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My E51 review

nokia-e51.jpgRecently I changed my E61i for a E51. I’ve been using this new phone for a while now and decided it was time to write a review. The E51 was released in November 2007 and is the latest in the business line from Nokia. The company has 2 main lines of products in their smartphones division: the N-series which focuses on high end camera and video features, and the E-series which focuses on stability and connectivity options.

Since I came from the E61i, I’ll start by listing the differences between the 2 phones. The phones are similar in many ways, but the E51 has key differences:

  • Lack of a QWERTY keyboard
  • Much better form factor (it’s smaller and thinner)
  • Dual band 3G (high speed works in many North America areas, unlike the E61i)
  • Slightly smaller battery (1050mAh instead of 1500mAh)
  • Mini-USB port (instead of the old Pin-port)
  • Headset jack
  • Visual radio

Hardware

The main attraction of the E51 is the form factor. It truly is a gorgeous phone, solidly built, small and very thin (114.8 x 46 x 12 mm) and available in many colors (I picked black, as shown in the photo). This means of course no QWERTY keyboard, which makes it a no go if you require a full size keyboard. If form factor is more important to you than the QWERTY, then then you won’t find a better size for the amount of features.

Speaking of keyboard, the one on this phone is very nice. The keys seem solid to the touch and are easy to use. The keyboard has the standard number keys, a D-pad (which btw is not to be taken lightly, as someone who’ve gone from joysticks to D-pads, it’s such a huge improvement), a delete key and 4 custom keys. The custom keys link to the menu, calendar, contacts and mail. Also of note is that 3 of those keys can be customized to any other application, which is something you couldn’t do on the E61i.

On the top and sides there are buttons for power, volume up, down, mute and the voice recorder.

Connectivity

This phone is all about connectivity. It has GSM, EDGE and dual-band 3G (WCDMA 2100MHz and 850MHz) which means you get high speed 3.6Mbps data transfers where those frequencies are supported. This means all of Europe, most of Asia, and many of the newer networks in North America (it works fine using Rogers in Montreal).

The phone also has wi-fi 802.11g with built-in support for VOIP. It also has Bluetooth 2.0 (with A2DP), and USB using the mini-USB cable (with mass storage mode, which is very nice since you can connect it to any Windows PC and it allows you to transfer files right away, without the need to install drivers or PC Suite).

Finally it also has a standard 2.5 microphone jack, which means any headset with a (small) plug will work in it, which is also nicer than having to deal with the proprietary plugs.

CPU and memory

The phone has a surprisingly large amount of memory with 130Megs of user data memory and 96Megs of SDRAM. As a comparison, the E61i had 60Megs, and non-smartphones such as say the Moto RAZR has 10Megs. This means you can store many more applications, data and also run more apps at the same time. The phone also has a MicroSD card slot supporting cards up to 4GB (although people report using 6GB and 8GB cards fine).

This phone also has a 396MHz processor, which is an improvement over older E-series phones which had 220MHz CPUs. This means everything will run faster. And indeed, browsing menus and starting applications is visibly faster on this device. This has to be the fastest phone I’ve used.

Features

The E51 runs S60 9.2, which is the first E-series phone running this latest version as far as I know. It comes with all the usual S60 features, like contacts, calendar, notes, SMS, MMS, E-mail, Web (full S60 web browser with landscape browsing support), PTT, RealPlayer, Podcasting, Music Player, QuickOffice (read only, but upgradeable to edit mode), Maps (the phone has complete GPS, maps and localization search support built-in if you have a Bluetooth GPS receiver), recorder, Java support, and so on. It also has a FM radio with visual radio support. Plus, since S60 v3 is now a mature platform, the UI is rock solid.

S60 is a very versatile platform and I won’t go into details as to what all the features are or all the applications that can be added. You can basically do as much as you can on any other phone platform, if not more, using the wide array of tools built into S60. When you first turn on the phone there are a large amount of applications that help new users set things up. First there’s the language and time zone settings, then an installer to get any memory card applications installed, and a series of modules visible on the home screen that helps you setup E-mail, VOIP and so on.

Multimedia

The camera on the E51 is the 2MPx camera module that is the same as most other E-series phones. It takes 1600×1200 images and QVGA videos at 15fps. Those can then be stored in phone memory or on the memory card, or sent via E-mail, MMS or Bluetooth. The photo quality is average indoors, so it’s best for outdoor shots.

The music player, video player and gallery are the same ones as previous E-series phones. They are very functional and include all the basic features you’d expect, such as storing images in folders, marking files, copying and moving them, sending them off, viewing them as a slide show, listening to music and play lists, viewing videos locally or streaming (in RealPlayer format only, which is rather rare nowadays) and so on.

Compared with typical phones, the multimedia features are on-par or better, but compared with N-series they are very basic. This is not a phone aimed at high end multimedia users, and you won’t find on-phone photo editing, the enhanced N-series gallery, auto-focus or a flash.

Battery life

Even if it has a smaller battery than QWERTY phones in the same line (1050mAh versus 1500mAh), the battery life is still excellent. You can expect a week of standby time and 4h20mins of talk time. I can charge this phone over the weekend, and if I don’t use it much it will still be running by Friday.

Conclusion

As the latest smartphone in Nokia’s business line, this is a fantastic phone. As long as you don’t need QWERTY, and really this is not a negative, more like a personal choice of large QWERTY devices versus small form factor, this is the best phone out there. Currently going for $300 (without contract) from most online vendors, this phone is perfect for anyone who wants a stable smartphone with the most connectivity options possible.

In my E61i review, I gave that phone a 9.5, and this phone is clearly superior, mainly because of the better plugs, 3G support in my area, FM radio, and a faster interface. In fact, I can’t find any negative so far, and from reading forum threads, it seems to be a favorite from anyone who’ve gotten it. For the audience this phone is aimed at, this is the perfect choice.

Score: 10/10

March 30, 2008 - Posted by Patrick Lambert | Reviews | | 11 Comments

11 Comments »

  1. An excellent review, and your final comment “For the audience this phone is aimed at, this is the perfect choice” is a perfect summary.

    Comment by alcatraz | March 31, 2008

  2. An excellent review of what is and excellent mobile phone. The more one uses this phone the more one becomes to “love” it.

    Comment by ziffos | March 31, 2008

  3. Hi, you’re a very good writer, that one I can see, but let me get to the topic on hand… I would like to ask how to work on WLAN… the main reason I purchase this phone is the thought of using iskoot (skype for mobile) so that I could chat with family without having to be tied up in front of a PC… now, am I right or wrong to assume that this phone could do so…
    At our camp, in Qatar, I’m not sure yet wether it is the Wifi Connection that is the problem or I’m just missing to do something on the phone because I can’t connect to any website yet. I tried again this lunch time and ‘No Packet service’ or something comes out. What do you think is the problem here.
    where you from? i may be thinking that maybe it is not good to do wifi here in our area…

    God bless…. Ricky (alternate e-mail ricardo.chua.jr@gmail.com)

    Comment by Ricardo Chua | April 3, 2008

  4. Packet service would refer to cellular connections not wifi. If you want to find a wifi network just use the Search for WLAN function on the home screen. It will give you a list of available networks. Then to connect to one you need to know the password if its encrypted. The phone comes with a few VOIP services built in. I haven’t tried Skype but it should work fine too.

    Comment by Patrick Lambert | April 3, 2008

  5. hey man nice review! i can’t help but notice that you said you get up to a week before recharging. i can only get up to 2 days but i do send around 50-100 sms a day.

    Comment by legendary | April 12, 2008

  6. well! uve taken the same route as mine! e61 to e51 and a completely satisfied Nokia user :) 10/10 is wat i give e51 :)

    Comment by Ganesh | April 15, 2008

  7. تعريف كبل النوكيا e51

    Comment by ahmedfawzi | April 21, 2008

  8. [...] about upgrading, or that I may even want to upgrade someday to some new product. If you read my previous review you can see that I gave it a perfect score, and I still stand by it. For me it was and still is my [...]

    Pingback by The itch « Mobility Now | May 13, 2008

  9. Hi, thank you so much for the nice review. But I personally think that in some areas there are scope for improvement for this gem. And those shortcomings may prevent it to get 10 on 10 and to be declared as the Best Phone. Such areas are:-
    1. The otherwise excellent screen is rather small in size for a business device. It should be at least 2.4 inches.
    2. The Quickoffice available with the phone is read only version. For editing capability separate version have to be bought.
    3. The camera is just so so, with no auto focus or flash. In today’s standard those two facilities are a must, even for a businessman or professional, if at all a camera is given!
    Hope nokia will consider the points while releasing the next upgrade of this almost perfect phone!

    Comment by Prosenjitz | May 13, 2008

  10. Clearly, this E51 is the best Nokia mobile so far for me.

    Comment by MetallicSteel | May 21, 2008

  11. can e51 make video call? as i notice from nokia site it support video calling but i notice no camera infront of the unit.

    Comment by john | June 16, 2008

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