It was a long wait for
the first Nokia smartphone with Windows Phone OS. And we believe that
wait has been a long but successful one. The Lumia 800 seems to be a
well designed package - with looks far superior than any other WP phone
out there, an excellent display, good battery life and a UI that is
thrashing Android’s ageing UI hands down. Critically, it again boils
down to the pricing bit, and we hope Nokia gets it right.
It is finally here. We have been waiting since the February announcement for a Windows Phone from Nokia.
And we must admit, we were quite apprehensive about how good the
smartphone would be. Safe to say, those apprehensions seemed to
evaporate rather quickly. To be precise, after a couple of hours of
playing with the Lumia 800!
Look & Feel
The Lumia 800 does carry a lot of design traits from the N9. All the
four edges are curved, and the back is slightly sloped near the top and
the bottom - ever so slightly. Below the 3.7-inch display are three
touch buttons - return, home (familiar Windows Logo on it) and Bing
search. The only three physical buttons on the entire handset are on the
right side panel - volume rocker, camera and the power key.
On the top are the 3.5mm jack and a
bunch of flaps that cover the micro USB port and the micro SIM card
slot. Opening this is a bit of a pain though - not because it is
difficult but because of the sheer wastage of time. First, press one
flap down, marked by a bulge, enough that the other end lifts up. Once
that happens, open it completely. Now turn your attention to the SIM
card slot. For this, slide the panel slightly towards the USB port, and
then pull it out. Don’t really understand the entire complication.
Separate handling of the two ports would have been better - time saving
as well as longevity of the loving parts. Flip the phone to the bottom
panel and there is the speaker. No other moving parts on the phone,
since even the battery is closed away and cannot be accessed.
The Lumia 800 seems to have a lot going
for it, design-wise. It feels good to hold, has a nice sophisticated
feel and minimalist looks as well.
Features & Performance
We had criticized Nokia quite a bit recently for launching very good yet
under-powered phones - the Nokia E6 being a good example. However, that
seems sorted now. The Lumia 800 comes with a Qualcomm Snapdragon
MSM8255 processor clocking at 1.4GHz on a single core. There is 512MB
RAM to help move things along as well. The single core processor will
surely raise a few eyebrows, particularly if this is priced in the same
bracket as some well established dual core Android phones and the iPhone
4. This neatly brings me to my next point - Windows Phone Mango doesn’t
need any more grunt than this, or so it seems. We have seen this OS in
action on the older gen Samsung Focus smartphone, as well as the newer
ones - the Samsung Omnia W and now this. The interface is zippy,
transitions are silky smooth and the phone doesn’t slow down at all.
Quite creditable considering the host of 3D effects in the menu.
The 3.7-inch display is the AMOLED type
with a resolution of 480 x 800. This display type is similar to the one
we saw in the Samsung Galaxy SII, albeit a smaller size. The darker
colours in an AMOLED display draw lesser power. Apart from the battery
life benefit, it results in really dark black levels. The rest of the
colour bunch is quite vivid as well. Brightness levels are extremely
good as well, and even at low brightness settings, it is comfortable for
indoor use. The display isn't very reflective, which helps a lot in
viewing the text in sunlight. Windows Phone 7.5’s UI looked absolutely
gorgeous on this display. The rich colours and the deep blacks mean that
viewing videos or reading text on this display will be a delightful
experience.
There is 16GB storage built-in on the Lumia 800, but no memory expansion slot.
Contact handling has been improved
extensively with the mango update. Now, you can even transfer all
contacts from any phone to the Lumia via Bluetooth. We tried this with a
Blackberry phone, and all 750 contacts were transferred to the People
list on the Lumia, complete with any tagged images.
Disappointingly, the call quality of
the Lumia 800 wasn’t as brilliant as we had hoped for. The clarity was
just not there, and it was particularly difficult to hear the other
person if you or the other person happen to be in a noisy place. Also,
if the signal strength isn't perfect, there will be noise within the
call. No problem with the earpiece loudness though.
The disappointment continues on the
camera front. First off, there is no front facing camera. That means,
video chats are out of the question. Secondly, the 8MP camera is
extremely finicky when it comes to lighting. If the lighting is perfect,
then the shots that you take will be quite good. However, if you are
taking a shot in less than perfect light, or even indoors, then the
images will be ruined by the noise. The camera takes time to focus,
particularly when taking close-up shots. This snapper can record 720p HD
videos, and the quality is quite satisfactory. There is quite a bit of
sharpness, but there tends to be a ‘de-noise’ effect on some details
when panning.
But what is really going for the Lumia
800 is the operating system on board. Windows Phone 7.5 looks absolutely
gorgeous. We had said this earlier, and will say it again, “WP.7.5 is
kicking Android hollow as far as UI slickness and an intuitive feel is
concerned”. We feel that post the Mango update, only the iOS 5 is better
in terms of the slickness, with WP 7.5 in a solid second place. The
Live Tiles are an excellent add-on, particularly when you consider that
it isn't demanding a high spec hardware package to do all that. The Xbox
Live tile, People and Gallery keep getting updated with new elements at
regular intervals - usually a few minutes. If you add the weather tile
as well, that keeps getting refreshed as well. It is an interesting
sight the moment you slide the lock screen upwards!
Nokia have preloaded the Lumia 800 with
a couple of their own apps - Nokia Maps and Nokia Drive. The Maps
application asks you to download global maps - well you can select which
ones you want, and the navigation voice as well. Downloading these
helps improve lock-on and navigation speeds. Nokia Drive is the
turn-by-turn navigation app that is useful if you rely on your phone to
be the GPS device sometimes.
We must say this - the battery life of
the Lumia 800 is impressive. Despite constant connectivity to the
Internet, a bunch of calls, messages, and lots of web browsing, the
battery lasted 2 full days on a single charge. Admittedly, we were in
the initial excitement phase and using the phone a bit more than most
people normally would!
Our Take
In terms of the package, the Lumia 800 has the hardware, the performance
and a very good OS. It does miss out on a memory card slot and a front
facing camera. We just hope Nokia get the pricing right, and don’t
overprice it.
Price:28,000 Rs.
Specs:
Qualcomm MSM8255 Snapdragon 1.4GHz processor; 512MB RAM; Windows Phone
7.5; 3.7-inch AMOLED display, 480 x 800 pixels; 16GB storage; 8MP camera
with 720p HD videos; micro SIM slot only; 1450 mAh battery
Ratings
Features: 7.5
Performance: 8
Build: 8
Value: 6.5
Overall:7.5