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Friday, April 25, 2014

Behold! the Nokia X

As a proud owner of a Nokia Lumia which runs a Windows Phone OS, I was curious to see how Nokia’s first Android device will turn out. The Nokia X smartphone, seems like a Stephen Elop legacy or should I say gamble. The device was launched some months back at the Mobile World Congress in Spain and unveiled a few weeks back here in Accra, and finally I have been able to get my hands on a unit to review.

Before I go into details, I would like to share images from the unboxing process below:








The device comes with all the necessary things to get you started. A set of instruction manuals, a USB wall charger and a set of bright red headphones. The only thing missing is a microUSB cable for data syncing ( I wonder why RED though…being an “EWE” man it is funny considering what people would say. *Ayigbe ni* with RED headphones).
Now let’s see what is under the hood.

Nokia X Quick Specs

Display Size: 4 inch IPS LCD capacitive touch screen with 480 x 800 resolution
Processor: 1 GHz Cortex A5 Dual Core Processor
RAM: 512 MB
Software Version: Android 4.1.2 (Jelly Bean) OS
SIM: Dual MicroSim
Camera: 3 MP FF camera.
Secondary Camera (rear): No
Internal Storage: 4 GB with 2 GB approx. available
External Storage: Expandable up to 64GB
Battery: 1500 mAh battery Lithium Ion
Connectivity: 3G, Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, Bluetooth 4.0 with A2DP, aGPS, 3.5mm audio jack, FM Radio
Sensors: Accelerometer, gyro, proximity

Physical Look

Easily fits in your pocket and palm at a weight of 128 grams with physical dimensions of 115.5 x 63 x 10.4 mm which makes it similar to Asha phones in terms of looks and build. Thus, quiet smaller than a Nexus, a Samsung Galaxy S5 or an Apple IPhone 5s.  It has a matte finish on the back cover and glass on the front... it is fairly light in weight and both of these things makes it fairly portable.

Operating System
Nokia X is built on Android Open Source Project and represents another fork of Google’s mobile operating system. The act of forking is defined as download free and open source software without prior approval of those currently developing, managing, or distributing the software. The first to attempt was when Amazon chose Gingerbread (2.3) as the base for building a mobile operating system for their Kindle Fire range of tablets, and Nokia selected Jelly Bean (4.1.2) for the Nokia X.
Not a bad choice though 18 months. I believe the average Android enthusiasts will find it acceptable. Nokia be someway ooo, they do not even mention Android in the phone settings as Nokia is calls the OS, Nokia X Software Platform.

Memory
In built memory of the device is 4 GB out of which around 2 GB is available to the user, but good thing about this device is that it has Micro SD card slot that can be expanded to 32 GB and you can move apps from phone to SD card and can also install apps on SD card.

User Interface

So Nokia is very smart or rather tried to maintain uniqueness as it used a non-familiar UI and not the regular Android look and feel. The “fast lane” and tile like looks ensures smooth navigation. You clearly see an inspiration from the Nokia Lumia and Asha series devices, as it has icons which looks and behave like tiles. When you swipe the lock screen it takes you to the home screen which shows you tiles for all the apps in a similar manner as shown on any Windows Phone device. Which means that the number of apps will increase with time and you have to scroll more and more to open a particular app, or you can just make folders or use the search option. Overall, the UI is good but a bit laggy sometimes but wait, what do you expect when you are limited to 512 MB of RAM.

Neat UI

Display

With an IPS LCD display at 480 x 800 pixels resolution, the display is good but the viewing angles are not that wide but still its looks decent.

Camera

The camera is 3 MP Fixed Focus  rear camera which is pretty average in photo quality but the overall quality is decent in daylight but in low light photos come out very average, please don’t expect too much from the camera on this phone. It is interesting to note that, there is no front facing camera. Thus, if an owner of a Nokia X device, forget selfies unless you use the rear camera with some positioning skills. Too bad for my selfie bombers Kwabena, Edward et al. You cannot do the Obama.

One of my cakes...


Media

The sound from the loudspeaker is good but not too loud and the earpiece gives clear sound without any distortion on voice calls. You can play 720p HD videos but 1080p videos cannot be played on this phone.

Gaming

You can play medium graphic intensive games and casual games like Temple Run 2 ,flappy bird( where is dbreeze? ) and subway surfer smoothly but heavy games may not run, if they run they will lag a lot this device is not designed to play HD games or graphic dependent games.

Battery
With a Snapdragon S4 processor running at 1GHz you have some good battery life, smooth running of the Nokia X platform and almost lag-free navigation. The battery on the device is 1500 mAh which can last up to 3-4 hours on heavy usage and on moderate usage you will get around 1 day or more as usage time.

 

Services

All the Google services such as Gmail, Google Maps and Gdrive including APIs and back-end support for maps, cloud messaging (Hangout), and the Play store, among others are replaced with Microsoft’s services such as OneDrive, Outlook ,Skype , HERE Maps to name a few in the Nokia X.  
A Microsoft flavor of Android allows it to develop its strategy of cloud services. You can download all the popular apps from the built in Nokia store or you access the regular android apps from the 1market. Two apps markets on one device? Isn’t that fascinating?

Conclusion

It is the first android phone from Nokia which is a worthwhile effort, great form factor, weight and build quality but the hardware on the phone specially RAM and camera is not “SOLID”.  With access to two SIMs via the dual MicroSim slots and the freedom to install apps from different stores you can spice your experience up with variety.
Web browsing is just okay and another drawback is that you will have to use a memory card if you plan on storing videos, music and images on this device. The 3G and Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n functionality works pretty well. The overall performance of the phone is satisfactory but no real killer specifications including the smoothness and PureView technology found in the Lumia devices. I am still a Windows person though a Nokia person too so i say buy it. Its affordable 

 

 




3 comments:

Unknown said...

Please i wish to buy one how can i get it?.

Attigs said...

http://frankotrading.com/ or any MEDI-COM supported outlet in Accra

Edward Tagoe said...

Please, the cake....is it is just cake or it contains some X ingredients?

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