| 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 asmartphone byNokia with aQWERTY keyboard that was marketed as part the business-orientedNokia 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, retailing for 495€ / HK$4898 / £375. As with the other two, it ships with theSymbian^3operating system.
Aside from the addition of the physical keyboard, many of the E7's specifications are similar to the more multimedia-focusedNokia N8.[9] Differences include the lack ofmemory card slot, no FM transmitter, a less advanced camera withextended depth-of-field, instead ofautofocus as in the N8 and theNokia E90. However, it retains the N8'sHDMI connection and a non-removable battery.[10] Its keyboard features a similar spring-loaded mechanism as theNokia N97 andNokia E75.
Compared to the N97 and E90, the E7 has amultitouchcapacitive touchscreen. Unlike the N8, N97, and the E90, the E7 has anAMOLED ClearBlack display with a slightly lower resolution than the E90's primary display.[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.