it. I don't even use the bloody thing that much. Features : 5 stars Worth owning? No.