Nokia E71 - gray (unlocked)
Manufacturer: Nokia Corp. Part number: 002F581
- More product information:
- Editors' review
- User reviews
- Specifications
- Product series
- Manufacturer info
- Bottom Line:
- Mobile professionals who need a powerful but sleek messaging-centric smartphone will be well-served by the Nokia E71; just be prepared to pay a price.
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CNET editors' review
Nokia E71 - gray (unlocked) price range: $279.99 - $339.99
- Reviewed by: Bonnie Cha
- Reviewed on: 07/03/2008
The good: The Nokia E71 features a slim design, while still managing to have a full QWERTY keyboard. The Symbian smartphone is stocked with features, including Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, GPS, and U.S. 3G support. Voice, messaging, and productivity tools are also strong.
The bad: The E71 is expensive, and the display is on the smaller side. The keyboard is a bit cramped as well.
The bottom line: Mobile professionals who need a powerful but sleek messaging-centric smartphone will be well-served by the Nokia E71; just be prepared to pay a price.
It may be that the Nokia E series sometimes suffers from Jan Brady syndrome, as it gets overshadowed by a flashier member of its family--the Nokia N series (aka Marcia Brady). But the E series is just as bright and deserves some recognition too. Traditionally, the E series devices have been very corporate-centric and serious in design, but now Nokia is updating the line with the introduction of the Nokia E66 and Nokia E71, bringing with them a modernized look and a fresh set of features.
For this review, we took a look at the Nokia E71, which steps in to relieve the older Nokia E61i. What the company has done with the E71's design is remarkable, as it's taken the once-bulky smartphone and turned it into an incredibly sleek QWERTY device. You do lose a bit in screen and keyboard size, but we feel it's manageable. Plus, with its strong messaging, productivity, and connectivity features and solid performance, it's worth those little sacrifices. The only downfall is that it has yet to be picked up by a U.S. carrier, so your wallet will take a hit, as an unlocked version of the Nokia E71 will go for about $500.
Design
The first thing you'll notice about the Nokia E71 is its design. It's noticeably sleeker and sexier than the Nokia E61i, sporting a compact frame that measures 4.4 inches tall by 2.2 inches wide by 0.4 inch deep and 4.4 ounces. The slimness is especially noticeable when you use the E71 as a phone, or just hold it in the palm of your hand. In addition, the handset has a solid construction with its steel frame. Our only complaint, and it's a minor one, is that the back gets a bit tarnished with fingerprints and smudges.

On front, there's a 2.36-inch QVGA nontouch display with a 16-million-color output and 320x240-pixel resolution. The screen is a bit on the smaller size, but text and images look sharp. It also has a light sensing technology that adjusts the display's brightness depending on what environment you're in. A new feature that's not readily apparent from looking at the phone is the Business and Personal home screens. You can now toggle between two different home views, depending on whether you're at work or at home. In Business mode, you'll have immediate access to work tools, such as e-mail, the Web, and the file manager. After hours, you can switch to Personal mode and have your music and photo gallery a click away. Of course, you're not really "off" from work since you can easily switch back, but its a nice thought anyway.
Below the display, there's a standard navigation array of two soft keys, Talk and End buttons, and a four-way toggle with a center select key. In addition, there are four shortcuts to the Home screen, Calendar, Contacts, and Messages. You also get a full QWERTY keyboard. Given that the E71 is physically smaller than the E61i, the layout is a bit more cramped with less spacing between the buttons. Still, I found it pretty easy to use, though I do have small fingers. Customers with larger thumbs might want to give it a test drive. On the bright side, the keys don't have that squishy feel of the E61i; they give more of a satisfying, clicky tactile feedback.

The left spine holds a microSD slot and a micro USB port. It seems Nokia is sticking with the decision to go with the less standard micro USB port at this time. It's definitely not a deal-breaker, just a minor inconvenience since you can't use the more widely used mini USB accessories. On the right side, you have a 2.5mm headset jack, a volume rocker, and a voice command activation key. Both sides also have buttons to release the battery cover. The power button is located on the top, while the power connector is on the bottom of the unit. Finally, you'll find the camera, flash, and self-portrait mirror on the back.
The Nokia E71 comes packaged with an AC adapter, a USB cable, a wired headset, a 2GB microSD card, a protective pouch, a lanyard, a software CD, and reference material. For more add-ons, please check our cell phone accessories, ringtones, and help page
Features
If the QWERTY keyboard didn't give it away, the Nokia E71 is a messaging-centric smartphone, though it's certainly not limited to just e-mail. The E71 works with Microsoft Exchange Server, POP3, IMAP, and SMTP accounts and has a full attachment viewer. The device is also compatible with a number of push e-mail solutions, including Intellisync Wireless E-mail, Visto, and Seven Always-On Mail. The E71 includes a new wizard to help set up your e-mail as it automatically looks for the settings needed to access your account. There are no instant messaging clients preloaded on the device, though you can certainly download software to do so. In fact, there is a download catalog right on the device where you can find such titles. We'd also suggest taking a look at CNET Download.com for more suggestions for third-party applications.
Using the new wizard, we configured our review unit to access our Yahoo Plus account by simply entering our username and password. There's also a voice aid utility that uses text-to-speech technology to read aloud not only your messages but also your call history, contacts, clock, and more. The feature worked fine in our tests, though the voice sounded quite robotic. We'd say this function might come in handy when you need to hear a message while driving; otherwise, it might just be easier to read the information off the phone.
The E71 runs Symbian OS 9.2, Series 60 3.1 edition, and comes with full support for viewing and editing Microsoft Word, Excel, and PowerPoint documents with the Quickoffice suite. It appears, however, that the company has done away with the Nokia Team Suite, which first debuted on the Nokia E65. The E71 comes with the Nokia Web browser with support for Flash Lite 3.0, so you're able to view and use such sites as YouTube. The smartphone does have a number of other PIM applications and organization tools, including Adobe Reader, a Zip Manager, a calendar, notes, a calculator, a clock, a voice recorder, and a currency converter. There are also a number of security features, including memory encryption and mobile VPN. There's 110MB internal dynamic memory, and the microSD slot can accept up to 8GB cards.

The Nokia E71's phone features include world roaming, a speakerphone, conference calling, speed dial, voice commands, VoIP calls, and text and multimedia messaging. The address book is limited only by the available memory, while the SIM card can hold an additional 250 contacts. Each entry has room for multiple numbers, an e-mail address, home and work addresses, a Web URL, and so forth. For caller ID purposes, you can pair a contact with a photo or one of 39 polyphonic ringtones. The E71 makes it easy to perform certain tasks from your contact list, as you simply press the right arrow button and a pull-down menu appears where you can choose to place a voice call or send a text, multimedia, or audio message.
The E71 works on U.S. 3.5G bands, more specifically the 850/1900MHz bands. This means you'll only get the HSDPA support on AT&T and not T-Mobile's 3G network, which operates on the 1700/2100 bands. Other wireless options include Bluetooth 2.0 and Wi-Fi. The smartphone supports a number of Bluetooth profiles, including mono and stereo Bluetooth headsets, hands-free kits, dial-up networking, and file transfer.
The E71 is equipped with a GPS chip, as well as assisted GPS, so it uses the help of cellular towers and Wi-Fi spots to more quickly get a fix on your position. The E71 comes preloaded with the Nokia Maps 2.0 application, which offers plenty of navigation tools, including satellite and hybrid maps, and pedestrian and bicycle modes. For turn-by-turn directions, however, you will need to pay $125.77 for a one-year license or $13.96 a month for the privilege.
Finally, for those times you do want to switch from business to personal mode, there are a host of multimedia features on the smartphone. The built-in music player supports MP3, WMA, W4A, AAC, AAC+, and eAAC+ files, as well as OMA DRM 2.0- and WM DRM-protected songs. The music library categorizes tracks by artists, albums, genres, and composers; you can also create playlists right on the phone and adjust the sound with the built-in equalizer. You can listen to your favorite podcasts or listen to the radio (you must used the included earbuds as it contains the FM tuner). If you'd like to watch other videos, you can use RealPlayer to check out 3GPP and MPEG-4 files. And while there is a direct link to the Nokia Music Store, it's not yet available in the United States.

The Nokia E71 is also equipped with 3.2-megapixel camera with video recording capabilities. There are a number of imaging tools, including autofocus, an LED flash, exposure compensation, and digital zoom. You also get multiple scene modes, white balance settings, and color adjustments. In video mode, there are three quality settings, but you only have access to controls for the scene mode, white balance, and color. Once you're done snapping photos or videos, you can share them via multimedia message, e-mail, or Bluetooth; set them as your phone's wallpaper or assign them to a contact; or post them to the Web, whether it be on Nokia's Ovi service or a site like Flickr.

Picture quality was disappointing. Though we could make out the images, there was a grainy quality to the photos, and the colors never looked right, even after tweaking some of the settings. Video, on the other hand, looked quite decent.
Performance
We tested the quad-band (GSM 850/900/1800/1900; HSDPA 850/1900) Nokia E71 in San Francisco using AT&T service, and call quality was good. We enjoyed clear and loud audio on our end, and we were able to use an airline's voice automated system with no problem. Meanwhile, our friends also reported good sound, though every now and then, they could hear an echo, but not enough to be distracting. Speakerphone quality wasn't quite as stellar. Calls could sound patchy at times, and volume could be a problem in louder environments. We were able to successfully pair the E71 with the Logitech Mobile Traveller Bluetooth headset and the Motorola S9 Active Bluetooth Headphones.
The Nokia E71 was a very responsive smartphone. Long performance lags were rare, and we never experienced any system crashes during our review period. Web browsing was swift, whether we were cruising on AT&T's HSDPA network or via Wi-Fi. One area that could use some improvement was multimedia. Music playback through the phone's speakers sounded flat, even after we fiddled with the equalizer. Watching video clips was fine in short spurts.
The Nokia E71's 1,500mAh battery has a rated talk time of 10.5 hours (GSM) and up to 17 days of standby time. We are still conducting our battery drain tests, but will update this section when we have final results. According to FCC radiation tests, the E71 has a digital SAR rating of 1.4 watts per kilogram.
User reviews
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Great email device if u don't want to pay for data plan
by kennifu on September 6, 2008
Pros: Yes, you can send attachments with this phone.
Great Wifi functions
Great POP email functions
Great office appsCons: Poor media functions (no divx playback; flash player is choppy)
Summary: Particularly a good choice for people who do not want to get an expensive data plan for email - I can find a wifi connection often enough (at home, or ...
Summary: Particularly a good choice for people who do not want to get an expensive data plan for email - I can find a wifi connection often enough (at home, or at the university or at coffee shops) so I can just download all my emails by wifi. I was looking for a phone that can download all the emails (including attachments) by POP (instead of IMAP) so i can read and draft replies offline, and the E71 is excellent for this purpose.
Also, I've read some people had trouble getting gmail POP to work on E71: using recent:username should fix it. See link below
http://mail.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=47948
The office applications are also good enough for me to write my cover letters and resumes on. With 8 gb of ram I can carry a backup of my documents with me and refer to any documents i need.
I've always used nokia phones since the the 1990s, and this phone has impressed me the most since my 6100.10 out of 11 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Slim, strong, crisp
by rgsmith21 on August 12, 2008
Pros: Wi-fi, US 3G, Bluetooth, GPS, bright screen, strong set of applications, VPN capabilities for intranet access, very solid build quality
Cons: Cramped keypad, currently lacks support of third party software
Summary: While the E71 measures about he same height and width of my Palm 700p it is 1/3 of the thickness, and while my Blackjack II is larger the E71 ...
Summary: While the E71 measures about he same height and width of my Palm 700p it is 1/3 of the thickness, and while my Blackjack II is larger the E71 weighs more. It's a dense phone giving it a very sturdy feel.
Symbian S60 reduces the number of steps one has to go through in order to get where you want to go relative to Windows Mobile, it does lack some home screen customization. For instance, I'd like to replace the Nokia Maps with Google Maps, but it doesn't give me the option.
The Nokia Maps application is underwhelming. Google maps with GPS enabled is a much stronger application on this phone.
I'm also awaiting Skype and Google Talk support for the E71 so I can use WiFi to make video calls and chat with my Google contacts.
The keypads on the Blackjack II and Palm 700p are much more efficient to type emails and even fill in spreadsheets or edit documents. There isn't enough button definition to be able to determine by feel if you are pushing one or many at the same time.
The camera takes a decent 3.2 pic, and the flash does an adequate job of lighting the subject.
The call quality is by far the best of any phone I have used. The reception of 3G does not seem to be as strong as the Blackjack II, and it has little to do with how I hold the phone as you may see discussed elsewhere.
I can't wait to see how it does overseas even without the 3G support there.3 out of 3 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Fantastic little phone
by andyde1 on July 31, 2008
Pros: size, packed w/ nice features, querty keyboard, fantastic build quality, great battery life
Cons: somewhat of a small screen, Nokia Maps, camera is a little weak but still nice
Summary: I am not much about writing reviews but I am compelled to write about the Nokia E71. I am coming off a Palm Treo 680 and blackberry 8100. This phone ...
Summary: I am not much about writing reviews but I am compelled to write about the Nokia E71. I am coming off a Palm Treo 680 and blackberry 8100. This phone is on a different league all together.
Form factor: This thing looks so sexy, and amazingly thin where I can't believe Nokia packed so much into it. The build quality is the best of any phone I have ownedm seriously this thing is so well built and the materials are superb.
Call quality: IMO Nokia and Blackberry both have the best call quality of any manufacturer. The Nokia E71 lives up to that mark.
The dedicated short cut buttons work extremely well. I have Garmin XT working on the E71 and it is much better than the Nokia Maps. Google maps works beautifully as well.
This phone will do it all for you, WiFi, GPS, Business suite, querty keypad, smart dialing, bluetooth, and so much more...
If you are looking for strong media, this phone is not for you. Look at the Nokia N-series such as the N95.2 out of 2 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Expensive to own / not a great business phone
Pros: Fast reliable OS, good battery life, simple navigation, voice command, looks great, predictive text works well, can load Opera Mini, Google Maps, built-in RSS (through Nokia browser), GPS, WiFi (when you need it), good PDF reader, good for texting
Cons: Bundled ActiveSync limited to 1 Exchange email box, QuickOffice only reads Office 2003 or below, ugly OS, decent email connectivity requires additional software, UGLY calendar/contacts/OS, limited additional software
Summary: Nokia bills the E71 as a 'business phone', but is it really? I personally bought the phone because I was looking for a Qwerty phone that had ActiveSync but didn'...
Summary: Nokia bills the E71 as a 'business phone', but is it really? I personally bought the phone because I was looking for a Qwerty phone that had ActiveSync but didn't run WindowsMobile.
The first surprise is that the Nokia ActiveSync only supports one Exchange account. Want more? Head over to DataViz and cough up $50 for RoadSync. Nothing against RoadSync (I recommend it), but a business phone should support full ActiveSync out of the box.
Nokia says that this phone comes bundled with Office. It does...although if someone sends you a file in Office 2007...you guessed it, another $50 to the makers of QuickOffice.
Ok, so it doesn't do great Exchange out of the box. How about other email (like GMail/Yahoo!/Live/Hotmail)? The phone supports POP, but not full IMAP. In IMAP the phone only will pull the headers down and the user has to wait for a painfully long time to open the individual emails.
But Nokia has a messaging solution - Nokia Email. My early tests are that the product is OK. It pushes email and supports HTML mail. However, the user is limited to the number of folders that can be synced and in my testing I cannot get all my selected folders to come down to my phone.
The Nokia Email service was in Beta until last week (April 2009) and it still has some bugs to work out. The email application UI doesn't really fit into the E71 UI and the whole thing kind of feels bolted onto the phone.
There is more bad news. Nokia states on it's website that this new messaging software is free while in trial and hints at some unspecified charges in the future for this service.
So - buyer beware - if you want non-Pop email on this phone, be prepared to buy extra ActiveSync software and/or pay some unspecified fees to Nokia for their messaging solution.
Additionally, the presentation is barely up to US standards. The address book is almost a joke, it is so bad. Good luck viewing a note for a contact - the only way to do it is to edit the note.
The calendar month view is good, the agenda view passable, and (again) the individual appointment view is horrible. (To be fair, for a mere $25 extra, Handy Calendar can greatly increase the look and functionality).
So why did I give this phone an OK rating? The OS is lightning fast and the precious few applications that run on Symbian (Google Maps/Opera Mini/RoadSync) are very stable.
The battery life works well. If you turn off the phone, a charge can last for days with constant push email on.
The phone shines for quickly accessing the communication. Start typing the name and then choose to call/text/email from the popup menu. Anyone with a Palm will already expect this, but people stuck with WindowsMobile will find it to be a revelation. I have to say that it is refreshing to have a browser-enabled phone where it is easy to make phone calls.
So who is this phone for? It barely works for me as an email phone. RoadSync is recommended if you plan to use it with Exchange. But the cramped keyboard, the expensive software and the lack of out-of-the-box functionality (especially regarding email) would have me steer you towards a Blackberry Curve or the Apple iPhone.
I wouldn't recommend this phone for heavy email users. It will just frustrate. And the total cost of ownership is high considering that I already bought the phone unlocked from Best Buy.1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Productivity powerhouse
by guyfromtrinidad on December 21, 2008
Pros: WI-fi, Slim and sexy, user friendly, great on board apps, very extensible. Predictive text is the best i have seen. Best battery life of any smartphone on the market.
Cons: Camera could have been better, 2.5mm jack instead of 3.5mm, expensive depending on where you are.
Summary: I was a long time Nokia fan but flirted with the W sony ericsson series because I loved their multimedia capabilities. Since that time my job has evolved where I ...
Summary: I was a long time Nokia fan but flirted with the W sony ericsson series because I loved their multimedia capabilities. Since that time my job has evolved where I needed a smartphone to support my new way of working. Being a road warrior it was either the Bold of the E71. The E71 won hands down.
Quick update for those of you who are considering this phone. Nokia has recently released a firmware update(13/01/2009) that makes this phone a must buy. Several stability issues have been rectified and some of the issues with the camera have been fixed. Since I installed the update I have been pushing it hard trying to force a crash and it has performed exceptionally. Their are a lot of sites (including Nokia) that has all the details of what's in the update. They have also released it in two new colors (red!! is one of them). Load up some apps like fring, gmaps, goosync and shozu on this baby and you won't regret it. Fantastic buy
It is perfect for me because I don't live by email so the excellent email push qualities of a blackberry wasn't for me, however I am in a wireless environment for most of my day and would rather make a quick check of my email rather than making paying for a data plan. The E71 wireless discovery is fast, you can go from discovering an access point to browsing in 5 secs(literally, I timed it).
A lot has been made about the cramped keyboard but I am 6ft tall which means big hands and I was able to bang out a document with few mistakes because of the excellent predictive text. In this area it also beats back the Bold because you can edit and create new documents(doc,xls and ppt) whereas with the Bold you can just view them(you have to pay for the upgrade to be able to edit on the Bold). I could see myself pulling this out on a flight and editing a document rather than firing up my laptop.
Finally the battery life is fantastic this thing keeps going and going again another plus if you are a road warrior.
You would realise I see the choice is between this and the Bold(not the iphone). If you live by email and can pay for Blackberry services go with the Bold. If however you want a nice into the smartphone world and at the same time want to experience one of the best phones on the market go with the E71.
Updated on Jan 18, 20091 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Excellent phone for business and communication.
by Dalecosby on November 15, 2008
Pros: Very slim. Very Solid. Decent camera and great camera for a phone.
Good selection of built in software. GPS, bluetooth, wifi and 3G all built in as well as infrared. Syncs with Macs and iTunes.Cons: The camera could be better but it is not bad for a phone. Real player does not have a good interface but there are 3rd party solutions. the webcam on front does not work with US carriers. Has only a 2.5 MM plug. a larger 3.5 would be nice for music.
Summary: Over all this is a great phone. It is no iPhone for entertainment uses but then the iPhone is no E71 for work needs. I ultimately decided to go with ...
Summary: Over all this is a great phone. It is no iPhone for entertainment uses but then the iPhone is no E71 for work needs. I ultimately decided to go with the e71 and my iPod for the best of both worlds.
The hardware is very solid and the camera is one of the best I have seen in a phone, short of the N95, though it is still lacking compared to a dedication digi cam.
The bundled office software is great and the excel program is very usable for viewing my schedule spreadsheets and also basic stuff such as shopping lists etc.
The music player was a big surprise. It is almost as good as an iPod and the built in podcast app is great for downloading new episodes on the go.
I have been amazed with the wifi performance and I find myself using it often at home for basic web and chatting.
The keyboard is very accurate, though I do not have particularly large hands. It is better than the blackberries and WM devices I tried, though that is a more personal opinion.
The takes decent pics but will not replace your main camera, though the video is phenomenal for a phone, taking YouTube quality video.
The built in GPS was a but disappointing to me but I am used to using a Garmin dedicated GPS so I would not buy this phone rather than buying a GPS if you intend to use a GPS often.
The built in browser is OK but for the most part I prefer to use Opera Mini, though for things such as online banking you will need to use the the Nokia browser.
Overall, I would reccoment this device over any other qwerty device I have seen but depending on your uses you might prefer one of the touchscreen phones such as the iPhone or the Google Phone from TMobile.1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Pretty good phone, but with too many compromises
by swrobel on November 13, 2008
Pros: - Beautiful design
- Extremely think (perhaps too thin?)Cons: - Keys are rounded and my fingers slip from one to the next - a lot of mistypes
- Camera is horrible in all but the best light, flash is useless
- No 3.5mm jack!
- S60 feels antiquated, the "dual homescreens" feature is marketing snake oilSummary: Mail for Exchange works well enough, but the built-in search chokes with over 100 e-mails in my inbox. This just doesn't feel like the enterprise device it's supposed ...
Summary: Mail for Exchange works well enough, but the built-in search chokes with over 100 e-mails in my inbox. This just doesn't feel like the enterprise device it's supposed to be.
I'm getting a Blackberry...1 out of 2 users found this user opinion helpful.
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To me, of the best smart phone units around
by clfcj9975 on November 9, 2009
Pros: Sleek design, easy interface, global unit for the business traveller
Cons: Not that good for US domestic market
Summary: Using 3 mobile units for my businesses, this, to me is the epitome of an almost global business phone. Almost global because of the software, yet not that adaptable to ...
Summary: Using 3 mobile units for my businesses, this, to me is the epitome of an almost global business phone. Almost global because of the software, yet not that adaptable to the US market but a gem of one in Asia & Europe. Satisfied user here.
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Great phone. Tiny keys.
by louparte on October 14, 2009
Pros: Excellent wifi. Great little camera.
Cons: Tiny keys. They are hard to see.
Summary: I bought a grey one. I could not read the keys despite light-sensing. So I bought a white one and gave my girlfriend the grey one. Now I can read ...
Summary: I bought a grey one. I could not read the keys despite light-sensing. So I bought a white one and gave my girlfriend the grey one. Now I can read the keys. It's an excellent little phone. The internet is very fast. CON'S: It's difficult to figure out how to do basic things. For instance - I want to tag a signature line "Sent from my mobile device" to emails. Can't figure out how to do that.Too many menus & they aren't intuitive. Still - I liked it so much -- I bought 2 of them.
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Good for Business alone, Don't expect more multimedia
by rajesh_mmv on September 18, 2009
Pros: 1) Good battery life (3 hours talk time + 3 hours of wi-fi usage)
2) Good sound quality during calls & good speaker phone.
3) E-Mail & Web Browser is awesome even much better than Blackberry for sure.
4) Security and profile selection is excellenCons: 1) 2.5mm headphone jack sucks
2) Multimedia features like camera, video & Audio features really sucks.
3) Keypad is unimaginably small, almost impossible to type for people with above avg size,
4) keypads should be handled with extra care (expensive)Summary: Overall this phone is meant only for business people (who should be handling the phone with extreme caution) and strictly not for any other people cos of its expensive repair ...
Summary: Overall this phone is meant only for business people (who should be handling the phone with extreme caution) and strictly not for any other people cos of its expensive repair cost and bad multimedia feature.
Meant only for more battery life/ security/ e-mail / wi-fi
Specifications
- Manufacturer: Nokia Corp.
- Part number: 002F581
- Description: Making the most of your day at work and away, Nokia E71 is mobile efficiency, beautifully styled.
General
- Product Type Smartphone
- Service Provider Unlocked
- Width 2.2 in
- Depth 0.4 in
- Height 4.5 in
- Weight 4.4 oz
- Body Color Steel gray
Cellular
- Technology WCDMA (UMTS) / GSM
- Band WCDMA (UMTS) / GSM 850/900/1800/1900
- Phone Design Candy bar
- Antenna Internal
- Vibrating Alert Yes
- Polyphonic Ringer Yes
- Voice Dialing Yes
- Call Timer Yes
- Conference Call Capability Yes
- Voice Recorder Yes
- Speakerphone Yes
- Wireless Interface IEEE 802.11g, Infrared (IrDA), Bluetooth 2.0 EDR
- Additional Features aGPS
Communicator Features
- Operating System Symbian OS
- Synchronization With PC Yes
- Synchronization With SyncML, MS Outlook
- User Memory 110 MB
Messaging & Data Services
- Mobile Email Yes
- Supported Email Protocols POP3, SMTP, IMAP4
- Data/Fax Capability Yes
- GPRS (General Packet Radio Service) Yes
- EDGE (Enhanced Data Rates For Global Evolution) Yes - Class 32
- High Speed Circuit Switched Data (HSCSD) Yes
- Internet Browser Yes
- Platforms Supported Java MIDP 2.0
- JAVA applications Yes
- HSDPA (High Speed Downlink Packet Access) Yes
- Messaging / Data Features PDF support, VoIP client, XHTML Browser, Zip Manager support, Microsoft Word support, Microsoft Excel support, Macromedia Flash support, Microsoft PowerPoint support
Multimedia Features
- Playback Digital Video Formats 3gp, MPEG-4, H.263 video and AMR audio, RealVideo and RealAudio (RealMedia)
- Downloadable Content Themes, Ring tones, Business cards, Operator logos
Digital Camera
- Camera highlights With a resolution of 3.2 megapixels, this camera phone will give you higher quality pictures than other phones.
- Sensor Resolution 3.2 megapixels
- Still Image Resolutions 2048 x 1536
- Focus Adjustment Automatic
- Video Recorder Resolutions 640 x 480 (VGA)
- Features Self timer
GPS System
- GPS Navigation GPS receiver
Organizer
- Alarm Clock Yes
- Calendar Yes
- Reminder Yes
- Calculator Basic
Display
- Type LCD display
- Technology TFT
- Display Resolution 320 x 240 pixels
- Diagonal Size 2.36 in
- Color Support Color
- Color Depth 24-bit (16.7 million colors)
Memory
- Internal Shared Memory Yes
Connections
- Connector Type 1 x Video out / hands-free microphone connector - Sub-mini-phone 2.5 mm, USB
Security Features
- Keypad Lock Yes
- SIM Card Lock Yes
Miscellaneous
- Included Accessories Hands-free headset
Power
- Type Power adapter
Battery
- Technology - Lithium polymer
- Capacity 1500 mAh
- Talk Time Up to 270 min
- Standby Time Up to 480 h
Product series
Manufacturer info
- Nokia Corp.
- Manufacturer profile
- Browse Nokia Corp. products on Shopper.com
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- Website: http://www.nokiausa.com/
- Address:
6000 Connection Drive, Irving, TX 75039 - Phone: 1-972-894-5000
- Fax: 972-894-5050










