Friday 15 February 2008

Nokia E51 - No BS

T
hose two little words basically sum this phone up. I might be wrong, of course, but barring the absence of a small camera in the front for video-calls - it lacks nothing. Basically this is a smart-phone that mimics an ordinary phone. The slight wedge-shape of the bottom-part of the phone makes it perfect for snug pockets. The Nokia e51 is a good basic phone.

The keypad is small but distinct, the buttons feel nice with a slight laptop-feel to them. The only negative thing about the keys is the soft-button's size and placement. The angle and size of the left/right soft-button that could easily lead to erroneous key presses if one is not careful. The “OK”-button and navigational-ring will probably live forever – they're excellent.

The screen is crystal clear. A 2" display is probably as big as it gets on a phone of this size. In combination width the excellent color depth, youtube works OK.

I use my E51 as a (detachable) wireless broadband modem via the tele2 mobile network. My girlfriends SE w910 is actually better at this than my Nokia E51 since it supports usb networks. In practice this means that all you have to do is plug the phone in and surf away! After issuing the mandatory “ifconfig usb0 up” , I don't even consider this a step a step. The Nokia requires a serial approach, by using /dev/ttyACM0 as modem one simply dials (I use wvdial). This is my configuration (right):

Bluetooth configuration has yet to work for me - I could make it work with the trusted old Nokia 5500 sport by substituting “/dev/ttyACM0” with “/dev/rfcomm0” in the wvdial.conf-file but my current Nokia just won't have it... I haven't really tried the wifi but whenever I come across an open network it is as easy to surf the web off as the gprs is – no problem.

Using the E51 with Ubuntu 7.10 was no problem. Universal Mass Storage support for the NON-INCLUDED 2gb “hotpluggable” microsd-card that I ripped out of the 5500 sport and and pc-suite mode for data-transfer ie modem use. Unfortunately neither gammu nor gnokii supports it yet so no syncing! Not an enormous problem unless you want to back your calendar up... In which case it is.

Between the built in BrowserNG symbian browser and the java midp Opera browser virtually all web content is available. I don't know why but Nokia refuses to deliver this phone with stopwatch/timer applications but there is one available at mosh for free that seems to work well enough. I think that anyone who has come in contact with the standard calculator for S60v3 has learned to loathe it! There's a replacement called Calcium at mtvoid.com. The screenshot was taken using 'Screenshot for symbian s60'. The future of the PC is dead... and gone. It belongs to the mobile phone now! Everything in personal computing that I once needed a complete computer for can now be done with a tiny 100 gram mobile phone. I say the future because the day of mobile rule is not quite here yet. But the second they can figure out how to squeeze these things into the moblie - is the second I toss my desktop computer in the bin.

Full "big boy" operating system – access to applications.
qwerty-keyboard/voice recognition – fast text input
support for HD-video/TV-out

I soon learned that mailing using predictive/non-predictive text IS hell. qwerty desperately needed! 2” screen - it works - but built in projector or TV-out would be nice. Until then I'll have to make due with this extremely slick and capable phone.