Posted by
A comparison between Nokia N97 and the iPhone 3G might be interesting. All around me I’ve heard people say they are going to buy the Nokia N97 the same day that goes on sale, and others who buy Apple’s iPhone when you upgrade in terms of certain functions that create essential. And some friends and b2b-blog readers have asked me to write about which of the two mobile devices is better. Today I begin with a Nokia N97 vs iPhone comparison somewhat introductory but it can do so with the two phones in hand delve into concepts.
Graph comparing attributes between Nokia N97 and iPhone 3G
The most positive aspects of the Nokia N97 is undoubtedly its memory or storage capacity (32GB of internal memory with the option of further expansion in 16GB via microSD card). The memory of the iPhone is only 16GB. Nokia N97 has a camera 5 megapixel camera with dual LED flash that records video, has a full QWERTY keyboard. The iPhone’s camera is 2 megapixels and does not record video. Or connectivity Nokia N97 has HSDPA (3.5 G) and WiFi – the iPhone -.
Nokia N97 and iPhone include A-GPS (geographic positioning browser Assisted GPS). N97 works with Nokia Maps 3.0.
One of the main points against the Nokia N97 is that its touchscreen is resistive (rather than capacitive) which implies that we must put more pressure on the harder surface and transmit the commands, write or surf on the user interface . The resistive screen is more prone to be damaged by scratches but it affects both the dust or water. The 3.5 inch touch screen Nokia N97 is very bright which always makes it look dirty.
The Nokia N97 can be bought off for an official price, in Nokia, for 650 euros. Apple, until now, not free but sells the iPhone through mobile operators. The price of Nokia is expensive compared to the price at which you can access the iPhone via plans.
The user interface of the Nokia N97 is a Symbian touchscreen version that lets you customize the screen with widgets of all kinds.
Both the iPhone and the Nokia N97 lacks compatibility with the standard HSUPA (High Speed Uplink Packet Access) which is a major handicap for corporate communications users.