
The phone comes in a “black steel” finish and is generally meant to evoke the same kind of “ooh, ahh” that Apple’s iPhone 3G commanded before it became the phone de rigeur of everyone and their mother.
In other words: Nokia is making a go of the U.S. market, despite my previous post noting that the company is subscribing to a global strategy. RIM, watch out.
Full specs:
Basics:
- Dimensions: 4.4×2.2×0.4 inches
- Weight: 4.4 ounces
- Battery: 1500 mAh Lithium ion Battery
- Talk Time: Up to 4.5 hours
- Standby Time: Up to 12 days
- Technology: GSM/GPRS/EDGE/UMTS/HSDPA
- Frequency: 850/900/1800/1900 MHz (GSM/GPRS/EDGE); 850/1900 MHz (UMTS/HSDPA)
- Operating System: Symbian S60 3.2
- Memory: 120MB with microSD expandable memory up to 8 GB (microSD card sold separately)
- Display: 2.4 inches, 16M colors, 240×320 pixels
- GPS and aGPS ready
- 2.5 mm UHJ connector for audio
- Speakerphone
- Connectivity: Wi-Fi (IEEE 802.11 b/g), Micro USB (USB 2.0 Full Speed), Bluetooth 2.0 with EDR + Stereo A2DP, Infrared
Feature Set:
- Mail for Exchange to sync your corporate email, contacts, calendar, and tasks in real time
- Xpress Mail for personal email including Yahoo! Mail, AOL, Windows Live Hotmail, and others
- Mobile instant messaging—including AOL and AIM, Windows Live Messenger, and Yahoo! Messenger
- Text and multimedia messaging
- AT&T Navigator support for turn-by-turn voice directions and maps with fast traffic re-routing
- Full HTML browser with Flash support
- Location-Based Services: AT&T Navigator, Yellowpages.com, Where (U-Locate)
- Multi-language support: English, Spanish, French, Portuguese
- QuickOffice and PDF reader
- Multitask effortlessly with Symbian S60AT&T Navigator
- 3.2 megapixel digital camera with auto focus and flash
- Video Share—share a live or recorded video during a call
- AT&T mobile music
- XM radio
- CV—Stream video clips of news, sports, weather, and entertainment