First Take: Nokia 9300

By Bonnie Cha, ZDNet US
09 September 2004 11:20 AM
Tags: mobile, phone, nokia, smartphone, 9300, phones
Nokia 9300 The full-featured Nokia 9300 is a portable office in the palm of your hand.

Nokia is giving business users something to write home about with its new 9300 smart phone -- literally. Reminiscent of the Nokia 9210i Communicator in looks, the Nokia 9300 flips open to reveal a spacious QWERTY keyboard and an ample internal colour display for on-the-go note taking and messaging. And as a corporate-centric phone, it has support for multiple e-mail accounts and Bluetooth, and it runs Symbian OS 7. The 9300 will be available in the first quarter of 2005 in two triband versions: one for Europe and Asia (GSM 900/1800/1900) and one for the Americas (GSM 850/1800/1900).

Upside: Aimed squarely at corporate citizens, the Nokia 9300's features won't disappoint, with its built-in office apps for documents, spreadsheets, and presentations, as well as a PDF viewer. The handset also has a whopping 80MB of free user memory (compared to the Sony Ericsson 910i's 64MB and the Treo 600's 32MB), so you'll have plenty of room to store contacts, appointments, and more; if that's still not enough, there's an MMC slot for expanding memory up to 2GB. Other features include an integrated speakerphone, five-way conference calling, an MP3 and multimedia player, an infrared port, a Web browser, and USB connectivity. For frequent messengers, there's e-mail support (IMAP4, POP3, SMTP, SyncML, and BlackBerry Connect) and text, instant, and multimedia messaging.

Downside: With so many goodies packed inside the Nokia 9300, it's no surprise the handset is a little on the bulky side. At 13.2 by 5 by 2 cm and 167.3 grams, the lengthy mobile will need some room, whether it rides shotgun on your hip or in your bag. Also, for such a full-featured phone, the 9300 has external and internal displays that are limited to 65,000 colours, though newer models support 262,000 shades. And shutterbugs are out of luck with the camera-shy 9300.

Outlook: Due to be released in January 2005 (pricing has not yet been determined), the Nokia 9300 will face tough competition from other office-savvy smart phones such as the P910i, which carries the advantage of a sharper display and an integrated camera. Check back soon for a full review; to see more Nokia handsets, check out our other mobile phone reviews.

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