WOM World were more then kind enough to lend me a Nokia N95 8GB NAM for trial over 3 weeks, and I have come to know it's Pros and Cons for someone in my situation over this time.
The Nokia N95 8GB is an improvement to the revolutionary Nokia N95, mixing S60 powered goodness with advanced features such as a 5 megapixel camera, GPS, WiFi, TV-OUT as well as many other significant technologies that still look advanced today. Over the N95 it offers a bigger battery (1200mAh VS 950mAh), more RAM (128MB VS 64MB), a bigger screen (2.8" VS 2.6"), improved Media Keys, 8GB of internal memory and a new Black colour.
The N95 8GB is a fairly ordinary looking device, apart from the gigantic 2.8" screen on the front of the device. Showing it to friends at school, they were wowed by the Dual sliding design (and impressed by the Automatic-Screen Rotation feature, which changes the screen to landscape mdoe upon turning the phone around due to it's built-in accelerometer)
Going around the device clockwise you can see the infrared port (nice to see it still hanging on) the 3.5mm jack and the left loudspeaker on the left side. On the top is a power button by it's lonesome. On the right side is the right loudspeaker, the volume keys, the Gallery key and the 2-press Camera key (Half-Press=Focus, Full-Press=Take Picture). On the bottom is the Mini-USB port and the charger slot.
The keys, while slightly squashed under the display, were fairly easy to use. The numeric keypad, once slid out, is excellent, they are big enough and offer great feedback and differentiation between keys. They are also nowhere near the top of the slider which is a problem on other phones for some with larger thumbs. The media keys weren't so impressive though. While it was great that they were there they offered mushy feedback at best, although the new ridges aided differentiation between keys when it was in your pocket.
I must also say the back cover was great, easy to put on or off, but it was held securely in place, unlike my N81 8GB that is a bit difficult to put on or off and creaks a bit once it's on.
The stereo loudspeaker quality was ok, but not as good as the N81 8GB. Depending on the situation it could have been louder or softer, it wasn't definitively behind or ahead of the N81 8GB in loudness levels so it was adequately loud for all scenarios.
The 3.5mm jack on the left edge, while great for N-GAGE gaming, is horrible IMO for listening to music, if you have pants with a phone pocket the headphones will cause it to get stuck in your pocket or to not even make it in the first place. It should have followed the N81 8GB for this aspect.
Speaking of music, the N95 8Gb has the standard N-Series/XpressMusic (5700) music player. It has an 8-band Equaliser (or Equalizer as my American model stated ;)) as compared to the 5-band on my N81 8GB. However, while the N95 8GB is ok for music listening, the N81 8GB is much better then it, music sounds a little clearer, much more bass and more volume. Better headphones could make the N95 8GB shine (I used some el-cheapo sub $20 Sony's) but the N81 8GB would just sound better then it again. The visualis(z)ations worked much better on the N95 8Gb thanks to it's dedicated Graphics Processor, which leads us onto the next topic...
N-GAGE gaming was quite good on this phone. The Graphics processor allowed every game to run very smoothly and the Media Keys also worked as Gaming Buttons (although they aren't as good as the ones on the N81 8GB). I also tried TV-OUT with N-GAGE, but the results were not incredibly impressive because of heavily aliased (jaggies) visuals coming from the phone.
TV-OUT can be used with any part of the phone, but it's usefulness increases with watching videos and looking at pictures because of it's ability to output in full VGA resolution.
Speaking of Pictures and Videos, now would be a perfect time to talk about the amazing camera abilities of the phone. This phone takes stunning 5 megapixel images, netting the phone possibly a 3rd position in the Western World in terms of camera quality (2nd=Nokia N82, 1st=Motorola ZN5) The videos are also top notch with VGA 30fps recording, but why is there a red light for videos? A solution similar to the N81 8GB would be good where the normal LED is displayed just at half the brightness to not wear it out. After you have taken your photo or video you can quickly access it by pressing the Gallery key of the right hand side of the device as mentioned above. I found this very useful over my time with the phone, which was unexpected.
Other great features include built-in WiFi and GPS. The WiFi allowed me to browse the internet around my home for free, the same as any other S60 powered device would. It is always handy for me to have WiFi and many other households could also find this feature very handy.
GPS locked onto me while indoors with no AGPS in 3-5 minutes, Cold Start. I did not thoroughly test this feature however as I do not find it very important. It is nevertheless, quite a handy feature for some people and Nokia Maps 2.0 was a great looking and working software to use. It was slightly annoying to have to keep the slide open but this is a minor qualm.
There were some slightly annoying things about the phone which Nokia have hopefully improved upon for the N96 (One of the problems has already been solved):
1. Phone automatically locking when closing is quite annoying, and there is no option to turn it off. The N96 and the N81 8GB have a switch/slider at the top that can be quickly flicked to lock the phone or unlock it
2. The phone was slightly laggy at times, my N81 8GB is snappy at all times.
But overall, the N95 8GB is a great phone, the excellent multimedia capabilities, whether it's the camera, or whether it's the N-GAGE gaming, all excel at what they do (except for the slightly lackluster music player)
Prices are dropping all the time, and if you already have a dedicated MP3 Player or are ok with standard sounding music, then this could be the phone for you
8/10
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