Nokia N97 in Smartphones
Verdict
Packed with features, but the keyboard is terrible and the touch-enabled OS confusing.
Review Date: 22 Jun 2009
Price when reviewed: £434 (£499 inc VAT)
Buy it now for: £415.00
Overall Rating

Features & Design

Value for Money

Ease of Use

Elsewhere, the N97's list of capabilities is immensely impressive. There's a good quality five-megapixel camera with dual LED flash, a huge 32GB of onboard memory, a 3.5mm headphone jack and good quality sound and smooth video from the phone's usable media player. You get an FM transmitter that allows you to play your tunes through the speaker of any handy radio - excellent for an impromptu party, or playing music through a car stereo.
Plus, there's the usual smorgasbord of smartphone technology, including 3.6Mbits/sec HSDPA, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, GPS, an RDS FM tuner and a front-facing camera for video calls. You get a proximity sensor that allows you to silence a call by flipping the phone over, an accelerometer that rotates the screen orientation without lag, and an ambient light sensor that automatically dims and brightens the screen. You can even use the camera to shoot 30fps VGA video; just don't expect Flip Mino-rivalling results.
It's all the more disappointing, then, that the damage has already been done by this point. Way before you get to the handy FM transmitter, high quality camera, decent media player capabilities and no-stone-unturned features list, the N97's usability issues stamp their muddy great boots all over your nice, clean smartphone fun.
It's also worth pointing out, at this point, that battery life is no more than average. We eked a mere two days out of the phone in our light use test - some way short of the best phones on the market, which can get to four days and more.
The unavoidable fact is that this phone's touchscreen OS is frustrating and confusing, and as a package it doesn't add up. Its mid-range looks and feel mean it can't challenge the likes of the iPhone or HTC's best handsets, and one of its key selling points - the keyboard - simply isn't good enough.
Author: Jonathan Bray
Latest Prices for NOKN97WHT_UK
| Seller | Price | Buy Now | Seller Rating |
|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
£415.00 |
|
advertisement
- Q&A: Why Conficker was a victim of its own success
- App developers losing faith in Android
- Biz Stone: Murdoch's Google veto will "fail fast"
- Google adds automatic captions to YouTube
- China ramps up cyber spying
- Mozilla maintains dependence on Google
- Windows 7 flying off the shelves
- Google Chrome OS: full details unveiled
- AOL slashes 2,500 jobs
- YouTube begins streaming full-length shows
- Why Britain's watchdogs have fewer teeth than goldfish
- Tabbed documents: how to make Office 2010 great
- Outlook 2010 People Pane – does it spell death to Xobni
- Microsoft Outlook 2010 screenshots
- Co-Authoring in Word 2010 and SharePoint Foundation 2010
- Microsoft Outlook 2010 screenshots: Backstage view
- Flash 10.1: Developing for Desktop and Device
- Microsoft Office 2010 screenshots: Recover unsaved items
- Microsoft Word 2010 screenshots: Text Effects
- Microsoft Word 2010: inserting screenshots
- The sci-fi legends who shaped today's tech
- Conficker's first birthday: how a year of havoc unfolded
- When will you get superfast broadband?
- The Crapware Con
- The 10 greatest tech U-turns
- Windows 7: everything you need to know
- PC 2010 and beyond
- The High Street Rip Off
- How to avoid the high-street rip-offs
- Do online protests really work?
- Getting to grips with Microsoft's IT Health Environment Scanner
- Virtualise your servers
- The changing face of travel gadgets
- Build your own distributed file system
- The bulletproof Dell that costs an arm and a leg
- Microsoft Office 2010 Technical Preview: Q&A
- Lawnmowers, the TyTN II and one odd insurance request
- There'll never be a bulletproof OS
- How far can we trust apps?
- Five nice touches in Outlook 2010
advertisement
Printed from www.pcpro.co.uk





