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Christian Lindholm, former Nokia Director, talks about his Nokia N95

Categories: Devices
By: , IntoMobile
Thursday, February 1st, 2007 at 2:43 PM

The Nokia N95 (pre-production proto) finally arrived a couple weeks ago and it is the most existing mobile device I have used in years. It has everything. The Camera is amazing and the device is lighter than one thinks. It does produce spontaneous WOWs. I think this is due to three things, weight, size and brightness of the screen and 5MP camera. It is much faster than N73 and the mechanics have a great clicketiclack feel to it. The stereo audio is good, the slide show feature is improved as the panning is smoother.

I love the fact that the video recording has matured to VGA resolution and 30fps. It is smooth and clips are really watchable, The pictures are crisp and the macro is as great as it has been on N90 and N73. If I ever buy another digital camera it will be a SLR.  I hence pronounce the pocket camera dead. The Camera boot time is my greatest criticism of the device! This needs to be fixed it is unacceptably slow!

The GPS was cool, I was impressed how swiftly the maps came down over 3G. I also liked the graphics on them. Clean design. The N95 screen is big enough to make mapping useful. From utility point of view it is first generation and there is plenty room for innovation. I wish it was more, I am here, let me explore what’s around me. What makes the Maps app really interesting is the way they split it into product and service. The maps are downloaded dynamically, so where you move, a map corridor is downloaded and stored on the card. If you want turn-by-driving direction you need to buy a service. There are also point of interest services from several providers. This is real end2end management from Nokia’s point of view.

The N95 is a major upgrade compared even to the N73 launch last summer.  For anyone who makes phones, the N95 must be a source of stress. The sheer level of complexity to engineer this device would make most engineers have sweat pearls in the forehead. This is the most sophisticated gizmo at 120g ever engineered. Congrats guys, my hat off. My very rough guess is that more than a thousand engineers worked directly full-time on the device around the world and across the ecosystem, most of them have worked very long hours. I am also sure that in the labs there are engineers and designers who already are bored stiff with it, busy making the successors, and like this they will blow your socks off when public. As an outsider I am constantly surprised by the seemingly acceleration of utility in some many domains. When I put the N95 next to my wife’s 6682, they seem to be from a different decade, and it is only two years ago. The N95 to me is yet again proof that we are living a mobile revolution that is about to transform society in a profound way. All that said would I recommend the N95 to friends and family the answer is yes.

Source: Christian Lindholm

Via: Tommi’s S60 Application Blog

I’m still going to say we aren’t there quite yet. $200 point and shoots are still producing images with a much higher degree of color saturation and proper lighting than a $700 smart phone.

$200 point and shoots also boot in less than 3 seconds.

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About The Author

Stefan Constantinescu

Stefan Constantinescu (@WhatTheBit on Twitter) has loved technology since as far back as he can remember. It started with computers, but in the past few years his passion has turned to mobile devices. As a mobile phone enthusiast who lives and breathes devices that connect to the internet, he knows he is not alone with this radical fascination of all things wireless. He is strongly opinionated and enjoys a good debate so leave comments in his posts and he’ll get back to you! Stefan began blogging as a hobby in the fall of 2006 and joined IntoMobile in the summer of 2007. Later he got a job at Nokia in March 2008, but as of June 2009 he has rejoined the IntoMobile team. He is currently based out of Helsinki, Finland.

  • alberto

    wondering if

    u hav the nokia n95 prototype (not retail)
    can u still update thefirmware as if it was a retail?

  • Viipottaja

    Lol. Alberto, what the heck are you talking about? Stefan does not have the N95.. why are you asking him that?

    Yep, I agree that pocket cams still produce infinitely superior pics. However, N95 may produce good enough ones for many people to indeed skip their next pocket cam, even at the price of lower quality pics. I might do the same, get an SLR and a N95 (our pocket digi cam died recently).

  • alberto

    i kno he doesnt.
    jus wondering if he knows

    cuz i can get a prototype
    and i wana kno if u can update the firmware to get rid of bugs, like u can do w/ a retail.

    like was the downside of a prototype (missing features? bad screen? cam quailty, etc..can they all be fixed???)

  • Viipottaja

    Ah, gotcha.. well, prototype is also a prototype in hardware terms so you may want to be careful in any case. But I would imagine you can istall the new final firmware (unless some hardware related aspect has changed making the firmware incompatible).

  • Roland Tanglao

    true, but $200 point and shoots don’t have any connectivity and force you to go through a massive chain of pain to get your photos online

    with Shozu on your mobile or even Nokia’s gallery to flickr and vox you can get your videos and photos online with a far less nasty chain of pain

  • Jonathan Greene

    Stefan – Hard to argue the speed of a 200 buck point and shoot, but then it does not do anything else. the 5MP images of the N95 (even the 3MP of the N73 and N93) are excellent and when you factor in GPS, cellular calling, 3G data, wifi and a world of applications, it’s not even playing the same game as the el cheapo camera.