Update : Nokia Booklet 3G Specifications

September 3rd 2009 | 1712 Views | Posted by admin | Print This Post Print This Post | Email This Post Email This Post

nokia_3g_booklet

For as popular as Nokia has been worldwide, it is just not a brand that Americans particularly care about. Even though it has consistently been the most prolific shipper of mobile devices worldwide, Nokia has only an 8% market share in the United States according to IDC, and even that is slipping.

So when Nokia unveiled its first netbook — the Nokia Booklet 3G — which has mobile consumers elsewhere in the world taking note, all American consumers seem to do is laugh. Even though DisplaySearch rankings for last quarter showed that we are eating up netbooks almost twice as fast as we are consuming full-sized notebooks, to us, Nokia still doesn’t click.

But why? Here are the specs that were released today:

- Intel Atom Z530, 1.6 GHz

- Intel US15W fanless chipset (formerly “Poulsbo”)

- 1 GB DDR2 533 Mhz RAM

- 120 GB, 8 MB cache, 4200 RPM SATA HDD

- Windows 7 Starter Edition, Home Premium or Professional

- Built-in 3G/HSPA modem, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 2.1, A-GPS

- 10.1″ glass display (1280?-720)

-$817 retail (€575)

Aside from the heavy pricetag, it looks like a solid mobile device which could offer some serious competition to HP’s Mini-Note and the Acer Aspire One if it was subsidized by a mobile carrier. But it’s immediately hindered because it’s a Nokia device.

For starters, it’s still meant to be a companion to a user’s Nokia mobile phone, so they’re already limiting themselves to 8% of the U.S. market. This companionship is achieved through an integration with Nokia’s Ovi suite of tools. The Booklet will include the Ovi Suite 2.0 for photo, music, calendar and contact syncing, Nokia Music for PC, and Ovi Maps.

This stuff is just not happening in the United States. Forrester Research analyst Mark Mulligan told Forbes that Nokia is having success in emerging markets, but in developed markets, it is falling way below expectations. And this is not only its handsets, but its services too. Because of this, Nokia has already put its Comes With Music unlimited download service on hold several times in North America.

As blogger Robert Scoble Tweeted this morning: “As far as I can tell Nokia still has a sucky user experience. Until they fix that [the Booklet 3G] will be off the rails.”

Whether Nokia’s insignificance in the American market is due to its refusal to play ball with wireless carriers that control the way phones are packaged and sold, or if it’s due to a fundamental incompatibility with the yen of the American buyer, the Booklet 3G has a lot of wasted potential because of its integration with Nokia’s unpopular services.

Source : http://www.betanews.com



Like This Post? Share and Spread it out

  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Twitter
  • Technorati
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon

Related Posts

Lenovo IdeaPad Y460 and Y560

Lenovo haven’t forgotten about their mainstream home users, the company has unveiled two new models, the Lenovo IdeaPad Y460 and Y560 notebooks, complete with various options from Intel’s latest Core i3, i5 and i7 processors.  The IdeaPad Y460 has a 14-inch 1366 x 768 display, Core i3 or i5 CPU, ATI Radeon HD5740/HD5650 graphics and up to [...]

Lenovo ThinkPad Edge Review

In our Lenovo ThinkPad Edge review we felt that the new ThinkPad style was too conservative to truly be edgy, but too dressed-up to feel like a real ThinkPad. Introduction After over a decade of filling the same matte black boxes with fresh hardware, Lenovo has finally bowed to the design gods and attempted to put a little bit of an [...]

ASUS UL50Vt Preview: Factory Overclocked CULV Delivers 7 Hours of Battery Life

Wow, what’s with all the CULV hate? I’ve never seen a quietly introduced, low volume, mobile Intel CPU get so much negative press before. CULV stands for Consumer Ultra Low Voltage. It’s a badge affixed to certain mobile Core 2 Duos that run at lower clocks and lower voltages than standard mobile Core 2 Duos. Just as some CPUs can [...]

Acer Aspire One 751h Review

Introduction Finding ways to differentiate your product in the notebook market can be difficult. Most companies are currently going with the Intel Atom N270/N280 CPU combined with the 945GSE chipset. The result is that performance is nearly identical between similarly equipped netbooks, although as we saw with the ASUS 1005HA and the GIGABYTE [...]

Leave a Reply:

Name (required):
Mail (will not be published) (required):
Website:
Comment (required):
XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>
Security Code:

All prices and specifications are subject to change without notice. Active Xtream Technology is not responsible for typographical errors.
All typographical errors are subject to correction.
All product images may vary from the actual product. Images are only to be used as a point of reference.
Copyright © 2010 Active Xtream Technology