- This unlocked cell phone is compatible with GSM carriers like AT&T and T-Mobile. Not all carrier features may be supported. It will not work with CDMA carriers like Verizon Wireless, Alltel and Sprint.
- Unlocked quad-band GSM cell phone compatible with 850/900/1800/1900 frequencies and US/International 3G compatibility via 850/1900/2100 UMTS/HSDPA plus GPRS/EDGE data capabilities
- Access to corporate/personal email; QWERTY keyboard; Wi-Fi networking; a-GPS with Nokia Maps navigation; Bluetooth stereo music; 3.2-megapixel camera/camcorder
- Up to 5.3 hours of talk time, up to 280 hours (11.6 days) of standby time
- What’s in the Box: handset, battery, charger, 4 GB MicroSD card, connectivity cable, wired stereo headset, user and quick start guides
Product Description
Stylish business smartphone with a side sliding full keyboard and enhanced Nokia Email for Eseries. Nokia¿s consumer messaging service lifetime license; Nokia-hosted and Nokia-supported email push service for ISP emails. Service will be launched country by country starting beginning of 2009. wave 1 countries: Geotagging of images in camera application. When you upload this kind of images to OVI service it shows the place with Google Maps Designed for the best email… More >>
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I returned this item for the following reasons:
Political-
I am completely disgusted with Nokia’s involvement in supporting the Islamic regime of Iran in further oppressing its people. By cutting off its digital airwaves Nokia has colluded to perpetuate isolation of the Iranian freedom movement.
Phone Features-
1- After using a Palm for many years, I could not get over the inferior visual quality of the screens and the icons.
2- The phone keeps locking and I had no way to asking it not to lock the home page.
3- the text messaging was chronological but it did not keep a conversation string on the same page.
Overall-
As someone who uses Mac and Palm, I was surprised that non-user-friendly phones like this still exist.
If you want to use it for business it had features that were helpful and if you don’t care about the political bend of who you support, this phone might be a possibility. For me I feel literally and figuratively liberated after I returned this phone.
Rating: 2 / 5
I just bought this device. standby time is too short, I have to charge it everyday. when use for internet browsing, it’s better to use touch screen device. And the browser doesn’t support other languages except English. I am still using this and I believe will find more inconvenience.
Rating: 2 / 5
I am a big fan of Nokia and the Symbian Operating System. I currently use a Nokia E71x, which is a great phone, but had used a predecessor to the E65 in the past (Communicator) and really liked the various sliding / flipp open keyboards. Honestly, this phone is a perfect size, seems sturdily built and really I wanted to love it (I love the looks). However, where it totally fell apart was trying to set up Mail for Exchange to synchronize my e-mail. On every other phone that i have set up M4E on, the process has taken literally seconds…on this phone I have spent the last week looking at support forums, trying various configurations, hard resetting the phone, all to no avail. Finally I am giving up and sending this thing back to Amazon…again, the phone looks and feels fantastic, and if you are only going to use it for POP mail or SMS/MMS, I would recommend it. However, with the problems I had trying to get it to access my M4E account, I would be wary.
Rating: 1 / 5
I would like to warn T-Mobile subscribers to stay away from this phone.
I bought it and used it for 3-4 weeks before finally returning it. I should explain the 3-4 weeks delay by underscoring I loved everything about this phone (granted, I didn’t try/need all the features, so some of the complaints may be legitimate), but as a phone it (reception) simply sucked. I had been using previously, and reverted to a Nokia E51, excellent phone, and reception, even on T-Mobile (my E51 is an unlocked Singaporean model, so the bands don’t necessarily match T-Mobile’s).
I will miss the E75′s keyboard mostly, but the device is very feature rich, as everyone details herein. If only it also functioned as well as the E51 as a phone… on the T-Mobile network.
Rating: 2 / 5
I have purchased 2 of these phones hopeing that one of them would work. I even went and got a new AT&T SIM card because I thought it must be the SIM card not the Nokia phone. Nope, this phone just sucks! No wonder Nokia is losing market share to Apple and Blackberry. I have used Nokia phones for the last 10 years and loved every one. This one is awful. Cheap plastic construction on the top keys that you can see the screen when you press the 3 button. It sounded like the person calling was in a well and a lot of static when I would talk. That was the first phone. The second one would not complete outgoing calls and anyone that called me it went directly to voicemail. I thought it may be the SIM card so I got a new one. Same problems with the new SIM card installed.
I will say that the qwerty keypad was great though. I loved it. The sliding mechanism was fine also. Nokia needs to care about PHONE quality as much as they did on this phone about texting capability. My fingers are too big for the E71 so I am sticking to my 6822 til I find a suitable phone. Nokia has really let me down on this one.
Rating: 1 / 5