Posts Tagged ‘E66’

Youth Review: Nokia E66 – A Disappointment.

Monday, August 4th, 2008

When I received the Nokia E66 a little over a week-ago I was really excited; my first mobile to test, and a mobile I had never used before! Plus, it’s a Nokia right? It should be good, not it has to be good. Nokia phones have always treated me well.

Wrong.

Now I know this is a business phone, and I’m sixteen years old, so the business use of it to me is somewhat useless. I really don’t require my e-mails on the move, and I don’t even really need the internet. And I quickly found looking at this phone from its business menu, and a point of view of a “business type person”, was quickly getting me nowhere.

So I’ve looked and felt this phone from my own perspective, and I’ve decided it’s not for me.

Firstly its looks; not the most engaging design known to man-kind, but at the same time it doesn’t scream “I’m a business phone, steal me!” which I quite like. It has a nice screen, although not that bright. As a plus the screen doesn’t get terribly dirty through fingerprints that much, which is always nice touch.

The buttons I found slightly annoying. This is particularly on the top of the phone where it is very easy to hit another button when you’re trying to do something else. Otherwise, the main keypad was brilliant; they weren’t too small, and were easy to text with. The side buttons are well placed too, which is always a plus.

The E66 itself is relatively heavy, and I tried carrying it in my pocket for sometime, but it aggravated me a lot, so it ended up going in a bag instead. I like to be able to keep mobiles where I want, and to be able to carry it in my pocket without that feeling of it weighing down on me; sadly the E66 doesn’t do this.

I really loved the landscape screen mode, which automatically flips when you turn the phone. I actually much prefer it, and find the phone a lot easier to use, and hold when it’s held that way. Although, as my Mum and friends pointed out – what about left handed people? The phone only flips so that the keypad is on the right, which is utterly useless for the left-handed population out there; Nokia, please fix that.

The 3.2 megapixel camera is a little disappointing, and I tested it against my Sony W810i 2 megapixel camera, and I found it didn’t look that much better. You can see a picture test I did by clicking “here” and “here“. The picture quality is below par, and at night there isn’t an option to have the light on whilst aiming, so you have to hope for the best.

The general navigation of the mobile is a little complicated even my Nokia’s standards. There are way too many menus, and I found some of the options menus were a little scattered. I also found myself navigating through it quite a lot to find what I wanted, which was a little annoying. I don’t want my mobile phone to be a treasure hunt; I want it to be organised, and quick to navigate.
The connectivity of the phone is brilliant, and I enjoyed being able to wirelessly tap into open connections around my local high street; this was particularly useful when I was sitting outside the Library, and I was looking up train times. Although the sites weren’t useful, the fact I could look up such information was handy.

The music quality on the phone is a little poor, although this may be due to the terrible enclosed headphones. My friends and I all collectively agreed that the headphones are too big for ears, and they don’t sit properly. I found this particularly annoying whilst walking around listening to music and they kept popping/falling out. The quality of the music was poor to say the least, and it was somewhat lacking in every department. There wasn’t any recuperation when I changed or manually edited the equalizer settings. I couldn’t use it for listening to music to at all.

I also had major issues with the placement of the headphone jack; it’s a serious downfall for pockets, and wastes a lot of space. I would have much preferred it to be at the top or bottom of the phone.

The single thing that has annoyed me the most though is the battery life. It’s utterly useless! On Friday morning it was fully charged, and I used it a little during the day, I listened to some music, and browsed the internet for about ten minutes. The battery life had gone down a quarter. Since Friday night it hasn’t been in use, sitting in my bedroom doing nothing, and the battery is nearly dead. The Bluetooth is on (I always have it on), and WLAN scanning is off; today I awoke to find it had two bars left. Since writing this it has gone down to one. Similarly, my W810i, same amount of charging, used on Friday for music and phone calls, all day Saturday for music, the camera, and texting, and Sunday for more texting, and this morning it had still over half of its battery, and this also had Bluetooth on.

I’ve barely used the Nokia in terms of battery power, and for someone of the likes of Ewan, or anyone else for that matter who had more serious uses for their mobiles, I’m sure that they would quickly find themselves phoneless.

I have a slight issue with the “leather case” that comes with mobile too. It’s not leather, and it’s horrible, cheap plastic, “plastic bin” material. For a phone of this price I would have expected Nokia to provide a real leather case, not a cheap replica.

I can’t say I hate the phone, because I don’t. Although I haven’t been able to test its durability, the metal casing definitely makes it feel like it could withstand a more than a couple of drops, and minor spillages – always good for someone like me. The ability to download Podcasts was really good too, and iTunes users would certainly appreciate it more than me (although it doesn’t sync with iTunes which isn’t good). The downloadable radio guides are brilliant too. I was able to find all the radio stations I love really quickly, without having to input them all manually.

I also can’t say I would buy the Nokia E66, for me, it isn’t practical, it’s far too expensive, and it has way too many flaws to make it financially worthwhile. It has some good points as I’ve mentioned above, but they are not enough to win me over.
It’s a shame; I’ve always loved Nokia’s too.

Feel free to browse more pictures of, and from the Nokia E66 at my Flickr account.

Blogger Q&A with E71 and E66 Product Managers

Monday, June 16th, 2008

Just prior to the virtual on-line session, the 4(!) bloggers at the event got to spend a few minutes with the product managers.

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Here’s what was discussed:

Q: Why FP1 not FP2?
A: Nokia needed a stable and reliable platform to build the unique (security and messaging) E-series features on. At the time the products started development FP2 wasn’t suitable.

Q: Where’s the GPS receiever on these devices?
A: On the top (learnt the lesson from poor N95 placement).

Q: What is the rational for the Contacts quick-access entry process?
It starts with letters from contacts in the phone book then reverts to numbers if something is entered that isn’t in the phonebook. There seems to be an exception for entry of the first character (always a number) which was noted.

Q: Will there be E71 variants – QWERTY in different form factors?
A: Considering it (reference was also made earlier in the day to other QWERTY devices in the pipeline).

Q: What’s happened to the E70 form-factor?
A: There’s no similar form-factor devices in the foreseeable future. Not ruling anything out very long-term though.

Q: These devices support Ovi services. Does that include N-Gage?
A: No – that requires additional hardware acceleration. Games are available (and included), but not N-Gage ones.

Q: So these are all ’single chip’ products?
A: Yes – done for size and cost.

Q: Does the inclusion of Ovi services risk customer confusion over the difference between E and N series?
A: No – there’s a common suite of functions, but games and media are really only consumable on N-series and messaging and security features of E series identify it as business-focussed. Some consumers will choose E-series for styling, but they will understand the device’s capabilities.

Q: Will there be a special US variant like the E62 was for the E61?
A: Both E71 and E66 are US-capable and will launch in Q3 there. There will be 3 variants of each handset for Europe, Asia, and a special Brazilian variant.

Q: What about syncing services?
A: No comment on Ovi offering – MFE and corporate or hosted Microsoft Exchange is best for the moment. Blackberry not supported on this platform for now – concentrating on core offering initially. Blackberry will have to develop a client if one is to be made available (reading the body language – forget it).

Q: How was the camera spec decided?
A: It’s the best compromise of spec and size.

Q: Why does the E71 have infrared?
A: Primarilly for the Asian market where it is still very popular.

Q: Why have light-up keys on teh E66? Doesn’t it make it hard to see what they do in bright conditions?
A: It’s not an issue – it’s only the top function keys and people learn their functions quickly without reference to icons. They wanted the device to have physical appeal too and this is part of that.

Q: On the E66 the delete key is immediately below the square-pad. Is it easy to trigger delete key by accident?

A: It’s in the same position as previous phones which have received this complaint, but harder to hit – as pad is more raised. Not found to be an issue in testing.

Q: What was the test feedback on the smaller E71 keyboard, paticularly regarding speed of typing?
A: 70% of test users choose the E71 keyboard over competitors in testing

Live E66 and E71 pics and video

Monday, June 16th, 2008

For those that want a fuller view Steve at AllAboutSymbian has the full write-up.

Here’s my snaps and video from the launch:

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Live from the Nokia E-Series Event

Monday, June 16th, 2008

Right now I’m sat on the 29th floor of a building over-looking the Thames… A very snazzy venue for a Nokia E-Series launch. I’m with the WOM World team (Nokia’s blogger relations guys), Jon Jensen and Rafe and Steve from AllAboutSymbian, but am mostly surrounded by mainstream media.

View from the 29th Floor

As you’d expect with an E-Series event the focus is on mobile e-mail.

Ready to go

They’re launching the E66 (announced first) – shame he’s calling it the ‘6600′. Not a Steve Jobs presentation!! It’s the first E-series announced with a full suite of entertainment services (from Ovi) [note: later clarified to exclude N-Gage], has screen auto-rotation and auto-silences by being turned over.

E66

They’ve also just announced the E71 – ‘an un-compromising e-mail experience’.  Specs are as widely leaked – the form factor is clearly something they’re very keen on as it’s being discussed a lot as well as the speed of the device. ‘World leading in this size’ – the thinnest device in this class ever.

E71

Both ship in July for around €350 unsubsidised.

They’re both S60 ‘open platform’ with over 10,000 applications available for them.

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Update: There’s now a a full review of the E71  by the AllAboutSymbian guys, I have posted some first pictures and videos and covered the blogger Q&A.


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