There’s a whole lot riding on the Lumia  800. Nokia’s first Windows Phone and the handset that will usher in  – so the company hopes – a new era of smartphone relevance and a  turnaround in fortunes. Question is, will the Lumia 800 be Finnish  enough for long-time followers as well as mainstream enough for a new  audience of smartphone users. Symbian may not have been universally  appealing, but at least it was unique; has Nokia sidelined its  independence alongside its faithful old platform? Check out the full  SlashGear review to find out.
If we hadn’t already seen the Nokia N9,  the Lumia 800′s physical design would have been the biggest surprise of  Nokia World 2011 last week. Like its MeeGo-powered  sibling, which we reviewed last month, the Lumia 800 rocks a  polycarbonate casing which Nokia’s production lines fettle from a single  chunk of plastic. The end result has a sleek, matte finish, sinuous  curves, and a hand-feel different to just about any other device on the  market.
  
At 116.5 x 61.2 x 12.1 mm it’s the same size as  the N9, though at 142g it’s ever so slightly heavier. Nokia offers the  same three color options, too, of black, cyan or magenta, and each are  the pure hue of the plastic itself: scratch your Lumia and you won’t see  grey underneath. It’s actually surprisingly difficult to mark the case  anyway, with the scrapes left from a vigorous scratching with a  fingernail buffing straight off. If you’re still cautious, Nokia bundles  a rubber case – color matched to your Lumia, naturally – in the box.  The 1,450 mAh battery is non-user-accessible, which helps the Lumia be  creak- and flex-free. This, frankly, is the Nokia hardware we’ve been  waiting for, though we certainly wouldn’t argue with (nor be surprised  if Nokia was indeed working on) an E7-style QWERTY device running  Windows Phone too.
Beyond the similar first impressions, there are  some key differences between the Lumia 800 and the N9. The side buttons  still include volume up/down and a power/lock key, but now there’s a  dedicated camera shortcut button too. Microsoft’s mandated back, Start  and search buttons are in a touch-sensitive row under the display, and  accommodating them has forced Nokia to use a smaller panel. The 3.7-inch  WVGA 800 x 480 screen loses some pixels over the N9, but still relies  on AMOLED ClearBlack technology for picture quality that is simply  superb. Viewing angles are broad, colors rich and eye-catching, and the  black background consistently found throughout much of Windows Phone is  inky in its darkness.
On the bottom is a speaker with decent volume and clarity. Up top is  the same 3.5mm headphone socket as the N9 and, under a flap, a microUSB  port. Once you’ve opened the hatch – which is our single point of mild  concern about the Lumia’s durability, thanks to its seemingly delicate  hinge mechanism – you can slide out the microSIM tray too. Unusually,  Nokia told us it has been forced to tweak the headphone jack a little in  order to work within the confines of the casing design. Its Monster-blessed Purity headsets actually come with a  short adapter cable to allow them to be used with non-Nokia phones,  though the bundled set of headphones in the box with the Lumia 800 lack  that converter. Even so, we had no problems using either the bundled  headphones with another phone, or using third-party headphones on the  Lumia.
Inside things take a significant change of  direction from the N9, with Microsoft’s platform standardization meaning  Nokia was forced to switch processor and radio. Qualcomm’s 1.4GHz  single-core MSM8255 takes center-stage, paired with 512MB of RAM and  16GB of storage (of which 13.86GB is available); there’s no microSD slot  to extend that. Nokia’s favorite pentaband UMTS/WCDMA radio is absent,  unfortunately, replaced with a quadband 850/900/1900/2100 alternative  (along with quadband GSM/EDGE).
Then there’s the usual WiFi b/g/n, Bluetooth 2.1+EDR and A-GPS, plus a  bevy of sensors: accelerometer, proximity and digital compass, though  no gyroscope. On the back is an 8-megapixel autofocus camera with Carl  Zeiss optics and a dual-LED flash, capable of 720p HD 30fps video  recording. Unusually, neither the Lumia 800 nor the Lumia 710 launched  alongside it last week have a front-facing camera. Right now that’s no  huge loss, since Windows Phone doesn’t make use of the front camera, but  it could be a drawback as services develop.
Performance overall is swift: the Lumia 800 may  lack a dual-core processor – no Windows Phone has one so far, since the  OS isn’t optimized for them – but that doesn’t hold back apps or the  Windows Phone interface. Menus whip along at speed, our  heavily-populated Gmail inbox loaded instantly, and there was no lag to  be found.
Windows Phone 7.5 Mango is a considerable step up  from the original OS as launched a little over a year ago. We’ve reviewed the latest iteration comprehensively here,  but the core premise is the same on the Lumia 800. Microsoft has  trimmed away at the unnecessary chrome and ornamentation to leave a UI  dominated by block colors, oversized typography and minimal buttons,  with a system of user-arrangeable Live Tiles making up the homescreen.  These tiles can show updates from the apps they’re connected to, so the  Phone tile shows the number of missed calls while the Photos tile  previews the latest images. 
Nokia’s two-pronged music services are the  first of the value-adds the company builds into the Lumia series, and  thanks to Microsoft’s Hub system they dovetail completely. Both purchase  and streaming options are on offer, with the Nokia MP3 Store offering  paid downloads from a choice of around 14m tracks (in the UK, individual  tracks are generally priced between £0.79 and £0.99) in DRM-free MP3  format, while Mix Radio offers a selection of preset streaming  playlists.
The MP3 Store works as you’d expect, requiring a Nokia account – and a  registered payment card – but downloading tracks straight to the Lumia.  You can then manage them using the Zune PC software or the more basic  Windows Phone Connector app for OS X, or indeed transfer your own  existing music collection over to the handset.
Mix Radio is more interesting. Nokia is offering a  choice of up to 100 different preconfigured playlists for streaming  over 3G or WiFi, separated out into categories like pop, rock, dance and  classical. Each category has multiple playlists, so for instance under  pop you have a choice of new releases, bestsellers, tracks from the last  year and the like. Nokia’s gimmick is that there’s no subscription or  even registration required to listen: once you get past the initial  warning that streaming songs can use a lot of data, there’s no barrier  to picking a playlist and starting to listen.
t works well, though it’s not a Spotify  replacement. There’s no apparent way to see what the playlist actually  contains, only the current track playing, and like online radio station  services such as Pandora, you’re limited in the number of track skips  you can make in short succession. Our review Lumia lacks the offline  playback support and the ability to pin individual playlists to the  Start screen, though Nokia tells us those features will be pushed out in  time for the 800′s imminent commercial release. 
In short, it’s a good replacement to traditional  radio – no annoying DJs, no ad breaks, no repetitive jingles – but it’s  not as flexible as a true streaming jukebox service. We can see it being  popular, however, especially if Nokia follows up on its promise to  leverage country-level teams to put together their picks of interesting,  local music. That would make it a good way to discover new music a  regular radio station might never play. On the downside, we experienced a  few hiccups with streaming, and on occasion a track would restart from  the beginning rather than resume playback.
Audio quality from the bundled headphones is  solid, though the earbuds themselves proved uncomfortable for some of  the people that tested them out. There’s an in-line microphone for voice  calls with a single multifunction button: during music playback,  clicking once toggles between play/pause, while double-clicking skips  forward.
Nokia Drive – along with Nokia Maps – is the  second strand of the company’s main software strategy. It’s a  combination of general and exclusive functionality: Nokia Maps, based on  the company’s NAVTEQ data and supporting 2D and 3D views together with  points of interest, will be released for any Windows Phone user through  the Marketplace, while Nokia Drive will be exclusive to the company’s  own phones.
Drive is what adds turn-by-turn voice guided  directions to the platform, along with a chunkier UI that’s more suited  to stabbing at while driving. It’s pretty much what we’ve seen on the  N9, neatly skinned to match Windows Phone. Search for a destination and  you get a list of results with icons to suggest what category they might  fall under – a bed for a hotel, for instance – while tapping them shows  a preview map of each result that can be side-swiped to flick between  them. Hit the “Drive To” button and the Lumia 800 calculates distance,  route and time, and you can tap the map pane to expand it and check  which roads it will have you taking prior to setting off.
The first time you use Nokia Drive, it prompts you  to download a voice pack – there are options available for multiple  languages, with some having both male and female choices – which is  roughly 4-5MB. You can also choose to download maps on a  country-by-country basis, meaning you can navigate without a data  connection.
Nokia is rightly proud of its cellphone  cameras, and while the Lumia 800 might not pack the sort of photography  system you’d find in the N8, its 8-megapixel sensor and Carl  Zeiss-blessed f2.2 aperture optics are still excellent. Windows Phone  mandates a dedicated camera shortcut button, which can bypass the lock  screen and take you straight to the camera app, and Nokia has opted for a  useful two-stage control that can lock focus with a half-press and then  fire off the frame when pushed all the way. Once you’ve taken a photo,  there’s a basic on-phone “auto-fix” tool to edit it. That tweaks  exposure and contrast to try to make a mediocre image better, and it  generally does as well as any of these auto-correction apps can.
You’re better off transferring your images to a computer and editing  there in earnest, however, since the Lumia 800 is capable of some decent  photography if given sufficient light. As you can see in our outdoor  sample photos, the Nokia copes well with London’s grey, foreboding  skies, with colors somewhat muted but generally accurate.
Indoors, with the flash turned off, however  there’s noticeable noise; the LED does make closer subjects brighter,  but we certainly wouldn’t argue if Nokia managed to fit the Xenon flash  from the N8 inside instead. There’s also something of a difference  between what the Lumia 800′s preview shows and the eventual photo the  camera actually takes. Colors in the preview generally showed up richer,  whereas in the resulting still – even if viewed on the phone itself –  was more subdued.
Video, meanwhile, is recorded at up to 720p HD  resolution and at 30fps. Clips are saved in MPEG-4 format and there’s a  3x digital zoom along with digital video stabilization. Generally  performance is good, with little in the way of smearing during faster  moving scenes, though there was some brief focus-hunting when dealing  with closer subjects. Audio is recorded in stereo, thanks to the twin  microphones.
In-call quality has been solid, with both  incoming and outgoing audio clear and easily heard. The Lumia 800′s  speaker can crank up surprisingly loud, but with an inevitably loss of  quality along the way. Still, it’s perfectly sufficient for an impromptu  conference call. There’s Bluetooth support for headsets if you’d prefer  to cut the cord.
One issue we experienced on a few occasions was intermittent loss of  signal, despite other phones using the same network being able to  connect while side by side with the Lumia. Most of the time the phone  would automatically reconnect once we tried to get online or make a  call, but at least once we needed to power-cycle the Nokia to restore  service. It’s possible this could be addressed by a firmware update,  however.
Microsoft added support for internet sharing –  turning your phone into a mobile hotspot, and sharing its 3G connection  via WiFi – in Mango, but availability on specific devices depends on  manufacturers, carriers, firmware version and WiFi chipsets. The feature  was not present on our review Lumia 800, but the smartphone is due at  least one firmware update prior to retail availability. We’ll update  when we know for certain whether or not the sharing functionality will  be added in.
Symbian smartphones always offered good battery life, and so we had  high hopes for the Lumia 800 tempered by the knowledge that Windows  Phone could well spoil things. Nokia quotes up to 9.5hrs of 3G talktime  or up to 335hrs of 3G standby, or alternatively 7hrs of video playback  or 55hrs of music playback, from a full charge of the 1,450 mAh battery.
With double the processor speed compared to most  Symbian devices, we weren’t expecting multi-day runtimes from the Lumia  800. Sure enough, this is a charge-nightly handset. With a full day of  use – a couple of short calls, push Gmail, some browsing over both 3G  and WiFi, photography, GPS and streaming music through Mix Playlists –  the Lumia 800′s battery gage was almost empty by the evening, though  it’s worth noting it still managed to last a couple of hours longer  before expiring. We did notice streaming Mix Playlists did take a  particular toll on battery life, particularly over 3G, something to  consider if you’re an avid music listener.
It may not be the first time we’ve seen the  Lumia 800′s design language, but Nokia’s unibody style is no less  appealing second time around. Elegant and tactile, it’s a clean step  away from the “just a big screen” ethos we’ve seen proliferate among  Android devices and, increasingly, Windows Phones too. Pentaband is an  obvious omission, but beyond that we have primarily only good things to  say about Nokia’s choice of display and other hardware.
Comparisons to MeeGo and the N9 are obvious, but futile: one phone  represents Nokia’s future, and the other does not. The Lumia 800 lacks  some of the more endearing features of its cousin – on more than one  occasion we found ourselves double-tapping the display to wake the  handset, something supported on the N9 but not in Windows Phone – but it  makes up for that with far more app choice and the reassurance that the  platform is unlikely to disappear any time soon.
here’s plenty to like about the Lumia 800. We’ve  been begging for a different OS on Nokia hardware for more than a year  now, and the first results of that change don’t disappoint. A brilliant  camera and compelling design, paired with a usable and clever platform,  add up to a handset that’s straightforward enough for first-time  smartphone users but still has enough appeal for those more familiar  with advanced phones. It’s the first foray of what will be a far longer  battle, but with the Lumia 800 Nokia is off to a very strong start.
                   


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