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Nokia N86 Cep Telefonu

Fiyat Aralığı
721 - 1.271 TL
ÜRÜN ÖZELLİKLERİ
Ağırlığı :  149 gr
Bluetooth :  VAR
Ekran Özellikleri :  240X320 piksel
Gprs :  Class 32
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N86 NOKIA CEP TELEFONU (İNGİLİZCE İNCELEMESi)

You may've thought Nokia lost their touch, you may be out of love with the Nseries but the Nseries are always keeping an eye on you. Their wide-angle, variable aperture eye. On you. Whether the Nokia Nseries are making up the ground lost in the megapixel race or claiming back what they believe is rightfully theirs, they seem to have the right leadership to put them back on the megapixel map.

Nokia N86 8MP official photos
Armed with one of the most advanced cameras in terms of hardware and features you don't just find on every other handset out there, the N86 8MP is keen to take cue from the N85 and shake the Nseries out of their slumber. Now, in case you forgot, it's still the market leader we're talking about here, and that should probably tell why everybody is so worked up.
So, the question as always is whether strong performance will deliver on that awesome promise. And you've got us to help you make a more informed decision about buying Nokia N86 8MP. Given all the comments above, the N86 8MP is more the kind to encourage impulsive spending but you'll choose wisely not to miss our write-up.

Key features

• 2.6" 16M-color OLED display of QVGA resolution (scratch-resistant surface)
• 8 megapixel autofocus camera with dual-LED flash and AF assist light
• 28mm wide camera lens, variable aperture, mechanical shutter, geotagging, time-lapse, camera lens cover, VGA video recording at 30fps
• Symbian OS 9.3 with S60 3.2 UI
• ARM 11 434 MHz CPU, 128MB RAM
• Quad-band GSM support and 3G with HSDPA 3.6Mbps support
• Wi-Fi with UPnP technology
• Built-in GPS with A-GPS functionality and 3 months of free voice-guided navigation (Ovi Maps)
• Dual slide design with dedicated gaming/audio/gallery keys
• microSD card slot with microSDHC support
• Beefy 8GB internal storage
• Built-in accelerometer for UI auto-rotation
• 3.5mm audio jack doubling as TV out port
• Stereo FM Radio with RDS, FM transmitter
• Standard microUSB port and stereo Bluetooth v2.0
• N-gage support plus you get an N-gage game for free
• Digital compass
• Web browser has full Flash and Java support
• Active kickstand
• Nice audio reproduction quality

Main disadvantages
• Camera feature set is last year's stuff (and even older)
• Image processing isn't very well tuned at this moment
• VGA@30fps video is no longer top of the line
• No xenon flash
• HSDPA only 3.6Mbps, no HSUPA
• Poor display sunlight legibility
• No DivX or XviD support (can be installed, possibly requiring a purchase)
• No smart dialing (can be installed as well, but will probably set you back some cash too)
• No office document editing (you upgrade for a fee, while some Eseries phones get that for free)

The Nokia N86 8MP offers advanced camera technologies, combined with the power and maturity of the Symbian OS and the intuitive S60 3rd edition interface. It doesn't get any better than that on paper, and if you aren't all caught up in touchscreen, you're most likely about to check it out.

Nokia N86 8MP reporting for duty
But no matter if the glass is half full or half empty to you, we guess you wouldn't want to miss Nokia's first move in the 8 megapixel game. The Nseries proven all-round skill and the innovative camera features have us eager to explore this promising cameraphone. We're most curious of course to find out if they got the image quality right. But first things first - the handset gets unboxed and ready to roll on the next page.

Retail package - bare minimum
Having just forked out on a high-end handset you kind of feel entitled to a couple of treats in the retail package. The Nokia N86 8MP however fails to deliver, bringing only the most essential stuff along.


Not much to get excited about in the box
Inside the mid-sized container you will find a regular charger, a USB data cable and a two-piece headset that lets you swap the headphones and keep the remote. Nokia OVI suite (as it is now known) is also included on a disk, as well as a hard copy of a user guide.
There is no memory card supplied as Nokia probably thought 8GB of internal storage would do for a start. The thing is it does, really.


At 103.4 x 51.4 x 16.5 mm, totaling a volume of 69 cc the Nokia N86 8MP is a reasonably sized handset considering the feature load. If it wasn't for the dual-slide design, we bet a few more millimeters could've been trimmed here and there. As things stand now - you can easily find a more compact 8MP cameraphone or a more compact smartphone, but not both. The weight of 149 grams though is an entirely different story, making the Nokia N86 8MP the heaviest 8MP handset to date. While there is no question about it being heavy, we did enjoy the solid and secure feel of the phone. We still suggest you check how that works for you before taking out the cash.

Design and construction
Placing the Nokia N86 8MP and the N81 side-by-side reveals striking resemblance. Although our distaste for its design is well documented, we have to admit the materials used on the casing make all the difference this time. While we are still not particularly happy with the shiny fingerprint-gathering front, the plastic on the rear feels really nice and looks just the same as Nokia N97.

The designers must have taken the year off
We also have to admit that the fingerprints on the front panel aren't as easily visible as on some other phones. Except fort the metallic frame that is, which turns into a smudgy mess when the handset is used extensively.
The Nokia N86 8MP front panel is mostly taken by the 2.6" 16M-color AMOLED display of QVGA resolution. It looks identical to the one found on the Nokia N85 suggesting that the N86 8MP was meant as more of an update of N85 than a totally new phone.

The display looks even more impressive in the dark • The backlighting is nice and even
AMOLED technology is exciting enough with all its benefits, but the QVGA resolution is starting to seem outdated. In times where LG and Samsung are introducing feature phones with WVGA screens, a high-end device with less than a quarter of their pixel count is hardly a commendable achievement.
Bottom line is, the display still offers great contrast and decent brightness but it isn't comparable to, say, the Samsung S8000 Jet, which uses the same technology.
Another issue of the Nokia N86 8MP display is its poor sunlight legibility. The screen is hardly readable on a bright sunny day and this is a major problem for a cameraphone.
Below the display there are 6 keys, three on either side of the D-pad. Those include the two soft keys, the Call and End buttons, the Menu key and the clear knob, arranged in a layout so typical of Nseries lately.

The controls below the display
The D-pad is a bit smaller than average - we guess it all started with the N85. The obvious gain is that the N85 and the N86 8MP don't have their Call and End keys so uncomfortably crammed to the sides like the N78 and the N81. At the same time, the D-pad is still quite user-friendly, with nice and solid press in both confirm and scroll.
At the top end of the front panel is the earpiece, surrounded by the ambient light sensor and the video-call camera.

The ambient light sensor, earpiece and video-call camera are as usually up there
The alphanumeric keypad uses a standard 4-row 12-key layout. There is quite enough space between the different rows and columns. The keys could've been bigger though and press feedback is slightly on the squishy side.

The numpad could've made better use of space
Sliding the Nokia N86 8MP down reveals the four multimedia keys. You use them to control the music player or the gallery. The middle pair can also be used for gaming and is quite handy with some of the N-gage titles.

Nokia are pretty keen on those multimedia keys
The left side of Nokia N86 8MP hosts a tiny keylock switch. It's not essential on a slider, to say the least: sliding up and down does the locking job. Releasing the lens cover automatically unlocks the phone too.

The lock/unlock slider is pretty useless on a slider, if we're to be asked
The shutter key on the right side is comfortable enough, with distinct half and full press. The volume rocker above is equally pleasant to use.

The two controls on the right are pretty comfortable
The power key is on top, along with the microUSB slot and the 3.5mm jack. None of the two connection ports is covered, probably due to the limited space.

The 3.5mm standard audio jack is flanked by the power key and the microUSB slot
The Nokia N86 8MP back side owes its sleek looks and comfy grip to the plastic used - think N97. It hosts the 8MP wide-angle camera lens and the dual-LED flash, hidden under an active cover.

Nokia N86 8MP looks pretty good from the back

As already mentioned, the lens cover is active and will automatically start the camera or unlock the handset. When you are done with it you can close it and the handset will return to the exact same state it was before you began shooting.

Making the kickstand active is a pretty good idea
The 1200 mAh Li-Ion battery under the rear cover sounds quite decent on paper. It's quoted at up to 312 hours of stand-by and 6 hours and 18 minutes of talk time in 2G networks, while with 3G you can count on 264 hours of stand-by and 3 hours and 54 minutes of talk time. That's about what it manages to deliver in reality too: we had to charge our handset three times over a week of quite heavy use.

The slider action is spot on, the effort required to put it in motion just about perfect. It gives away a nice click every time it locks in one of the three positions. The build quality raised no concerns and the phone was commendably comfortable to navigate and handle, even at such a considerable weight. The materials used on the casing are the same as the superior Nokia N97 so you can rest assured you get the Nseries - if not Nokia's - best.

This is Symbian S60
Nokia N86 8MP runs on the Symbian 9.3 OS with Series60 3rd Edition user interface and Feature Pack 2 preinstalled.
It's been a while since we last welcomed a classic Nseries device at our office. Nokia N85 was the last one to call by, and now we meet its successor - the Nokia N86 8MP. The seven-month long gap naturally brings some new UI graphics and some changes under the hood and there they are implemented on the Nokia N86 8MP.
The layout is quite familiar with status icons displayed at the top of the screen and the soft key labels taking the bottom. Quite naturally, Nokia N86 8MP also supports Active standby with two optional layouts.
If you have experience with Nokia S60 smartphones, the first difference you will notice is the new look that the menu icons have. We already met that styling in the touch controlled 5800 and N97 and now they have been transferred to the S60 3rd edition as well.
The standby theme and main menu have no changes in terms of functionality. All the usual suspects are here and remain the same - Maps, Tools, Settings, Messages, etc.

The standby screen has the three familiar layouts to choose from - a vertical bar, a horizontal bar and a basic view. They are also updated with the Symbian touch edition icons.
The active standby screen is a typical Symbian option and is a nice and convenient way of bringing the shortcuts to all favorite applications to your home screen. You can even assign shortcuts to websites of your choice for quicker access.
The screen can either be organized in vertical or horizontal tabs which can then be scrolled with the D-pad. If active standby is disabled the direction keys of the D-pad can also be assigned four shortcuts of your choice.
Active standby or not, you can always change the shortcuts assigned to the two soft keys to best suit your needs.



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