Nokia N97
Nokia N97 is a high-end smartphone part of the Nseries line from Nokia, announced on 2 December 2008 and released in June 2009 as the successor of the Nokia N96. The N97 is Nokia's second S60-based touchscreen phone, after the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic. It features a slide-out QWERTY keyboard. The N97 runs on Symbian v9.4. Its design was mostly based on that of the Nokia N79. A smaller 'mini' variant was later released.
Being Nokia's flagship and at a time when touchscreen devices were becoming increasingly prevalent, the N97 was highly anticipated. Despite good sales it is considered to have been a "disaster" on the hardware and software sides and is thought to have contributed to Nokia's decline. A Nokia executive admitted in 2010 that the N97 was a "regrettable failure".
Release
The Nokia N97 was released in US flagship stores on 9 June 2009, and on 26 June 2009 was released worldwide. In September 2009, two million N97 handsets had been reportedly sold in the three months following release.The N97 shipped with trial versions of Quick Office, Adobe Reader, Boingo, Joikuspot, Ovi Maps, and Ovi store.
The initial software had mixed reception, prompting the release of new firmware in October 2009. Nokia released the new firmware with kinetic scrolling for the N97 to address the major issues present in the firmware the device launched with.
In October 2009, the N97 Mini, a downsized version of the original N97, was made available. The N97 Mini was generally seen as an improvement over the original N97.
Operating times
Informal tests have shown that the battery can last nearly two days with regular use of the phone's various features for the original N97. Nokia quoted the following claimed operating times- Talk time: Up to 6.0 hours, 9.5 hours
- Standby time: Up to 17 days, 18 days
- Video playback: Up to 4.5 hours
- Video recording: Up to 3.6 hours
- Music playback: Up to 40 hours
Special applications
It is compatible with Nokia's N-Gage platform, being the only touchscreen to do so.
Reception
Common criticisms of the original N97 were the relative lack of RAM and available storage. With only around 50 MB of free RAM available after boot, the phone can become sluggish and close programs in order to conserve memory. Many first party applications also will only install on the root partition and with around 50 MB of free space, this is used quickly as it is also where temporary OS files are placed. This issue was resolved in the N97 mini as the user often has over 250 MB of free space on the fixed storage. A memory mapping alteration from firmware version 20 allowed applications to use less RAM and free it up better, helping to ease the strain of a lower amount of free RAM to the end-user.Anssi Vanjoki, EVP of Markets at Nokia, admitted that quality control in software has been an issue for this device, saying "it has been a tremendous disappointment in terms of the experience quality for the consumers", though, according to Vanjoki, later repaired by firmware updates.
Steve Litchfield of All About Symbian in a 2011 blog post wrote: "The N97 really was the device that should have ruled the world - it had, almost literally, everything. And yet it became the one device that Nokia had to apologise for, publicly. The one device that became a millstone around its neck."
Nokia has acknowledged that on many devices, the cover and the lens were mounted too close causing scratches from dust and debris. On later units, Nokia reportedly fixed this issue.
Others with the original N97 had speed problems with the built in GPS lock. These phones too easily lose track of the current location, making the free turn by turn navigation software provided by Nokia unusable. Users can have both the lens cover and GPS issues fixed under warranty at an official Nokia service centre.
Despite most Nokia phones having great signal reception, the Nokia N97 did not follow that same tradition. It had very poor overall signal strength, even in comparison to other phones placed side by side to the N97 that were connected to the same network.
The user interface of the S60 5th edition software platform, built on top of Symbian OS 9.4, has been criticized by the site TechRadar as inconsistent because menu items require two taps to be activated. In 2010 Nokia officially apologized for the number of customers who had experienced issues with the N97 and the buggy software. This led to a large number of potential customers choosing brands other than Nokia during this time period.
Despite of the generally lukewarm reviews, the phone sold well. However its marketing as an "iPhone killer" tarnished Nokia's smartphone reputation at the time.
Nokia N97 Mini
The N97 Mini is a downsized version of the N97 and has been available since October 2009. The N97 Mini downsized some features of the original N97, such as 8 GB of storage memory, touchscreen, and a shorter battery life. It uses the 2.0 Nokia N97 software by default. There has also been some redesign in the keypad. First, the big D-pad on the left side has been replaced by four arrow keys on the right side. Also there is more space between each keys and the keys are a little bit higher giving a much better feel when typing.Some major differences are listed in the following table.
Original N97 | N97 mini | |
Device Size | ||
Volume | ||
Weight | ||
LCD size | ||
inbuilt mass Storage Memory | 32 GB | 8 GB |
NAND Memory | 256 MB | 512 MB |
FM transmitter | Available | Not available |
Battery model | BP-4L 3.7 V 1500 mAh | BL-4D 3.7 V 1200 mAh |
GSM Talk Time up to | 9.5 hours | 7.1 hours |
WCDMA Talk Time up to | 6.0 hours | 4.0 hours |
GSM Standby Time up to | 18 days | 13 days |
WCDMA Standby Time up to | 17 days | 13 days |
Web Browser for S60 version after firmware update | lower than 7.3 | 7.3 |
A limited edition called the "N97 mini Raoul Limited Edition" has been released in relation with fashion house FJ Benjamin and the Raoul brand. It also features the new Fashion Asia widget and went on sale in late October 2009 in Malaysia and Singapore.
Reception
The user interface of the S60 5th edition software platform, built on top of Symbian OS 9.4, has been criticized by the site TechRadar as inconsistent because menu items require two taps to be activated.When compared to the original N97, the cheaper N97 mini was reviewed as an improvement, especially its keyboard.