Posts Tagged ‘nokia mobiles’
Nokia 6300 cell phone combines a smart, intuitive design with a wealth of outstanding features. Nokia is the world leader in mobile communications in presenting new phones with multi features. Camera, Digital Player, FM Radio, Push to Talk, Bluetooth, MP3 Cell Phone – GSM – Tri Band – Bluetooth are the main features of the new Nokia 6300. Other exciting features include integrated hands-free speakerphone, a music player that supports MP3, eAAC+ and WMA formats, an FM stereo radio, and multimedia messaging service with e-mail. The high resolution display has the power to show 16 million true colors which is quite a triumph for a phone this small. There is a MicroSD memory slot so that you don’t have to worry about not being able to store all the pictures you take. Your new Nokia 6300 also offers streaming video, cool 3D games, downloadable themes, and plenty of ringtone possibilities, integrated hands free speakerphone Voice commands Voice dialing Voice are also the features of the new Nokia 6300. This phone is built in the representative Nokia stylish approach. It enables you to identify tracks title in music player, so you can easily listen any track. You can easily check your mail and send text messages. Battery backup is the main and very good feature of Nokia phones having 3 hrs and 30 min of talk time and 348 hrs of standby. The white version supports 2G network and fantastic browsing of web at speed of 32-48 kbps with WAP 2.0 xHTML browser. You can easily download any graphics and tones and can save easily any where you want.
Nokia N86 follows a well worn path; it is a device with a smartphone blood line stratching back a few years into the mists of history… The advent of the Nseries brand set Nokia on the road to the multimedia computer; devices that aimed to converge multimedia functionality and mobile phone into a single device. here’s no simple answer here. For one, the competitive landscape has changed. Touchscreen phones have arrived by the bucket load since the introduction of the Apple iPhone. The entry of Apple and Google has shaken up the market and given the incumbents plenty to think about. However, I think its important not to get carried away and to understand the context. While touchscreen phones do get the lion’s share of media and consumer attention, they are still out sold by the non-touch screen devices. N86 stand out if you put it next to a traditional LCD screen. AMOLED screens are becoming less unusual (e.g. i8910 HD), but it is still great to see this superior screen technology (in most, but not all, light conditions) being used. With the 8MP appended to its name it is no surprise that it is the standout feature of the N86. It is the first 8 megapixel (3280 x 2464) cameraphone that Nokia have produced. However, as we’ve commented in the past and as Nokia were at pains to point out at the launch in Barcelona, cameras are about a lot more than just the raw megapixel number. With the N86 there are several key factors that are more important that the increase in megapixels: increased sensor size and sensitivity, optimised Carl Zeiss optics, variable aperture and improved software algorithms. Let’s work through these in turn. As with other a number of other Nokia devices, there’s a Tessar Carl Zeiss lens in the camera, but as the first 8 MP device Nokia did suggest that extra time and attention had gone into the N86 (typically other camera modules are shared across multiple device). As a senior Carl Zeiss executive said to me at the N86’s launch, ‘we wouldn’t put our brand on it, if we didn’t think it was a good camera’. Essentially, Nokia and Carl Zeiss have worked together to provide a good an experience as possible within the physical constraints of a mobile phone and within certain cost constraints.