
This has without doubt been Nokia’s most anticipated phone model after it was unveiled in September 2006 and after using the phone you would realize why. This Symbian S60 3rd edition phone has almost everything that today’s mobile phone technology can offer.
DesignThe innovative two-way slider design allows you to slide the front cover up as well as down to reveal two different sides of this power-packed phone. Sliding it up exposes the alphanumeric keypad and sliding it down, you will be presented with the multimedia controls. This dual functionality is useful but the front cover that houses the screen feels rickety while moving and may also move when you don’t want it to.
As Nokia’s TV commercial says that the phone is “not one thing but many”, its thickness is definitely not equal to that of “one” usual phone but “many”. It is one of the thickest modern phones without a QWERTY. But consider all it does, and the fact that it’s still pocketable and weighs only 4.2 ounces, and you can over look its 0.8 inch thickness.
It is comfortable typing on the spacious alphanumeric keypad but the media control buttons are a bit hard to press.
Features and PerformanceAs has been mentioned before but will continue to be mentioned by all reviewers of this phone, the features are more than what a regular user can ask for. To begin with is the GPS and the mapping application that bring this phone on par with the best GPS phones in the market yet. You can get color maps, route planning, and a healthy points-of-interest database. There's also a trip computer that shows you information about the total distance, time, average speed, and so forth. However, it takes quite a while to get a satellite fix and to get any kind of turn-by-turn directions, you'll have to download an upgrade to the device that costs an additional $91.93 for a one-year license or $11.81 for a month. Other wireless options include an IR port, Bluetooth 2.0 and 802.11b/g Wi-Fi. Apart from these, there’s support for HSDPA/WCDMA 2100 band and 3G.
The speakers are quite loud for a device this size and the music player has support for MP3/AAC/AAC+/eAAC+/WMA/M4A (unfortunately no luck playing protected tracks from iTunes). Audio player also includes FM stereo. Video player supports MPEG-4, H.264/AVC, H.263/3GPP, RealVideo 8/9/10.
Last but not least, the N95 is powered by Symbian S60 3rd Edition which is an incredibly versatile mobile operating system with a resource rich community allowing power users to tailor their handset to their specific needs. However, like in all S60 phones, the OS lags. Wether Nokia is to blame or Symbian has long been a debatable issue but that doesn’t matter here as the phone is no doubt sluggish for the price you pay for it. Other features include a speakerphone, speed dial, conference calling, voice-command support, a vibrate mode, and text and multimedia messaging. A drawback of all these power features is that the battery life is not that of a globetrotter but nightly charges will get you through the day. However, we were hoping for a battery life that’ll push the ceiling with this much-awaited phone.
ImagingThe shutter lag is horrendous, but after all, it's a 5mp camera with a Carl Zeiss 2.8/5.6 auto-focusing lens in a phone!! There are great customizing options like white balance, ISO light sensitivity, tones, exposure adjustment, cropping and red eye reduction -almost like an actual 5mp camera. The focal length is 5.6 mm and the macro focus distance is 10-50 cm. The video comes in at 640 by 480 at 30fps.. Not shabby. The pictures boasted vibrant colors and sharp lines and edges, and unlike some smart phones, the N95 didn't require you to have a super steady hand to get a clear shot. So the pictures are as good as expected from a 5mp camera except for a little level of grain bringing the camera rating to a 7 out of 10.
To sum it all up, the N95 is the most powerful phone out of all the N-series’ handsets till date but has a decent number of cons which are not expected from a phone nearly the price of a laptop.