Welcome to Anilfx7710
 

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Welcome Friends to the exciting Bizzaro World of  Nokia 7710. Here you can find every things relating to Nokia 7710. You can Download Various Themes, softwares, games & much more.... You can also get solutions to your problems related to your nokia 7710, its just a mail away. Here you can find Tips and Tricks For nokia 7710...!!!

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Editorial Review of Nokia 7710 :-

 

Editorial Rating :  

 

Editorial Synopsis:-
Great stereo sound quality, Music, Radio and video playback, Great PDA functionality, Great touch-screen and input implementation, EXCELLENT battery life
Heavy, Two-handed operation only, A few basic features missing, Somewhat slow UI

 

 

FEATURES  
EMS No
Website anilfx.googlepages.com
Phone Type Triband GSM
Networks GSM 800, 900, 1800
HSCSD Yes
GPRS Yes
EDGE Yes
UMTS No
WLAN No
Height (mm) 70
Width (mm) 128
Depth (mm) 19
Weight (g) 189
Battery Li-Polymer 1300 mAh
Standbytime (h) 216
Talktime (m) 720
IrDA No
SMS Yes
Email Yes
MMS Yes
Bluetooth Yes
Java Yes
Radio Yes
Camera Yes
Camera resolution 1152 x 864
Colour display Yes
Number of colours 65536
Video recording Yes
Memory 90MB x 128MB MMC card. Support for 512MB
Ringtones Polyphonic
Polyphonic Yes
MP3 Yes
Games Yes
Calendar Yes
Voicedialing Yes
WAP version XHTML
WAP Yes
Display width (pixel) 640
Display height (pixel) 320
LCD Type Color
LCD Size (pixel) 640 x 320
Voicememo Yes
Synchronization Yes
SyncML Yes
Touchscreen Yes
Handsfree Yes
Vibrate Yes

 

 MY Review Towards New Nokia 7710:-

 

When I was busy showing off the i-cube to friends, after telling them about all the things it could do - XviD, MP3, FM etc. - everyone would instinctively ask me the same question, "Does it have a phone in it?" Of course it doesn't have a phone in it. It's a portable media player - it can play movies, it can play music, it can catch radio and has a 20 GB hard drive to store it all - what's your problem, really?

The problem was that there was no phone in the i-cube. Everyone harps on and on about convergence, the phenomenon of all devices converging into one all-purpose, all-powerful center-of-everything. At first it was just a phone, then it became a phone and a camera, then a music player, and now finally, also a movie player: the new Nokia 7710.
 

Now you'll ask me to sheath my weapon for a moment - you've seen other phones play movies and music before. A good example you'd cite would be the Nokia 6600: a now inexpensive smartphone that plays music and also movies. But the sound is mono, not to mention low quality and the screen is small. The Nokia 7710 fixes all that - loud, crystal clear stereo sound and a large, wide aspect touch-screen. This is what I call portable entertainment.

So, is the Nokia 7710 the answer to all your multimedia needs on a phone? Will it let you dump your iPod or iCube completely? And more importantly: what else will it let you do? Grab a bag of popcorn and sit back... the show is about to begin!



Multimedia
Since the most striking characteristic of the Nokia 7710 is its widescreen LCD, we'll take a look at the multimedia features first. The 7710 seems to be a complete media center: a music player, a video player, radio and camera.

The 7710 has 90mb of internal memory and comes with a 128mb MMC card, for an out-of-the-box storage space of over 200mbs - great! You can store upto four full albums in medium quality AAC, or three in MP3. An unusual point here is the reversion back to MMC instead of the new RSMMC which has been featured in newer smartphones since the 7610. MMC is arguably better (because its cheaper - 1GB for Rs. 3700), but unusual for Nokia to revisit something technically outdated.



The MMC is hotswappable, but you need to remove the back cover to insert of remove it. On doing so, a message is displayed on the screen saying that some data may be lost due to the swap. Next to the MMC slot is the SIM slot and its lock. The SIM can be slid in easily into the slot, but its not possible to take it out as effortlessly. You need to push it out from the inner end using a pointed object - we found the stylus quite handy for this. Right above the SIM slot is the loudspeaker, and to its left, the megapixel camera.

If you notice, the piece is also a prototype - not the final retail model. However, there are no changes, except a few bugfixes in the firmware.

Music Player: The 7710 plays MP3, AAC, RA 7/8, WAV, MIDI, and AMR files. The player is playlist-oriented (what Nokia calls "Tracklists") - the main display is the list of files, double-tapping on which will play a track. This interface is more Foobar-ish than Winamp-ish. Basic functions are supported in one interface: play/pause, stop, volume control and seeking using a slider. Seeking is a great relief - some devices running Windows Mobile 2003 don't support it. While the length of the slider is somewhat short and low-resolution for full CD MP3 files, it's still good to even have the feature.



Yes, the MP3s are played back in full stereo!

Now there are a few problems with the music player. Like I mentioned, the basic functions are supported on the main interface, but there are no Back/Next buttons, which means you can't just flip through the files and find what you like, you have to manually advance to the next file either by double-tapping on it, or using the navi-pad (called the Select key). Back and Next are available, but they buried in the menu above. It would be a lot easier to just click Next, I feel.



There is no sound equalizer, so your only option is to listen to flat source audio. Another complaint I have is the lack of a standard stereo jack to plug my favorite headphones into. There's only a Pop-port available, so I have to use the standard Nokia handsfree to listen to music.

Radio: The 7710 is the first Nokia Symbian-based phone to feature an FM tuner. I know this enthralls all you Mumbai city radio fanboys and girls. Radio requires that you have your handsfree connected, but subsequently allows you to let the audio play from the loudspeaker also.

Edit: As pointed out, the Nokia N-Gage is the original first Symbian-based phone with an FM tuner, followed by the Nokia 6260.



I like the radio applet. Not only does it let you name the stations, but it's also easier to use since the entire station list is available in one screen. And there are also back/next buttons to traverse through the stations!

Visual Radio is an add-on to existing FM that streams additional related content over mobile networks, for example, artist name and other information of the currently playing track. It may be a long time before any local radio station starts offering Visual Radio content, but itÂ’s a promising technology to look out for.

 

 

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