Nokia C6-01
NOKIA C6-01 REVIEW
The
Nokia C6-01 may have been the “low end” device at Nokia World 2010, but that
doesn’t mean there’s nothing to recommend it. Packing one of Nokia’s new
ClearBlack AMOLED displays and a compact metal chassis. It’s smaller and
lighter, mainly due to fact that it doesn’t have the original’s slide-out
QWERTY keyboard, but it also has a better camera, more memory, and the latest
Symbian 3 operating system. Measuring 104 x 53 x 14mm and 131g it’s a chunky
little handful – not particularly long or wide but deep and on the heavy side.
Otherwise it’s a standard-looking Nokia smartphone with the 3.2-inch
touchscreen surrounded by a metal frame with a curved aluminium back cover.
Beneath the screen are touch sensitive call start and stop buttons flanking a
large, raised home/menu button. On the sides are a screen lock switch, volume
buttons and camera shutter, with USB syncing port, 3.5mm headphone jack and
Nokia charging plug on the bottom. On the back is a large speaker, 8-megapixel
camera lens and dual LED flash. The 3.2-inch AMOLED touchscreen looks, frankly,
gorgeous, especially when viewing video, and does a good job of showing itself
off even in bright light. Incidentally, it offers exactly the same pixel
resolution that you’ll find on the 3.5-inch screen on Nokia’s C7 – but here it
looks just a smidgeon sharper. It’s capacitive and multi-touch too, though it’s
not quite as sensitive as, say, the iPhone or some of HTC’s recent models,
requiring a few too many double presses than we’d like. Additional apps are
available from Nokia’s Ovi Store which is growing slowly but steadily, though
it’s still far behind its Apple and Android rivals. The Nokia C6-01 runs on the
new Symbian 3 operating system and while it’s definitely an improvement over
its predecessor, it’s nothing like the ground-up reinvention that is currently
saving Windows “mobile”. That annoying business of single tapping some list
items and double tapping others seems to be gone, but you still need to switch
between icon pages and lists, and when you’ve dug down through various levels
of icons, it’s easy to get confused about where you are. The three home pages
are laid out in a grid system and can be populated with all sorts of shortcuts
and widgets. It’s not as clear-cut as Windows Phone 7 or iOS, nor is it as
pretty as Android can be, but it’s functional and effective once you get used
to it. The 8-megapixel camera is minus the Carl Zeiss lens that’s become
familiar on Nokia’s higher end snappers but it’s not a bad effort all the same.
It takes about 3 seconds to launch and features include face detection, 2x
digital zoom, a variety of scene modes (though no macro) and options to tweak
exposure, light sensitivity, white balance, contrast and sharpness. Picture
quality is generally fairly good, with decent colour balance and reasonable
sharpness. 11Video recording is in standard VGA resolution (it lacks the C7’s
720p HD video) and the quality level drops accordingly. It comes with a 2GB
microSD memory card and you can bump that up to 32GB, though you’ll need to
remove the battery to get to it – so no hot-swapping. Battery life held up
fairly well, giving us 2 days of prolonged use. The C6-01 delivers a decent
camera and robust build, even if its browsing and social networking skills aren’t
up there with the best.
SPECIFICATION & FEATURES
NOKIA C6-01 PRICE
Price in USA $377
Price in UK £200
Price in EURO €280
Price in PAK Rs.25,500
Price in INDIA Rs.13,299
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