Another big bite out of the Nokia N97...
OK, so maybe Nokia is doomed. Techcrunch's MobileCrunch reviewer, Greg Kumparak, hates it, starting off:
"I could go on and on about the N97 - but there’s no point, and no way to do so without seeming unnecessarily harsh. Nearly every element of the phone has one glaring fault that just kills it for me.
A nasty lag here, an odd interface choice there... even down to the media functionality. Nokia makes a valiant effort to cram everything into this phone, but doesn’t pull a damned thing off perfectly."
As with the Gizmodo review, Greg likes the camera a little, likes the overall feel of the handset itself, and likes some of the UI, like homepage widgets.
But he really doesn't like some of the less visible aesthetics, the hinge, the keboard, the application UI, the capacitive touch screen and the laggy, slow, square-peg-in-round-hole Symbian S60 v5 operating system (S60 was never designed for full touch screen handsets). In fact Kumparak goes further with the Symbian OS:
"S60 has seemed as if it was on its last limb for some time now; with other interfaces now swooping in for the kill, it’s really dragging down Nokia’s efforts. It may be one of the most popular platforms in the world, but that doesn’t mean its one of the best.
Sorry, S60 - it’s game over."
Overall, with the current competiton (no need to mention them again), the Nokia N97 is a swing and a miss.
Now, when I posted my thoughts on the Gizmodo review, @kwingerai replied to me on Twitter saying:
First off, it's always good to hear of a businesses going well and I'm sure Nokia will indeed sell a fair few of these phones. They've sold plenty of N-series phones and they're really not bad at all. Taking a line through the middle of the N97 reviews you could summise that "it's not bad either". "Average" might also fit.
But "not bad" and "average" is not what the N97 was designed to be. This is Nokia's brand new, flagship phone. It's their demonstration of every piece of technical knowledge, expertise and phone/UI design experience they have. Yet it's 2.5 years behind the original iPhone, 1 year behind the Google G1 (HTC Dream) and is now in competition with newer and vastly improved versions of both of those handsets. Plus, it costs AU$300-400 more. It needed to be much better than average. It needed to be outstanding, it needed to put Nokia back on the smartphone map - in a big way. But it doesn't.
Instead the N97 features old technology, some cheap materials, a slow, laggy and out of date UI, and a processor with performance that doesn't cut it in the phone itself, let alone against the competition.
This is why we've seen the doom-laden reviews and why phone fans such as myself are somewhat mystified, not to mention disappointed. If this really is Nokia's best effort, two years late, then they are in big, big trouble. The game has moved on and Nokia's competitors are disappearing into the distance.

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