Artikle
-
▼
2012
(4042)
-
▼
April
(381)
- Neutrinos could deliver millisecond advantage to c...
- Angry Birds Space hits 50 million milestone, smash...
- Samsung Canada begins rollout of ICS today
- Nintendo 3DS turning purple on May 20th, takes a b...
- Study says wind turbines raise surrounding area te...
- Verizon gets new prepaid plans, adds Jetpack hotsp...
- LightSquared founder Philip Falcone to step down '...
- Apple spits out Android option from Chomp app navi...
- Amazon to collect sales tax, create 2,500 jobs in ...
- Nokia could sell luxury Vertu brand to VC firm for...
- Google Maps 'Cube' game rolls out, back, up, back ...
- GameStop to offer Android tablet and smartphone tr...
- How would you change the LG Nitro HD?
- Apple and Samsung set to meet May 21st, hug it out...
- Mozilla dispatches Firefox 3.6, fills its chair wi...
- Inhabitat's Week in Green: biophotovoltaic table, ...
- NVIDIA unleashes GeForce GTX 690 graphics card, lo...
- Refresh Roundup: week of April 23rd, 2012
- Ask Engadget: best 'money is no object' laptop?
- Engadget Podcast 291 - 04.27.2012
- Acer releases app to hurry the ICS-ification of Ic...
- Origin PC joins the 11-inch, rebadged gaming lapto...
- Space travel coming to an airport near you? Maybe,...
- MIT develops fog resistant, glare-free glass, it's...
- Sony Xperia ST21i with ICS leaks out, shows off it...
- Rocketfish's Sound Prism is triangu-lovely
- Business-minded HP 'Slate 8' tablet surfaces in le...
- Time Warner Cable is preparing for TWC TV IPTV str...
- Mobile Miscellany: week of April 23rd, 2012
- Acer Aspire V3 coming to Japan for $1,100 with rig...
- Leaked Rayman Legends for Wii U trailer showcases ...
- LG gives away 2,000 specially modified phones for ...
- Patterned by Nature: it's big, blocky and earth-ap...
- Nokia experiments with location-based white space ...
- Woz: Windows Phone is 'beautiful,' Android 'no con...
- ShelfX's Vending Fridge nixes the cashier, uses QR...
- Google MapsGL updates 3D buildings, improves virtu...
- AT&T stockholders vote down net neutrality proposal
- Micromax's Superfone A50 Ninja enters India with A...
- Maingear's Pulse 11-inch gaming laptop has designs...
- Dropbox adds automatic photo uploads for Windows a...
- FAA writing rules for electric aircraft, to allow ...
- Fujifilm X-Pro1 mirrorless camera review
- Google Drive now offers a bumpy ride for Chrome OS...
- Leaked T-Mobile roadmap outlines Ice Cream Sandwic...
- PSA: Space Shuttle Enterprise flying over NYC this...
- Panasonic teams up with NHK on 145-inch 8K Super H...
- Distro Issue 38: a peek at the Navy's Robotics Lab...
- LG's IPS monitors head downmarket with 2D-only IPS...
- IRL: gfxCardStatus, Nyko Charge Base 3 for PS3 and...
- TomTom's new sat nav: perfect for your van down by...
- Star Castle finally finds a home on the Atari 2600...
- First image of Sony NEX-F3 leaked, outs 16.1 MP se...
- Samsung applies for patent on emotional recognitio...
- Some Iconia Tab A500s getting Ice Cream Sandwich e...
- Motorola Droid RAZR Maxx hitting the UK in mid-May...
- The Engadget Podcast, live at 5:00PM ET!
- Walmart's website lets you Pay With Cash, strips a...
- Nintendo confirms that it's selling 3DS at a loss,...
- Sony Tablet S gets a wedge of Ice Cream Sandwich
- Google's gunning for web spammers, bans us from me...
- Ubuntu 12.04 LTS Precise Pangolin hits the web, wi...
- Netgear's R6300 router is first to use Broadcom 80...
- NZXT's Cryo E40 laptop cooler sends a pleasant bre...
- Box releases new API for developers, announces 15 ...
- Nintendo posts first annual loss of $460 million, ...
- Harvard tired of overpaying for research, tells fa...
- Koss intros Striva headphone systems, lets you str...
- Former MakerBot exec launches Solidoodle sub-$500 ...
- Lava's Medfield-based Xolo X900 smartphone gets re...
- 15-inch Series 7 Chronos with Ivy Bridge surfaces ...
- President Obama test drives a Sphero on Boulder visit
- Scalado Album launches for Android, we go hands-on...
- HackStore is like Cydia for Mac OS X, replaces wal...
- The Engadget Show 32: ASUS, Huawei and a trip to A...
- Apple's WWDC hitting San Francisco on June 11th
- Project Aether films northern lights at 100,000 fe...
- Nook Simple Touch with GlowLight review
- Google Drive vs. the competition: pricing plans an...
- Nook Simple Touch with GlowLight shipping this wee...
- Firefox 12 now available for download, Windows use...
- Must See HDTV (April 23rd - 29th)
- New Sony iOS docks promise clearer sound thanks to...
- Google Drive official: 5GB of free storage, Chrome...
- Google raises Gmail to 10GB free, 10-times increas...
- NewsFlash uses high-frequency light to transmit da...
- LG's 5-inch Optimus Vu shipping soon in white (in ...
- Onavo Extend stretches your data plan, now with CD...
- BYD intros dual-mode electric Qin vehicle, Remote ...
- Google Doodle celebrates Gideon Sundback, unzips k...
- ST-Ericsson to pass off application processor busi...
- Obama cracks down on Iran and Syria's surveillance...
- Netflix Q1 results: 3 million new streaming subscr...
- Nokia releases Browser 2.0 update for Series 40 ha...
- Ubuntu 12.10 gets christened Quantal Quetzal ahead...
- LG Optimus 3D Max launches in Europe, won't be com...
- Facebook paying Microsoft $550 million for 650 pat...
- China Times: HTC wants to develop its own processo...
- AmazonSupply launches, offers up lab and janitoria...
- First ASUS G55VW gaming laptop configuration spott...
-
▼
April
(381)
Home >Unlabelled > Nokia 7110 review
Nokia 7110 review
Posted on Sunday, April 1, 2012 by kusanag1
Nokia 7110 review
To say that Nokia's 7110 is an easy phone to review is something of an understatement. This is the first handset to ship running the company's Series 40 OS, but it also packs a dual-band GSM modem and a WAP browser. All of that is shoved into a handset no larger than your average candy bar. Of course, for all of its technical achievement, you're likely to be too busy focusing on its similarity to the customized Nokia 8110 used in The Matrix. The spring-loaded phone in the movie was merely the fever dream of art director Owen Paterson, albeit one that's now brought to life. But is its famous exterior a boon or a burden and does all that style detract from the substance? Pop a red pill and follow us down the rabbit hole for a closer look.
Nokia 7110 Review



Hardware
The 141 gram device sits comfortably in your hand and is far stouter than a Galaxy S II. The only visible controls are two shoulder buttons and the Naviroller, a clickable scroll wheel. Beneath it is the spring-loaded keypad cover and mouthpiece, which snaps down into position when you receive a call. The display isn't touch-enabled -- you'll have to get u sed to a backlit keyboard with dedicated answer and end-call buttons. If you can't commit to a fixed input process, you'll be missing out on keys made of heavy duty rubber.
At the head of the device is an infrared sensor, but forget about using it as an IR-blaster like the Galaxy Tab 7.0 Plus, it's only designed to work with 6100-series handsets and compatible printers. A 14.4kbps modem is available for use, but be warned: it'll cost you a pretty penny to use it. There's also no WiFi or Bluetooth available on this handset, and the storage isn't expandable. What this phone has going for it, however, is durability: this unit was purchased on its 1999 release day 13 years ago. It was then used for three years non-stop, before being consigned to a box for a decade and yet, if you excuse some lint that refuses to come off, some dents in the bodywork and the now geriatric slide of the keyboard cover with its broken spring, it's nearly fully functional.
Displ ay
You'll be spending your time staring into this high-contrast display with a resolution of 95 x 95. That translates into six lines of text, although it will render dynamic fonts with lowercase letters. The battery and signal indicators flank the screen. Don't expect to be viewing videos, because you'd be lucky to get a .GIF working on this. That said, it more than compensates for its shortcomings when used in bright sunlight. Under the midday sun, it'll make an iPhone 4 on full brightness look anemic compared to its minimalistic green and black setup.
Software
This handset is the first to run Nokia's Series 40. It's certainly less capable than Meego or Windows Phone. There's no app store, and its application s and web browser are basic, to say the least. What it does have in in its favor is speed: boot-up time takes around 12 seconds, and there's never any lag when flicking between its on-board applications. As there's very little else to use (not even the standard ringtone composer), you'll spend a lot of time playing games, but you'll find no Angry Birds here: just old favorites Snake 2, Rotation, Tennis and Reversi. Each are controllable with keys, but are much more fluid and enjoyable if you use the Naviroller, which is very accurate despite its limited technology. It's also used to enter text and cycle through lists, which makes it less immediate than a touchscreen, but also far less likely to engender mistakes.
Wrap-up
So, has history been kind to the 7110? From a hardware perspective, unequivocally, but even at the time, its software was severely limited. It straddled an awkward line, priced and aimed at business users and yet clad in a body that could only appeal to nerds. What impresses is that the flashy phone is still working today, something that probably wasn't expected at the time. There's also something intrinsically cool about answering calls with something more tangible than pressing some toughened glass -- those dents and chips are more like battle scars of a proud and noble phone, and if our smartphone died tomorrow, we'd have no qualms about taking this as a replacement -- which is surely the highest praise. Engadget