
…and What do you think?
Daily News From Nokia E-Series, N-Series, Other Nokia Phones and Accessories

…and What do you think?
US customers will now have another color option for the Nokia N95-3. The new bronze color will be available in the US only, but sadly to get the bronze you will have to pay $50 higher than the standard version

The Editor of igadgetlife.com is testing Nokia N95 and Nokia N95 8GB. Older N95 seems like very slow
On Wednesday, both Chicago and New York Flagship stores will begin selling the Euro 3G Nokia N95 8GB. The retail price will be $779 for those that just can’t wait for the US variant

via: darlamack
It’s much better than first Nokia N95’s color! Perfect i want one of these;)




Since the news on the Nokia N95 US 3G has landed, I’ve heard many interesting questions how different the device would be cosmetically, especially to accommodate the new BL-6F battery.
The first image shows the new multimedia keys. They are now padded which is cool.


Via - Darlamack
I don’t understand why they made this phone but you will notice the fake one easily
Do you like Nokia’s N95? How about a Nokia N95 clone? The E-PDA V16, from China, looks like the N95 but it is not a slider as N95 do. Compare to the N95, the E-PDA V16 is bigger in size while the screen size is also bigger.

E-PDA V16 has a 3-inch QVGA LCD touch screen, a 3 Megapixel camera, and Bluetooth connectivity. It supports also hand-writing recognition, and dual sim cards. Come on, don’t expect the device to have WiFi as N95 do. The E-PDA V16 does support microSD memory cards. As the other ‘PDA phones’ from China, the V16 supports music and video playback.
Continue reading ‘Fake Nokia N95 Undoubtedly [Made in China]’
Now, power users (and those with non-keypad models like the E61 and E70) can look away, but there must be many people reading this who have only ever used their smartphone ’standalone’, using its built-in numeric keypad to enter text.

If this is you, the chances are that you flinch whenever you have to enter a long word or name, getting through something complicated is a real hassle, both with multi-tap or with ‘predictive text’ turned on. Yes, you love having a tiny smartphone, but occasionally, perhaps a few times a week, you really, really wish you had a proper qwerty keyboard.


Since its advertisement and to its exit, N95 was presented like the ultimate apparatus of numerical mobile convergence. Which other apparatus indeed joins together in a so compact format a telephone 3G, Wifi, Edge equipped with the GPS and of capacities multi-media without similar (camera 5 mégapixels and camera of good quality)? Left the daily use and a simple reading of the chart I wished to know if N95 were really the ideal convergent apparatus and that it really made it possible to occur:
- of a camera
- of a video camera
- of a reader mp3
- of a PC to connect itself to Internet
- of a game console
- of a chart or a GPS?
My recent voyage to New York seemed the ideal occasion to put N95 vis-a-vis its claims.