Monday, November 28, 2011

Nokia 700 review: Agent seven double-oh

BY GsmArena

The Nokia 700 has a license to chill. Unburdened with high expectations, this phone is getting ready to surprise you. Not in it for the win, it has too much class to lose.
Scorching hot body and super crisp ClearBlack AMOLED screen, the Nokia 700 is stepping on its 1GHz processor to the delight of those who like their Symbian shaken (Belle) not stirred.
Small phone ready for big things. That's how we summed the Nokia 700 up in our preview. Time we guess for it to take its first big test.
     
Nokia 700 official photos
While the typical thin smartphone keeps fit by spreading the innards out under a huge slab of a 4+ inch screen, the Nokia 700 is compact in every dimension. That includes weight too - the nice metal touches that give the 700 its solid hand feel haven't pushed the weight over 100g.
The 3.2" nHD screen is a perfect fit in this petite smartphone. The AMOLED unit uses Nokia's ClearBlack technology, which has repeatedly demonstrated its great image quality and near-perfect sunlight legibility.
The Nokia 700 has a lot going for it, but it’s not without downsides either. Here go our traditional lists:

Key features

  • Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE support
  • Penta-band 3G with 14.4 Mbps HSDPA and 5.76 Mbps HSUPA support
  • Slim 9.7mm body
  • 3.2" 16M-color nHD ClearBlack AMOLED capacitive touchscreen (220 ppi); Gorilla glass
  • 5 megapixel fixed-focus camera with LED flash; geo-tagging, face detection, smart zoom in video
  • 720p video @ 30fps recording, stereo sound
  • Symbian Belle OS
  • 1GHz CPU and 512 MB RAM
  • Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n
  • 2GB of inbuilt storage, microSD expandable
  • Active noise cancellation via a dedicated mic
  • DivX, XviD, H.264 video support
  • Standard 3.5 mm audio jack
  • Stereo FM Radio with RDS
  • microUSB port with USB On-the-go support
  • Stereo Bluetooth 3.0
  • GPS receiver with A-GPS support and free lifetime voice-guided navigation; Digital compass
  • Flash Lite support in the web browser
  • Smart dialing and voice commands
  • NFC support
  • Built-in accelerometer and proximity sensor
  • TV-out functionality (SD)

Main disadvantages

  • Small screen, too narrow for comfortable typing
  • 5MP fixed-focus isn't particularly impressive
  • No video-call camera
  • Browser lacks full Flash support
  • Relatively limited 3rd party software
  • No office document editing (unless you buy an upgrade)
  • Non-hot-swappable microSD card
  • No HD TV-Out
What's under the hood should come as no surprise. Nokia's current crop of Symbian phones have more or less the same hardware. The camera is down a notch to 5MP from the 8MP unit in the 701. However, with both using fixed-focus optics and both shooting 720p video, we don’t think there's that much of a difference.
Inside is Symbian Belle, which we quite liked, running on the 1GHz CPU and 512MB combo that's enough to keep Android happy, let alone an OS that emerged around 2001.
Nokia 700 Review Nokia 700 Review Nokia 700 Review Nokia 700 Review 
Nokia 700 held in hand

Symbian Belle makes a difference

Nokia have Windows Phone in the driving seat and Symbian will have to settle for a backup role. But an OS that was once too big to fail, is finally moving too good to throw away. A good looking phone like the Nokia 700 is the perfect vessel for the new Symbian Belle. The new fast, fluid and beautiful Symbian Belle.
Nokia 700 Review Nokia 700 Review Nokia 700 Review Nokia 700 Review 
Symbian Belle has a shiny new look
And here's Belle on video because static screenshots don't tell the whole story:
The key elements in the Belle makeover are the new homescreen and menu, the updated native apps and overall polish of the interface. Here’s an extensive video demo starring Nokia 700, so you can get a good feel of Belle before we start.
You get up to six homescreens (up from three) and you can delete unneeded ones. Each homescreen has its own individual wallpaper, rather than one for all to share. A notable contrast with Android, the scrolling of homescreen panes is looped so you never need to go back from the last one. Auto-rotation of the homescreen is enabled too.
Nokia 700 Review Nokia 700 Review Nokia 700 Review 
Symbian Belle homescreen in portrait and landscape modes
Widgets have dropped the one-size-fits-all philosophy and now come in up to five sizes. In addition to widgets, you can also put shortcuts on the homescreen – the end of the silly shortcut widgets.
A tap and hold on a widget or shortcut activates edit mode, but only for that widget/shortcut. You can’t touch the others – there’s no mode where you can edit everything at once (which seems a bit inconvenient). You can move, delete or (where available) access the settings of the selected one.
Nokia 700 Review Nokia 700 Review Nokia 700 Review Nokia 700 Review 
Moving widgets around • Adding a widget to the homescreen
Besides widgets and app shortcuts, you can also add contact shortcuts to the homescreen. To do that you need to go into the Options menu of the contact’s details, but the extra taps are worth it. You end up with one-touch access to the contacts you call most often.
The bottom of the homescreen has three virtual buttons – menu, dialer and homescreen settings. The other big addition to the homescreen is the pull-down status bar at the top of the screen – think Android’s notification area or the Notification Center in iOS 5. This area is where notifications and status info wait for your attention, but you also get toggles for mobile data, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and Silent mode.
Nokia 700 Review Nokia 700 Review Nokia 700 Review 
Pull-down menu is always accessible, helpful
This pull-down status bar is available on any screen so you can also quickly change a setting and look up new events.
Moving on, the main menu has changed as well – it’s now completely flat, no level upon level of subfolders nonsense any more. Or at least not by default – you could still manually create folders, if you like. You can’t put folders in folders though (not that you’d want to do that anyway).
Nokia 700 Review Nokia 700 Review 
The new main menu
You sort icons alphabetically or manually, by choosing the Arrange option and Nokia menu items around. You can’t drop a shortcut in a folder while arranging them though. To do that, you have to press and hold on a shortcut, choose Move to folder and then select the desired folder. There are also Add to homescreen and delete options here.
Nokia 700 Review Nokia 700 Review Nokia 700 Review Nokia 700 Review 
Arranging the menu • Creating a new folder
This arrangement isn’t as convenient as in other OSes and it contrasts with how the homescreen works. On the homescreen you press and hold to move an item, while a tap and hold on a menu item pulls out a menu. To move items around you have to hit the Options key and choose Arrange.
It’s a bit odd the way folders on the homescreen work – you can only add a folder to the homescreen by first creating it in the menu. After you've added it to the homescreen, it remains visible in the menu.
Because the main menu is busier than usual - and will only get more crowded as you install extra apps - the search option is a handy addition.
The task manager in Symbian Belle is virtually unchanged – press and hold the Menu key and it pops up. It fits a bunch of side-scrollable thumbnails, one for each of the currently open apps. It’s worth noting that hitting the End key will terminate an app, while pressing the Menu key just goes to the homescreen with the app active in the background.
Nokia 700 Review Nokia 700 Review Nokia 700 Review 
The task manager is unchanged
Symbian Belle on Nokia 700 is fast, responsive, beautiful. It’s an experience that everybody will like. This is how Symbian should've looked and behaved all along.

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