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February 22nd, 2009Another smart phone under the hammer – Rogers Nokia E71 reviewed

Posted by Editor in events, future of wireless, Uncategorized, wireless

In which Michele introduces the The Hammer Metric, WirelessNorth.ca’s new method for evaluating mobile devices.

The Hammer Metric is measured by the strength of one’s desire to smash any designed tool (device, machine, system, etc) with a hammer in relation to particular aspects of design, functionality or use, especially as said usage relates to feelings of epic frustration or FAIL. As such, a low rating is desired, as it reflects a minimal urge for destruction based on what could be construed as user-centric antagonization on the part of the designer/maker.

Today we’ll be aiming our hammers at the newish Nokia E71 (now available on Rogers). This is Nokia’s fastest, sleekest, priciest, contender for the title of BlackBerry killer. This is a hybrid work/play device, for both the creation and consumption of content, whither image, video, web, office, email (yes, this is content) or music. Overall we’re going to give it 3 out of 10 hammers. This is pretty good.

The biggest value of this device is that it does a LOT OF STUFF and there is SO MUCH STUFF*, and that one can personalize almost every single aspect of functionality. However, the raw capabilities of the device are minimally hampered in the carrier-bound edition of the phone. More on that later.

The Good

Crystal-clear sound – while walking down a busy urban street, the loudspeaker quality = remarkably good conversation from both sides. Also the headphone/mic adapter is v v good. (1/10 hammers)

Connectivity for the E71 is the peppy 3G GSM, as well as the great option for WLAN when available (note: the author subscribes to Rogers’ 6GB plan, and with extended media streaming + normal use, I haven’t come close to the limit). (1/10)

The battery life is incredible, even with extended use of rich media applications, data, voice, email, etc – it lasts for days. (1/10)

The E71 has a pretty substantial memory of up to 8GB with MicroSD, 110MB internal memory, and the form factor is glorious, with the exception of the keyboard (comments below). Slim, substantial, the stainless steel back and trim are bonuses for grip and style. (2/10)

QuickOffice lets you create word docs, spreadsheets and presentations on the fly, and while formatting is a bit limited it’s still pretty damn good for sketching ideas out on mobile. The PDF reader is a pretty sweet addition as well. (3/10)

The GPS works well, with Nokia’s Maps application enabling navigation, positioning, trip distance, etc. (3/10)

Media tools include: voice recorder, video/image recording with a good suite of format/style settings, 2 music players (that would be one more than necessary thanks to the pretty terrible Rogers-branded player), podcast subscriber, a barcode reader, radio players, flash player (could use improvement), etc. Media transfer is enabled via Bluetooth, infrared or USB, and is simplified via a drag&drop protocol. Also, if you’re connected to the OVI platform you can save your content to the cloud and access/sync/share to your heart’s content. (Cool but E-series apps are sparse. Ovi may be much improved when the App Store launches in May 09) (3/10)

Aaaannnd speaking of apps, there’s a wide variety available via the Download Catalog as well as various other places on the web – it takes a bit more work to find them but there is an incredibly rich array of applications and services available. (4/10)

The Meh

The UI, while effective enough to use, still feels very much like a desktop… I feel like the practicality of this device came to the forefront, and while simplicity and accessibility is the +++ for the E71, a part of me wants a bit of playful glam. Where’s my mobile experience? While I don’t feel like I need to be an engineer in order to use it (a la Blackberry), I am hoping that the next iteration of the S60 OS will be a wee bit less desktop-centric.(5/10)

The Rogers branded web platform is… not very useful, and feels like it is getting in the way of what is already a great but potentially awesome smartphone. Thankfully the personalization workarounds that Nokia has developed allow you to bypass most of this. (5/10)

Web browsing is also at times a bit kludgey, and I’ve had the darn thing crash multiple times while browsing, precipitating a total restart. (5/10)

The camera, while bumped up to 3.2 megapixels, could use a better sensor and a WAY better flash, if only to prevent your subjects from appearing like pale, crazed vampirical maniacs. Given enough light though, video shot with the device looks and sounds *great* (try that on your iphone).(6/10)

The Ugly

No connectivity to the N-Gage platform, of yet (it’s primarily for the N-series phones…) Boo! The games that are pre-loaded are shadows of what is possible. (7/10)

The keyboard is no BlackBerry – straight rows of keys makes for somewhat awkward typing, also the QAZ keys are aligned with the far left edge, and the zero is found not below the number grid (that would be the space bar) but to the right. Little quibbles, as after a few hours of use typos are almost non-existent. Wish I could say the same for my laptop. (8/10)

Also, you can not tether the E71 to your other devices to share your 3G over wifi or bluetooth (haven’t tried the infrared). The Nokia fully enables it, but the carrier has fully locked out the capability on their version of the E71 (9/10).

Full Specs: http://europe.nokia.com/A41146123
This device is a nice balance between work and play. It doesn’t have the jellybelly sweetness of the iPhone, but it holds its own based on a quality platform, powerful hardware and specs, rich media and hyper-localized personalization. 3/10 hammers!

The E71 is 99.99 from Rogers on a 3year term, $399 on no term. Full retail and unlocked $569 at ncix.com. The later is less of a bad deal than you might think. There is little in the carrier platform of the phone that adds value. Rather more the opposite… Le sigh.

*or other words that rhyme with stuff

  • Jared

    Let's just say I highly recommend you buy this phone grey market (ie, unlocked & unbranded) to eliminate any negativity this review might have on it. You can get it from various other retailers for much cheaper than $569 at ncix. (Jumbo computers, SN Traders for $469 – $499).

    I've personally had this phone since August 2008 and it's been the most reliable and incredible phone ever purchased. Only a couple of my friends have this phone with me, but we all know how fortunate we are to own it.

    It's funny too, I just got back from a ski trip with some friends, who have blackberry's and iphone's, and all of them got more and more impressed over the days of me using the phone. Not to mention the fact that it was MY E71 that GPS navigated ourselves to the ski resorts using the incredible Garmin Mobile XT :)

  • http://pdfoxy.com PDFoxy

    Nokia make great phones and this is one of them. The features are top notch and better then most phones have these days.

  • http://www.skialpine.com/ski-terrain-park/ tahoe ski vacation

    This gadget would really come in handy for locating prospective ski resorts with pinpoint accuracy! Awesome!

  • http://www.whatmobile.com.pk/Nokia_Mobiles_Prices Mobile Prices

    Thanx for writing such an informative article for us . I love to read about Nokia phones and you explained the E71 in detail that's really nice….

  • http://www.mobilephoneonly.co.uk/ Jerry Smith

    E71's an amazing phone! My fingers are getting used to its small keys.

  • venkat20

    I am Using the Mobile Nokia E71 Model Mobile.My Mobile was Locked to the Rogers Canada..I Found the Unlocking Instructions In the site Unlocking Instructions..

  • http://gadgettechblog.com/ Gadget_Blog

    Great post, really help me alot. Thanks.

    Cheers,
    gadgettechblog.com

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