Nokia E65

Nokia E65
Manufacturer Nokia
Compatible networks Quad-band EGSM, WCDMA (3G)
Availability by country Released 14 February 2007
Predecessor Nokia E70
Successor Nokia E66
Form factor Slide
Dimensions 105 mm × 49 mm × 15.5 mm
Operating system S60 platform third edition on Symbian OS
CPU ARM 9, 222 MHz
Memory microSD (TransFlash), up to 2 GB (hot-swappable), 256 MB card included, ~45 MB SDRAM - 20 MB free memory
Battery 3.7 V 950 mAh lithium-polymer,
Display Portrait 2,2" QVGA 181 ppi 240 × 320 TFT screen 24 bits (16 million) colors
Rear camera 2 MP, 1600 × 1200 pixels,
Connectivity

GPRS Class 32, 107 kbit/s HSCSD Yes EDGE Class 32, 296 kbit/s; DTM Class 11, 177 kbit/s 3G Wireless LAN Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g, Bluetooth (v. 1.2), Infrared port,

USB (Pop-port)

The Nokia E65 is a smartphone in the Eseries range, a S60 platform third edition device[1] with slide action. It shared many of the features of the N95 (quad band GSM, 3G, wifi, bluetooth) released around the same time, but thinner, lighter and without the GPS. It was followed fairly quickly by the E66, which was very similar but gained an FM radio, a newer release of S60, A2DP bluetooth, GPS and 3.2 mpixel camera.

Key features

Operating frequency

Size

Display

User interface

Imaging

Photograph of Villa Park taken by the Nokia E65.

Messaging

Multimedia

Memory functions

Applications

Connectivity

Browsing

Data transfer

Personal information management (PIM)

Voice features

Digital services

Other features

Sales package contents

Power management
Battery Talk time Standby time
GSM WCDMA VoIP GSM WCDMA GSM/WCDMA and WLAN
BL-5F Up to 3–6 hours Up to 1.8–2.5 hours Up to 2 Up to 7–11 days Up to 8–14 days Up to 4–5 days

Operation times vary depending on the network and usage.

Known issues

Many users have experienced problems with the SIM connecting to the network after using the phone for some time. Most of them had to bring the phone to the Nokia center to get their phone repaired or replaced. The cause seems to be a design problem in the SIM container on the chassis of the phone. The SIM container is mainly built of a thin metal foil, which in time tends to bend, thus disconnecting the SIM from the mobile phone's SIM contacts. The problem can apparently be solved just by putting a bit of paper between the metal foil and the SIM, enabling it to make contact. There's also difficulties in making connection to WLAN networks which use EAP-PEAP and MSchapV2 protocols if you update the phone's firmware (this is true as for firmware version 3.0633.69) Other users experience problems with the phone connecting to third party GPS devices over Bluetooth. This seems to be a compatibility flaw in the Nokia Bluetooth stack of Nokia Maps as these devices do connect well when used with Google Maps on the E65.

References

  1. Cha, Bonnie (22 March 2007). "Nokia E65 Review". CNET.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nokia E65.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.