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Nokia has launched a new mobile phone that looks to thread all over Apple and its iPhone. Even if iPhone is far from any kind of market dominator unlike iPod, but Apple has found a niche with little competition. The competition has grown a lot tougher though and the last model to make an entry is Nokia N97 that relies on a large solid LCD with touch technology, but unlike SonyEricsson Xperia this one also has a QWERTY keyboard that folds out.



The LCD is perhaps the most interesting, measures 3.5″ diagonally and has 640×360 pixel resolution. To make sure the fine display and keyboard will come to good use, N97 supports WiFi, HSDPA and Bluetooth that all make it possible to browse the Internet or perform other kinds of communication.



Unlike Apple iPhone it has a decent camera sensor at 5 Megapixel sporting Carl Zeiss optics and supports high-quality video recording at 30 fps. To make room for all this and other media Nokia has installed N97 with 32GB integrated memory and a microSD slot.


The phone is expected to appear in the first quarter 2009 costing 550€ (+VAT). Below follows a video demonstration and Nokia’s complete press release;






Nokia N97 marks evolutionary milestone for Nseries and mobilekind


BARCELONA, Spain – The N97 isn’t a device that will trigger knee-jerk hysteria, but instead it should breed cool-headed excitement at the prospect of a new era of mobile experience.


It may be an Nseries handset, but the N97 carves a new space in the otherwise blurred realm between smartphone and laptop – a product built on a foundation of rock solid mobile principles, Nokia innovations, and tangible new technologies, pushed to the extreme and embodied in a slimline pocket shell.


Just as the original N95 re-shaped our perceptions of what’s possible with a mobile device, the N97 again raises the bar beyond the reach of its peers by equipping us with a product that fuses the best proven Nokia hardware, software and Internet services, blended with a new flavour of design, ergonomics and usability.


Read on to explore the N97’s full list of talents.


The most physically immediate stand-out feature of the N97 is its kick-out full QWERTY keyboard, hidden behind a 3.5-inch widescreen 16:9 touch display that tilts smartly above the keys. Both control methods neatly coexist and are tailored to ensure every experience, be it messaging, social, entertainment-focussed or otherwise, are manageable via the most instinctive physical toolset available. The touchscreen promises to be exploited to full effect, even when inactive, courtesy of a new homescreen that automatically sucks in live information via custom widgets sat on a S60 5th Edition backbone.


The N97 enters the fray stomaching 32GB of on-board storage, double that of any mobile device currently in existence, and can take up to another 16GB via microSD, enabling it to become a portable multi-media computer with 48GB in your pocket. Of course Nokia wants you to abuse this space with music, movies, photos and N-Gage games, and as such has worked hard to ensure the N97’s battery is up to the task – it promises to kick out up to 37 hours of music and 4.5 hours of video.


Embracing location based services and the concept of context awareness, the N97 is location-savvy, automatically sensing where it is at any given time via A-GPS. The benefit being that you’ll be able to tap into local services with ease and share your social location with friends minus any extra fiddling or fuss.


Other key talents include a 5 megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss Tessar lens and dual LED flash, GPS, HSDPA, Wi-Fi, USB 2.0, stereo Bluetooth and a 3.5mm headphone jack.


Jonas Geust, Vice President, heading Nokia Nseries, had this to say about it:



“From the desktop to the laptop and now to your pocket, the Nokia N97 is the most powerful, multi-sensory mobile computer in existence”


It will cost 550 Euros (before taxes and subsidies) when it launches in the first half of 2009. What do you think? Watch the video and leave your comments below.

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