You certainly wouldn’t want to be reading long financial reports on it, although Nokia seems to think you would – there’s a Bloomberg app to keep track of business news and stocks. Between the resolution and lacklustre font smoothing, reading on the E7 just isn’t that great. It has a resolution of 360 x 640, which is high-ish for a smartphone. The AMOLED screen isn’t the biggest we’ve seen, but it’s still pretty large at four inches. We’ve used Quickoffice for Android before, and on the Symbian operating system – Nokia’s own OS which it has recently abandoned* in favour of Windows Phone 7 – the office suite is just as intuitive. As such, it comes with a bunch of office apps installed, including Adobe PDF, the Quickoffice suite, a file manager, and even a dictionary. The E7 is very obviously designed with business users in mind, who travel a lot and need a full QWERTY keyboard and big screen to tap out lengthy emails and documents. The Nokia E7 actually has the screen slide up to reveal the keyboard, but the effect is the same. We can practically hear the angels sing about tactile, responsive buttons. If there’s one thing we like about a smartphone, it’s the reassuring click of a keyboard sliding out from underneath.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |