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The good: 2-megapixel CMOS digital camera with flash and 8X digital zoom; MPEG-4 video-capture capabilities; separate lens and display swivels; EDGE capable; RS-MMC external memory slot; MP3 player; PictBridge compatible; Bluetooth; USB connectivity; e-mail.
The bad: Expensive; big and heavy; proprietary headphone jack; low integrated memory; no stereo speakers; short talk time.
The bottom line: It's a startling combination of image capture, music playback, and communications capabilities in a clever but bulky Transformers-like package. However, at more than $900 for an unlocked model, the Nokia N90 is not for the faint of wallet.
Specs: Band / mode: WCDMA (UMTS) / GSM 900/1800/1900; Talk time: Up to 180 min; Combined with: With digital camera See full specs >>
CNET editors' review
- Reviewed on: 08/16/2005
Cell phone handset makers seem intent on ramming PDA applications, digital still and video capture, music playback, and phone capabilities into one tiny device, often disregarding the disparate form factors these functions require. Nokia, famous (or infamous) for its radical design attempts, has taken a huge step forward in reconciling these form and function conflicts with the N90, due to be available from T-Mobile, Cingular, or both sometime this fall. Instead of making superficial cosmetic compromises, the Nokia N90 morphs into recognizable shapes that enhance its 2-megapixel digital camera, MPEG-4 video, and MP3/AAC audio playback capabilities--not always successfully but compellingly, nonetheless. At more than $900 for an unlocked phone, the Nokia N90 is expensive. At the time of this writing, no carriers had picked it up, but it should be available for less when one does.
Resembling a metallic Chinese puzzle box, the Nokia N90 has two swiveling pieces built into its flip-phone form factor: the Carl Zeiss camera lens assembly on the flip's hinge and the display on its top. By holding the phone horizontally with the 1.5-inch external screen facing you, you can twist the lens assembly 90 degrees, switching the N90 into digital camera mode both technically and physically. The only problem is that the shutter release and the multifunction joystick, the only two controls on the exterior of the N90, must be controlled by your left hand instead of your right. This ergonomic decision sometimes forces you to reach over the lens assembly to shoot the picture, which can cause you to block or jar the lens or have trouble getting a firm grip. Consequently, pictures don't always come out well.To take a steadier picture, flip the screen up 90 degrees, then twist it around another 90 to 100 degrees, automatically activating the MPEG-4 camcorder function. The dual rotating capability of the LCD screen and optics assembly lets you capture images from an almost infinite number of positions and angles.
Once you've exhausted your initial fascination with all the twisting and turning, you'll notice the N90's more obvious physical attributes. First, it's quite bulky at 4.4 by 2 by 0.95 inches; it's also heavy at 6.1 ounces, although it didn't feel as weighty in our pocket as we expected. Both the 65,536-color external screen and the internal 2.1-inch, 262,000-color LCD are superbright, with plenty of detail and only slight picture lag.
Adjacent to the shutter release and the joystick, which doubles as a volume and navigation control when the phone is closed, is the RS-MMC (Reduced Sized Multimedia Card) slot. Oddly, the card fits in sideways; you'll need a long fingernail or a skinny pinkie to push it in and pop it out. On the left spine are the pinhole DC jack and the proprietary Nokia Pop-Port jack, to which the headset and the USB cable connect.
Flipping up the clamshell reveals a relatively normal (for Nokia) dial pad. For such a bulky phone, the keys are not as large as we expected, and the letters are small. The function keys are labeled with mysterious icons that only hint at their functionality. Since the swivel lens and the swivel screen automatically activate the camera, there is no separate camera key.
With the Nokia N90 in video mode, two handy soft keys on either side of the earpiece at the end of the extended LCD top flap ease navigation through the image-control, settings, and playback operations.
As noted, the CMOS chip in the Nokia N90's 2-megapixel digital camera captures still images in 16.7 million 24-bit colors. While images shot at a resolution of 640x480 can be e-mailed or sent via MMS, images shot at a resolution of 800x600 can only be e-mailed, and those shot at the staggering resolution of 1,600x1,200 can only be printed via PictBridge or transferred via Bluetooth or a USB cable or by using the RS-MMC card after you've copied images or video to it. You get a variety of photo options, including 8X digital zoom.The Nokia N90 can capture up to an hour of video at three resolutions: MPEG-4 (352x288 FCIF resolution at 15fps instead of 30fps), 3GPP, and 3gp--with the same limitations on multimedia-message and e-mail transmission and transferal as with digital stills. The phone includes both video- and image-editing capabilities, if you have the patience to work with a small screen and drill down through the various edit-control option menus.
For music, the Nokia N90's RealPlayer media player can handle both MP3 and iPod-compatible AAC files ripped from CDs but unfortunately not protected AAC tracks bought from iTunes. Tracks can be transferred via USB or by dropping and dragging files to the RS-MMC card. You can assign a song as your ring tone, choose from 41 polyphonic tones, or, of course, download a ring tone from a compatible carrier's online store. Sounds play out of a small mono speaker next to the power key on top of the lens assembly.
Nonmultimedia features include Symbian Series 60 PDA applications and text, enhanced and multimedia messaging, and both IMAP4 and POP3 e-mail. Each phone-book entry can hold five numbers as well as images, specific ring tones, and voice tags for voice-dialing commands. You also get a speakerphone, instant-messaging support, PC syncing, Java (J2ME) support, and a WAP 2.0 wireless Web browser.
Considering the phone's considerable multimedia capture and playback capabilities, the 31MB of internal storage seems a bit low; many less capable phones have twice as much internal storage. At the time of this writing, the box was scheduled to include a 64MB RS-MMC card.
Unfortunately, our test Nokia N90 did not always connect to an available network. However, the mobile is a triband (GSM 900/1800/1900) world phone that also includes support for GPRS and EDGE networks. While we were unable to access the Web or send messages, voice-call tones were soft and smooth--much closer in tone to those of a landline connection.Digital still-picture quality was exceptional for a camera phone. The large images exhibited deep color saturation and unusual detail sharpness. Video clips, however, were choppy, like stop-motion photography, probably due to their limited 15fps frame rate.
Given the phone's MP3/ACC capabilities, we were surprised Nokia didn't equip it with stereo speakers. However, the tiny mono speaker produced far more volume than we anticipated. Our test unit did not include headphones of any type, mono or stereo. But be warned that the jack is proprietary to Nokia.
Battery life was rated at a rather short 4.5 hours of talk time--somewhat expected, given the two large LCD screens--and a more robust 240 hours of standby time. According to FCC radiation tests, the N90 has a digital SAR rating of 0.22 watts per kilogram.
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User opinions
WRITE YOUR OWN REVIEW How would you rate this product?
-
5/10 Average November 26, 2005
"The Power-Sucking Brick" Read more >>
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5/10 Average January 18, 2006
"Not all it's hyped to be....." Read more >>
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9/10 Spectacular May 15, 2005
"Very nice, Nokia has improved, Not so slick though." Read more >>
- WRITE YOUR OWN REVIEWSee all 42 user opinions >>




