Nokia Finally Returns To The Smartphone Market (In China) (mashable.com)
An anonymous reader quotes Mashable:
To little fanfare, the Finnish technology company HMD Global Sunday unveiled the Nokia 6, a mid-range Android smartphone for the Chinese market. HMD owns the rights to use Nokia's brand on mobile phones. The Nokia 6, which runs the newest version of Google's mobile operating system, Android Nougat, sports a 5.5-inch full HD (1920x1080 pixels) display. With metal on the sides and a rounded rectangular fingerprint scanner housed on the front, the Nokia 6 seems reminiscent of the Samsung Galaxy S7.
The new Nokia smartphone is powered by a mid-range Qualcomm Snapdragon 430 processor and will compete with the likes of Samsung's Galaxy A series models and other mid-end smartphones... The smartphone is priced at 1,699 Chinese Yuan (roughly $250).
The new Nokia smartphone is powered by a mid-range Qualcomm Snapdragon 430 processor and will compete with the likes of Samsung's Galaxy A series models and other mid-end smartphones... The smartphone is priced at 1,699 Chinese Yuan (roughly $250).
With metal on the sides and a rounded rectangular fingerprint scanner housed on the front, the Nokia 6 seems reminiscent of the Samsung Galaxy S7.
Sounds like half the smartphones that have ever been made.
I've always liked Nokia phones and I'm looking forward to see what they come up with over the next few months. I'd bet the new Nokias will be pretty attractive in terms of price and features/performance.
And needless to say, they'll probably be rugged as hell *AND* come with a headphone jack. I'm hoping to see a waterproof model.
Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
Is that the price of an unlocked phone, or a locked phone? For an unlocked phone, mid-range is correct. A high end would be $500 and above - assuming no carrier owns it.
I hate really stupid terms and mid-end is really stupid.
You have an array of products and the most expensive and least expensive are hi-end and low end. All the rest are not "end"s. Mid-class or mid-line would work, but let's not start using such an oxymoronic term as "mid-end".
Kevin Oberman, Network Engineer, Retired
It sounds decent if and only if the OS isn't abandonware on day one, like rebranded phones tend to be. Especially bad are e.g. carrier branded Huawei : seems like you can find some sort of information on the web for a real Huawei phone but nothing at all for a carrier rebrand.
I sort of wished someone made an abandonware smartphone the way they deserve to be : 2G calls/text only, no wifi, not even data on 2G, no web browser out of the box. An abandonware smartphone deserves about the same level of network access a Windows XP machine does, i.e. none at all.
Unlocked of course.
The specifications look pretty good...
http://gadgets.ndtv.com/nokia-...
However, not really anything that will differentiate it substantially to make it the next big thing. I think the primary cause of the failure of Windows Phone was the fact that Nokia simply didn't produce hardware as sexy as Apple's or Samsung's, in fact I would describe the first Nokia Windows phones in comparison to the iPhone or Samsung offerings at the time as bricks.
They said that the OS is Nougat, which is the latest & greatest version of Android. That's different from those phones that still come w/ Gingerbread or Icecream sandwich or Honeycomb. If it came w/ the latter, I'd call it abandonware.
The sort of phone you are describing wouldn't be a smart phone
These are not really Nokia phones. They are designed, manufactured and sold by Foxconn. The only Nokia part is the name, which Nokia rents our to Foxconn. No Nokia engineers are involved in making these phones. You'll be buying just another Asian phone, and paying a bit extra for the Nokia name sticker.
As long as this keeps them in the market of making great dumbphones, I am happy. I prefer to have a good phone with fantastic battery life in my pocket and a tablet in my bag. I used to use a smartphone but if kept letting me down when I really needed it. One time, after a long trip, I arrived in Pakse, in southern Laos, no one spoke English, my phone battery was flat, I could not remember the name of my hotel (it was on my phone) and I could not phone anyone to find out where to go... I decided to give up on smartphones. Nokia make the best phones, maybe they should stick to what they are best at.
I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.