Posts Tagged ‘E63’

Goodbye to the E63

Sunday, December 7th, 2008

MIR-E63-23Thursday was time to say goodbye to the Nokia E63 – a pre-release unit the excellent folk at WOM blessed us with on announcement day… and I’m going to be sad to see it go.

Although less capable than its E71 older sibling, with a 2MP fixed-focus camera and no internal GPS, it’s going to be priced 40% lower than the E71 (expect it to be slightly more expensive than that at first, but to quickly settle to that price point) and these compromises feel right for a lower-cost unit – the camera in particular is no great loss as, despite what the specs might suggest, the E71’s camera struggled in anything other than ideal conditions.  Consumers should find this new model free on even low monthly tariffs and businesses will be able to afford large-scale deployments.

And whilst the best bits of the E71 have been retained – it’s diminutive size, huge 1500mAh battery and bright screen – some of the additions are really what make this phone.  The revised keyboard layout is excellent for messaging applications giving much more rapid access to common symbols and punctuation.  The keys are also now made from plastic with a slightly rubberised feel giving a better typing speed and less errors.  A 3.5mm headphone jack is offered for the first time in a business ‘E’-series phone (although the plug that blocks the hole when not in use is rubbish) and I found the torch feature of the LED camera flash useful surprisingly useful, as will anyone who’s used a phone screen to illuminate the bedroom as you creep in trying not to wake your partner after a long night drinking / blogging / consulting on social media.

Some commentators have criticised the plastic shell as being inferior to the E71’s case, but that’s not really the whole story… Whilst it is slightly thicker than the E71 the front has a solid metallic finish and the back has a soft-touch effect which felt pleasant in the hand, provided good grip and after heavy use looked better than the E71’s metal finish which became smeared and discoloured.  The choices of deep red or dark blue aren’t in line with the monotone grey uniform Blackberry devices in this class wear, but this is an improvement… a mass market business device that’s sober enough to get the nod from the boss, yet looks good on the desk.  Nokia have done amazing things at this price point.

Power users and execs are still likely to prefer the E71 if they’re choosing a Symbian device in this class, but if you mostly want calling and messaging or just one that’s a bit harder wearing, I’d pick this.  Even better, I’d keep watching the Nokia stable as the best bits creep into other models across the range.

—-

Having been very impressed with the hardware and build quality of the E63 I have to mention the software… It’s S60 3rd edition which will be familiar to current E-series users, but feels increasingly out-dated.  When configured with 3rd party products or Nokia’s add-ons it becomes a competent smartphone – Mail for Exchange provides push-mail with calendar / contacts sync, Opera Mini reasonable mobile browsing and PsiLoc Connect manages data access – but in nearly every aspect S60 ‘raw’ just isn’t good enough.  The built-in IMAP e-mail was awful 3 years ago and remains so…  I’m not sure how much longer buyers (other than Symbian enthusiasts) will tolerate such a poor ‘out of the box’ experience.

Say hello to the Nokia E63 (again…) [updated]

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

After a false start yesterday, the Nokia E63 device that Womworld sent me can finally see proper light of day.  Launched today Mobile Industry Review are one of the lucky few to receive the handset for a first hands-on.

Full photo set here

The initial temptation is to dismiss this handset as ‘just a plastic E71′ – it certainly shares much of the E71’s design and is intended to be sold at a lower price point, but I’m not convinced that’s fair:

E71_10MIR-E63-7

The main differences appear to be:

  • The E63 has a coloured plastic shell versus the E71’s metal one.  The front is a metallic-finish, whilst the back cover is a soft-touch finish – both attract far few fingerprints than the E71’s.
  • The E63 is nearly identical in dimensions to the E71 except for the depth – the E63 is around 1.5 times the depth of the E71.
  • The E63 has a 3.5mm jack on top versus the E71’s 2.5mm jack on the side.  This appears to be the first E-series to have a standard headphone socket – something normally saved for N-series.
  • The E63 has no side buttons for volume or voice recording.  It’s also missing the E71’s IR window.
  • The E63 has a revised keyboard layout, adding a ‘/’ button on the lower row, shortening the space bar.
  • The E63 appears to have a slightly smaller dimension screen although it is the same 320 by 240 pixels as the E71.
  • The E63 lacks internal GPS.
  • The E63 does not support HSDPA data.
  • The E63 has the same 110 meg internal memory, but is shipped without an additional memory card (although a slot to add one is present).
  • The E63 has a 2MP camera versus the E71’s 3.2MP and has a fixed focus.
  • The E63 adds a flashlight function that allows the camera’s LED flash to be used as a torch.
  • The E63 lacks the E71’s faux-leather slip case.

And whilst it is clearly a cut-down model – I don’t find any of these differences make the E63 a bad device.  The camera particularly is little sacrifice as the E71’s unit, regardless of resolution, was dire and the E63’s one appears no worse for its lower res.  I’d even take the slight size increase and plastic case without too many complaints – in use a smudged and smeary E71 doesn’t look that much better than the E63.

But lets be clear – consumers aren’t the target market here – businesses are… and the key business features are all still here:

  • WiFi
  • 3G (there had been some rumours this was 2G only)
  • Microsoft Exchange sync via MailForExchange
  • Expandable memory
  • Fast operation and stable S60 3rd Edition FP1 OS
  • Pre-installed QuickOffice
  • E-series security and encryption functions
  • Huge 1500mAh battery

…and now all of these things can be obtained from Nokia without also incurring the cost of high-end cases and GPS.  The executives may still have the E71s but the rest of us will get the E63s… Looking at the popularity of the lower-spec Blackberry devices around the large corporates I know (where they’re deployed in the hundreds or thousands) this is a smart move.

What Nokia have to do now is price this correctly relative to the E71 – nothing’s been announced so far… Watch this space, but I’d guess (and it is just a guess) at pricing around 60% of the E71. (see below for update)

Nokia-E63_05_lowresI’ll be testing the device out over the next few days and we’ll have it on the show early next week.

As ever – post your questions below and I’ll do my best to answer them.

Update: It will be available in blue as well as the red pictured above for €199 pre-tax SIM-free (which will typically equate to £199 in the UK once taxes are included).  Full press release here.

I have a Nokia E63! [updated]

Tuesday, November 11th, 2008

Thanks to the people at Nokia Womworld, the best surprise of the day has just arrived – a pre-production E63 (the model we caught a glance of unofficially the other week) not even in final packing!  I’ll be trying it out and reporting back.

11112008218

Looking much like an E71, it has a 3G chip-set, an all-plastic housing, a 2MP camera and a 3.5mm headphones connection (at last!), but no internal GPS.  They keyboard’s slightly different too!

Certainly looks prettier in red than the black one we saw.

1111200822011112008222

11112008223

The headphone socket lives under that removable plastic ‘lug’, which isn’t attached so will get lost pretty quickly I think.  Regardless, if you’re not a headphones user, it’s a nice touch to keep dust out.

Nokia E63 spotted at the Smartphone Show

Tuesday, October 28th, 2008

We met Mauricio of Visto walking round the Symbian Smartphone Show last week and — well — you could hear an audible squeak of excitement from us as he brought out a Nokia ‘Exx’.

That’s right.. it’s an E— something. We thought it could possibly be the E63 — and Mauricio did let slip that name.

We’ll publish the vid shortly but meantime… here’s the Exx next to the E71…

… And a closer look …

And you can view the video of it being loved and feted by the Mobile Industry Review Show team here.


Powered by Interactive Energy | Sign up to The Application Review newsletter