Should i buy nokia e6




















This increased weight contributes to the Nokia E6's feel of robustness and high build quality, rather than making it feel unwieldy. The BlackBerry Bold with its 1. But, until the Bold becomes available for testing, we can't say whether this difference is worth the likely higher price. The E72 and the E6 are clearly the same type of device. However, they share little design language, and so intangibly feel completely different to look at.

Different design languages of the E72 and E6. They keyboards share the same domed keys, with the same amount of stiffness. The most noticeable difference is the width of the space bar, occupying four columns, rather than two, in the case of the E This makes it easier to locate for the pseudo touch typists.

The symbol layout is different, which will take some adjusting to for those who have used other Eseries devices. The d-pad of the E6 has a comparatively reductionist design, to that of the E Comparing the E72 and E6 keyboards and d-pads. The call and application keys are very prominent on the E6, thanks to the wide plastic strip that covers the actual switches. This is a big improvement from the narrow keys on the E The only disadvantage is that a flat strip of plastic cannot give tactile feedback to suggest where your thumb is before you press.

Another way in which the E6 improves on the E72 is that the D-pad, application keys and call keys are all stiffer and have more travel. The metal battery cover of the E6 is much smoother than its matte appearance suggests. Compare this to the engraved stainless steel back of the E Even though its shiny back was a finger print magnet, its engraved lines were a good non-slip surface.

The E6 however, is more droppable because of its smoother surface. Viewing the backs of the E72 and E6 side by side. Another hybrid aspect of the E6 is the screen lock slider, as seen on every other touchscreen device from Nokia.

As with all the other LED-equipped devices, this doubles as a torch control too. Opposite side view, with just the microUSB cover. In terms of size and weight, the two are almost the same.

Viewing the E6 from the top. Comparing the E6 and the E72 top sides. Comparing the E6 and E72 from the side.

You can see in its design, that the E6 has a convex back to encompass its camera. EDoF has been notably unpopular among bloggers. The main disadvantages are its minimum focal length and the software processing artifacts.

The algorithms used to create an image where everything is in focus, cause a certain degree of fuzziness, which is visible when viewing fine detail. Also, it cannot focus on anything closer than a metre away.

The combination of the above two factors make this impossible with EDoF. It is, however, a niche case usage. It's hard work to play YouTube videos on E6, not because of the screen, but because of the operation system. It's rubbish, it's old, it's obsolete.

Would you please do me a favor? Actually i have a Nokia E6 since but i haven't used it at all, it's almost brand new.

Now i'm trying to use it and one of the things it can't do is to play videos on Youtube. Are there any settings i should follow? If it's easy for you i'd appreciate your assistance really. Thanks a lot in advance. Got 2 E6's myself, bu Personay I've never tried the Anna version, but for my and my use pattern the Belle is ok.

I use my E6 for all kind of things including TV-out functionality but not for email, I never used email with E6, I am afraid I can't help you with that one, I am very sorry. Keep searching on the internet or try and ask the guru of the old Nokia's and Symbian - Steve Litchfield, he must know something. I have news in my keyboard phones journal. Well, because and only because was a gift from my beautiful wife I used it for 2 months, otherwise a maximum one week was enough for me. Long story short, after 3 days on the learning curve with my new Classic, I began to use the Classic and in the 4th day I took it out as my daily driver.

Big problem, huge problem for me: this phone is shutting down if you press more than 3 seconds on the power key or the end key even if you set a password on the phone! So stupid, at least once a day my phone was sitting in my pocket turned off or sometime even in my hand. That was a so much no-no for me! Also, that stupid "function" called "Bed time", with a slide up or down in the screenlock again, even with the password lock on and the phone turns in some airplane mode, and turns off the network.

OMG, what a stupid place to put that function! Comparing BB Classic with E6, the Classic is a bit of a dinosaur, the grip with his mate backcover finish was not so good and the weight is not well distributed, is too heavy at the top because the keyboard is so much at the bottom.

The phone has that in the software, but not on a keyboard. For me, the keyboard of the Classic was good its also very very different from the E6's keyboard , but for me it needed time to get used to it. Also the trackpad is not ergonomic at all, the D-pad is still the dady.

On top of that, it has a capacitive touchscreen, which complements the directional pad. Overall build quality is excellent, with a tough metal back cover and sturdy covers for the memory card slot and microUSB port.

Battery life in our light usage test was exceptional, as we'd expect from a Nokia: it'll play music for almost three days non-stop, so you certainly won't need to charge it every day.

Another obvious improvement is the camera: an 8-megapixel snapper plus a front-facing 0. No video calling software is included, however, and Skype for Symbian doesn't support video calls yet. Photos and videos taken with the main camera were surprisingly noise-free and having a dual-LED flash means that you aren't limited to daylight shots.



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