Finally, here it is. The flagship device Nokia is counting on to bring a
smile to our phone-loving faces, a sigh of relief to its shareholders,
and a twinkle to the eyes of Finnish tax collectors everywhere. And,
guess what? This heavily leaked handset might just live up to our high
expectations.
From the outside, the Lumia 800 is very similar to the beloved N9. Dubbed the “first real Windows Phone,” this device is powered by a 1.4GHz Qualcomm
MSM8255 CPU and is sculpted from the same 12.1mm (0.48-inch) thick
piece of durable polycarbonate plastic, with tapered edges on the top
and bottom to give it that industrial look and make it feel thinner than
it really is.
If you're familiar with the N9 you'll know the
basics of the story here, a polycarbonate shell that feels very nice in
the hand and, perhaps more importantly, won't show scratches as clearly
as painted metal or plastic exteriors. That baby blue you see? It's that
same color all the way through to the core — there's no paint here to chip or scratch.
Sitting
at the top of the device is Nokia's logo, just above the company's
curved ClearBlack AMOLED (800 x 480) display, with a Carl Zeiss
optics-enhanced lens around back. This is Gorilla Glass, so hopefully it
being exposed in this way won't danger its visual purity. The Lumia
800 also packs 16GB of internal storage, 512MB of RAM and 25GB of free
SkyDrive space, and features Nokia Drive, Nokia Music and ESPN Sports
Hub baked into its OS. As for that OS, it's all about a fresh beginning:
those bold squares you see on the screen are, of course, the sleek live
tiles of Windows Phone Mango.
Up top, doors flip open to reveal
the micro-USB charger port and the SIM slot, doors that fit so well
you'd barely know they're there. A 3.5mm headphone jack is up on the top
as well. That's really about all there are for ports. The right side of
the phone is adorned with a
volume rocker and power button, and the left is completely bare — just
super sleek, curved polycarbonate. There's a speaker right there on the bottom as well.
The eight megapixel camera,
meanwhile, packs an f/2.2 aperture, and is designed specifically for
low-light environments. It seems pretty similar to what you'll find in
the N9, and according to Nokia, it's simply a shooter that works for
“ordinary people, under ordinary circumstances.” You'll also find
quad-band GSM support, with HSDPA download speeds of up to 14.4Mbps.
Now,
for the basics: the Lumia 800 is priced at €420, or about $585. It's
already up for pre-order now, and is scheduled to roll out across
France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain and the UK, beginning in November. It'll make its way to Hong Kong, India, Russia, Singapore and Taiwan before the end of the year, and will hit “further markets” sometime next year.
Overall the Lumia 800 looks quite incredible — this is some impressive hardware — but will Nokia's latest flagship help drive some serious Windows Mobile market share?