The Nokia N8 smartphone is strange, chunkier than its similarly-priced brethren, silver as a substitute of black, and with sharp angles rather than the curved edges.
The N8 runs the company’s Symbian operating system, which was just surpassed by Android as the well-known phone OS on the earth joined by a associate who has stared for a bit, before literally thinking outer of the square.
Some of the hardware aspects are outstanding, on the other hand: the physical lock switch and the SIM card slot that doesn't need battery removal were mainly valuable.
Nokia N8’s camera is by far its best feature – the 12MP Carl Zeiss Optics lens delivers beautiful images both indoors and out. There was no cloud function or storage to upload to Facebook or Twitter straight from the gallery as there's no social network combination.
In the end most of the photos stayed on the phone and got deleted when I performed a factory reset. The one picture that I did run to transport to a computer that may took about half an hour on a PC even if it get optimized for the N8’s screen.
Nokia’s Ovi store can be annoying to navigate as has a handy social networking app by default, although to apply it you have to link your social networks to your Nokia account.
Aside from the multiple little annoyances, the N8 is not a bad phone. If you like the look, have a spare grand to spend and don’t mind giving some time knowing how to navigate the unintuitive UI, the N8 is not a bad choice.
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