The good: The Nokia Lumia 900's
eye-popping unibody design sets a new direction for smartphone style.
Its LTE speeds, vivid 4.3-inch screen, and 8-megapixel camera are high
points.
The bad Point: Problems
with call quality and minor design flaws like some gaps in the
construction and weirdly placed buttons get in the way. The designer
camera optics are good, but they don't live up to the hype. The phone
shoots 720p video rather than 1080p video.
The bottom line: The
Nokia Lumia 900's unique design and high-end features make Windows
Phone look fantastic, and the $99 price is extremely fair. Despite some
flaws, this is my favorite Windows Phone yet.
Nokia
sorely needs a "hero" smartphone with the looks, the speeds, the specs,
and a price that will hush the doubters. With the Lumia 900, Nokia
proves that it has the chops to compete. We thought so at CES, where we awarded it best new smartphone, and I think so now.
But is the Lumia 900 a breakthrough device? The features are high for
Windows Phone's threshold (the OS doesn't yet support multicore
processors), but the phone lacks a halo-making feature like the Nokia PureView with its gasp-inducing 41-megapixel camera.
While a revolutionary new feature could clinch Nokia's victory, what it
has now in the Lumia 900 is the best Windows phone I've tested yet, and
it's perfect for the mainstream market. Of course, my assessment could
always change in a week when the HTC Titan II
launches, with its whopping 16-megapixel camera, though to me, the
Lumia 900 is ahead in style points. It's also half the price: $99.99
versus $199.99.
Beyond the looks, I'd recommend the Lumia 900 without hesitation
to anyone considering a Windows Phone -- although I'm psychologically
incapable of leaving out important caveats. I love the Lumia 900's bold
look and the way that the phone's style and screen make the Windows
Phone interface pop. With Windows Phone nearly identical on all
handsets, Nokia really only has the hardware to control, and in terms of
specs, it did a great job (mostly). LTE...check. Strong camera quality,
check. Fast processor, sturdy construction, check and check. There are
still some changes I'd make if Nokia had asked for my opinion, including
the placement of some buttons, quality control when it comes to calls
and on a couple external components, and 1080p HD video rather than
720p. However, none of these flaws would keep me from using the 900.
Design
If you imagine the cell phone section of a funky, Scandinavian design shop run by avant-garde youths, the Lumia 900 would fit right in. Its lightly sculpted unibody chassis and deliberate use of color scream "lifestyle product." Bold as an exclamation mark, the Lumia 900 has pure pop-art coursing through its electrical veins.
If you imagine the cell phone section of a funky, Scandinavian design shop run by avant-garde youths, the Lumia 900 would fit right in. Its lightly sculpted unibody chassis and deliberate use of color scream "lifestyle product." Bold as an exclamation mark, the Lumia 900 has pure pop-art coursing through its electrical veins.

This is the classiest "Smurf" phone you're ever going to see.
What makes the Nokia Lumia 900 so eye-catching? Even
without the electric blue version that I have, the bright white color
arriving April 22, or the more-understated black color, the 900's
profile stands out. The chassis has a perfectly flat top and bottom,
with round sides and a slightly curved back, which Nokia then topped
with a large, glossy screen.
At 5 inches tall by 2.7 inches wide by 0.45 inch deep, it's a
large phone. The smooth, matte finish helps it slide into pockets and
purses, but because of the width and flat back, the Lumia 900 did feel a
little flat in my hand. However, it was comfortable on the ear. It may
feel a bit heavy at 5.6 ounces, but it's also very solid. I'm a little
worried about the long-term effect of finger grease and residue on the
color, but in the short term, the finish survived my residual hand
lotion and the direct application of a goo-gone solution without marring
the color.
Back in its heyday, Nokia phones were largely synonymous with solid construction and thoughtful -- and sometimes daring -- design. The Lumia 900 may not present a strictly new design, since it's clearly adapted from the Nokia N9 Meego-based phone released in Asia, and the Lumia 800, the European version of the N9 that runs Windows Phone, but it's a good one that offers slight variations.

The smooth body helps it slide into pockets. Because of its size, the Lumia 900 fits better in my back pocket.
For example, the Lumia 900 is larger than the 800 and
features a front-facing camera in addition to that all-important LTE and
a larger battery. Then there are the more-minor surface variations,
which you'd only really notice holding the two phones side by side. On
the 800, the display bubbles out about 2.5 millimeters, like the surface
tension curving a drop of water. The 900's screen, on the other hand,
looks more like a slapped-on postage stamp. My review unit had a few
gaps that were barely perceptible, but were there nonetheless. The most
obvious was large enough for me to stick my fingernail into the space
around the SIM card slot, and pull up a corner of the locked door --
that's sloppy. There was also a thin gap where the right side of the
screen meets the body of my review unit, with no gap whatsoever on the
left side of the screen.
I had no complaints with the display
itself, though, and it's easily one of the Lumia 900's key selling
points. The beautiful 4.3-inch AMOLED screen features ClearBlack display
technology and Gorilla Glass. Colors look richly hued, bright, and
sharp. I compared the Lumia 900 with the Samsung Focus S,
which has an identical screen size and WVGA resolution (800x480
pixels). In both brightness and richness, the Lumia 900 absolutely blows
away the Focus S, which at the time I hailed as a beautiful Super
AMOLED Plus screen in its own right. At the same levels of full and
automatic brightness, the Lumia 900 shone about a full level brighter
than the Focus S.
I also compared high-res photos on the two handsets. While they
both looked terrific, the Lumia 900 showed noticeably greater contrast,
with blacker blacks, more color spectrum variation, and greens so bright
they looked a bit unnatural.

I compared the Lumia 900 to the iPhone 4S screen (above) and the Samsung Focus S (below), with brightness on full blast.
Beyond the screen, there's the front-facing camera and
three touch-sensitive navigation controls on the phone's face. Nokia's
sense of chic minimalism extends to the silvery controls on the right
spine. From top to bottom, you encounter the volume rocker, the power
button, and the camera shutter button. I'd prefer a different placement
for the power button and volume rocker, but I could get used to it. The
top of the phone houses the ports: the 3.5mm headset jack, the Micro-USB
charging port, and the micro-SIM card slot behind the push-in door. As
with the iPhone, you can insert a narrow "key" (or thin, unbent paper
clip) into a hole to pop out the small SIM. Nokia kindly tapes a key
right in the box, saving you from paper clip mutilation.
Thanks to its unibody construction, the back of the phone is
smooth, with no openings whatsoever. There is, however, the 8-megapixel
camera lens and a dual-LED flash.
Operating system and Nokia apps
Thanks to a close partnership between Nokia and Microsoft, the Lumia 900 runs the most recent iteration of Windows Phone OS, version 7.5 Mango. As a result, the Lumia 900 can perform every software task that other Windows Phones do, too.
Thanks to a close partnership between Nokia and Microsoft, the Lumia 900 runs the most recent iteration of Windows Phone OS, version 7.5 Mango. As a result, the Lumia 900 can perform every software task that other Windows Phones do, too.

Nokia doesn't have much leeway on the software side beyond these apps.
Unlike Android, Microsoft keeps its OS pretty locked down, so Nokia
has little room to add its own flair on the software side, a strategy I
appreciate for uniting the phone experience across devices, but one that
makes it harder for manufacturers to stand out. Still, Nokia does make a
mark with the nice Nokia Blue color theme (it's the Lumia 900 default)
and with a suite of Marketplace apps that include Nokia Drive, Nokia
Maps, Nokia Transit, and Nokia Contacts Transfer. This section also
highlights partners' third-party apps, like ESPN and CNN. It's a shame
that the Lumia 900 doesn't have Nokia's music app, Music Mix Radio,
like its European counterparts, and I hope the right deals are signed
soon. The absent app, which serves streaming radio and creates mixes, is
similar to a Windows Phone feature, but it's also an alternative that
could give Nokia some additional cred.
Nokia Lumia 900 Features
Since Windows Phone OS pretty much behaves the same on every handset, it's the extras that are important. LTE was the most crucial feature Nokia needed to sell this phone on our shores, and it'll be one of the first two Windows phones with LTE. (The HTC Titan II, which goes on sale the same day, is the other.)
Since Windows Phone OS pretty much behaves the same on every handset, it's the extras that are important. LTE was the most crucial feature Nokia needed to sell this phone on our shores, and it'll be one of the first two Windows phones with LTE. (The HTC Titan II, which goes on sale the same day, is the other.)
Wi-Fi, GPS, and Bluetooth are
standards, though sadly, the Lumia 900 ships with Bluetooth 2.1,
practically antique compared with the new Bluetooth 4.0 standard we're starting to see in mobile devices.
Windows Phone OS handily provides e-mail and social networking
integration through account log-ins in the settings, an option for
linking inboxes together, and support for group messaging. There's also
threaded text and multimedia messaging, and a cool feature that can
weave together messages sent between IM and traditional texts.
Task-switching, voice search, and scan searches with Bing are also
included, as are conference calling and voice dialing. (For even more on
Windows Phone OS, read my full Windows Phone 7.5 review.)

Xbox Live games look great on the Nokia Lumia 900's ultrabright screen.
On the apps side, you'll find basics like the clock, a
calendar, a calculator, Internet Explorer 9 (with HTML5 support but no
Flash), and podcast subscriptions in the Music + Video hub. There's also
a Maps app, with turn-by-turn directions for walking and driving,
Microsoft offers Xbox Live integration through the Games hub, an FM
radio, and the SmartDJ feature that creates mixes from your collection.
When it's time to get to work, you can create and view Microsoft Office
apps from a variety of sources.
I already mentioned Nokia's app contributions above, but
AT&T also preloads some programs. There's the carrier's usual
bundle: a bar code and QR code scanner; AT&T Navigator with
turn-by-turn directions; AT&T Radio; and AT&T U-verse Mobile,
(the mobile version of U-verse TV for streaming shows; it costs $9.99
per month if you create a new account from the phone). For video chats,
the Lumia 900 gives you the Tango video chat app, as well as YP Mobile
for yellow pages. For everything else, there's the Marketplace.
Cameras

The Nokia Lumia 900 has an 8-megapixel camera with dual-LED flash, autofocus, and its celebrated Carl Zeiss optics.
Nokia boasts that its 8-megapixel camera on the Lumia
900 has Carl Zeiss optics, which, along with its dual-LED flash and
autofocus, are meant to boost image clarity. I took about a hundred
photos on the 900, outside during bright daylight, inside with
artificial lighting, front-facing, and in low-light situations. As with
all smartphone cameras I've tested, the Lumia 900 did best in outdoor
shots with abundant natural lighting. Also, like all the camera phones I
tested, photos ran the gamut of excellent and very sharp to slightly
fuzzy and disappointing.

Outdoor shots looked good, but the Lumia 900 made shots more yellow.
Read More - http://reviews.cnet.com/nokia-lumia-900-review/?tag=lwrcomparable;comparable.4


06:15
Aru2012
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