Manufacturer | NokiaFinland |
---|---|
Series | E-series |
Availability by region | 7 February 2011[1] |
Predecessor | Nokia E75 Nokia E90 Communicator Nokia N97 |
Successor | Nokia 808 PureView |
Related | Nokia N8 Nokia N900 |
Compatible networks | |
Dimensions | 123.7 mm (4.87 in) H 62.4 mm (2.46 in) W 13.6 mm (0.54 in) D |
Weight | 176.0 g (6.21 oz) |
Operating system | Symbian^3 Belle |
CPU | ARM 11 @ 680 MHz[2] |
Storage | 16 GB external mass storage, 256 MBRAM, 1 GBROM |
Removable storage | none |
Battery |
|
Rear camera | 8 Megapixels (main), 16:9720p video, 35 FPS. Dual LED flash (can be used asflashlight by holding the Lock key). |
Front camera | VGA, forvideo calling |
Display | 640 × 360px (nHD), 4"capacitive,multi-touch ClearBlackAMOLED[3] |
Data inputs |
|
Development status | Discontinued |
SAR | 0.56 W/kg (head)[4] |
TheNokia E7-00, also known asNokia E7, is a business-orientedQWERTYsmartphone byNokia from theNokia Eseries.[5] It was announced at Nokia World in September 2010 together with theNokia C6-01 andNokia C7[5][6][7][8] and started shipping in February 2011. It is the second phone after theNokia N8 to be running theSymbian^3operating system.
When compared with theNokia N8,[9] it has fixedmass storage of 16GB without amemory card slot, no FM transmitter and a less advanced camera, withExtended Depth of Field, instead ofautofocus as in the N8 and theE90.[3] Like theNokia N8, it comes with anHDMI-out connector and a non-user-replaceable battery that is smaller than the E90's.[10]
It has the same keyboard spring mechanism as theNokia N97 mini, but has like the N8 an anodized aluminium casing. All this is different from the bulkier and heavier E90.[3]
Compared to theNokia N97 mini and E90, the E7-00 has amultitouchcapacitive touchscreen. Unlike the N8, N97 mini, and the E90, the E7-00 has anActive-matrix OLED (AMOLED) ClearBlack technology with a slightly lower resolution than the E90.[3]Vlasta Berka, general manager of Nokia Singapore, Malaysia and Brunei, talked about the trend of users who are using their smartphones for business.[11]
TheParliament of Finland bought 200 E7s in spring 2011; by late April 2012, over 50 of these phones had been serviced underwarranty. Most of them were fixed by an OS update.[12]
The E7's battery is not user-removable,[13][14] although unofficial online tutorials on how to replace the battery exist.[15]
Being one of Nokia's first phone designs without a dedicated connector for charging, the USB connector in the E7 is also used for charging, and is a common point of failure.