Dirt Cheap Nokia N800 WOW !
posted on 14 Dec 2007 07:34 by dirtcheapelectronics in ProductDetail
The most popular items in Notebooks. Updated hourly.
|
|
|||
| 1. | ![]() |
Nokia N800 Internet Tablet PC
|
|
Product Description
Nokia N800 is designed to stay online so you can enjoy the benefits of the Internet, whether you're at home or on the go. Browse your favorite sites. Stay in touch with the people you love with Internet calling. Chat with your friends. Check your email. Relax with your favorite songs and videos.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1 in Personal Computers
- Brand: Nokia
- Model: N800
- Released on: 2007-01-29
- Dimensions: 3.00" h x 7.40" w x 9.50" l, 1.32 pounds
Features
- Internet tablet with ultra-slim design makes web browsing portable and convenient
- Connects to open Wi-Fi networks (802.11b/g) or via cell phones using Bluetooth 2.0
- Conduct video conferences on-the-go using internet calling and the integrated webcam
- 4.1-inch LCD touchscreen with full-screen keyboard; wide variety of multimedia playback
- 256 MB flash memory expands via two memory card slots compatible with Secure Digital, MMC, miniSD, and microSD
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Product Description
The sleek Nokia N800 Internet Tablet combines a truly personal Internet
experience with easy wireless connections, high resolution display and
support for a wide variety of Internet applications. Built to be
constantly in use, you easily stay in touch with business associates,
friends, and family thanks to its Internet calling, instant messaging
and email connectivity. And with stereo audio, multimedia support and a
new ergonomic design, the Nokia N800 morphs into a portable Internet
entertainment device, enabling playback of streamed and downloaded
content wherever you roam.
![]() Stay connected to your world via the Web, streaming Internet radio, and the latest RSS news feeds. |
The N800 provides 256 MB of onboard flash memory and 128 MB of RAM. It also offers two expansion slots that are compatible with Secure Digital (SD), MultiMedia, miniSD, and microSD memory cards with a size limit of 2 GB. (Adapter required for miniSD and microSD.) You can also connect the N800 to a PC using the included USB cable to update software and transfer files from the PC to the a memory card. For multimedia playback, the N800 is compatible with MP3 and WMA digital audio files (as well as AAC, M3U, and WAV), Real Audio streams, and video files encoded as AVI or MPEG4. Additionally, with the UPnP media server functionality, you can share your music, video, and photos with others on the same Wi-Fi network. The N800 has two integrated speakers as well as a headphone jack for personal listening.
Access the web using the N800's Opera web browser, which provides Flash 7 multimedia support. Other applications include an RSS feed reader (for accessing all your favorite news sources), a PDF reader, image viewer, Internet radio player, and instant messenger with voice and video conferencing capabilities (using the Jabber and Google Talk services).
![]() Chat with friends and business associates using built-in chat programs and easy-to-use onscreen keyboard. |
- Integrated desk stand for on-table use
- Zooming, full-screen and panning display functionality
- Auto connection to saved Wi-Fi hotspots or through Bluetooth compatible phones
- More applications: Clock, Sketch, Notes, Backup
- Dimensions: 5.7 x 2.95 x 0.5 inches (WxHxD)
- Weight: 7.27 ounces
What's in the Box
Nokia N800 Internet Tablet, stylus, battery (BP-5L), 128 MB miniSD
memory card (with adapter), earphones, carrying case, travel charger,
USB cable, Quick Start guide.
Customer Reviews
Great device
Amazing product, crisp display, good touch screen, steady build, small but powerful, Wifi reception very strong
OS 2008 + N800 = A Bargain
Nokia's Linux based tablets almost feel like participatory lab
experiments. An open OS, decent web browser and media player, but
lacking a bit of polish in places. Simple but functional perhaps, but
with many opportunities for programmers -- a good and bad thing,
perhaps.
Nokia has recently released an update for the OS (OS 2008) the N800
uses. It is a very important upgrade, as it makes many improvements to
the device itself. It is faster. The web browser (which was Opera, and
good enough) has been replaced with Firefox (which I like better).
The UI has a polish to it now. Things are faster, simpler.
Skype can now use the camera on the N800, so you now have one of
the least expensive portable video conferencing devices you can buy.
It really takes the N800 to the next level. I bought one of these
even though I own an iPhone. There is a lot of overlap on these
devices. Ultimately the iPhone wins because it is a phone. It excels at
media playback. The N800 has a bigger screen and the benefit of an open
OS. Until Apple releases their SDK for the iPhone the N800 has the
advantage, at least in terms of potential.
I bought the N800 because I like the bigger screen when surfing the
web, the N800 supports Flash, and finally, I can listen to streaming
radio on the blessed thing. It is essentially a little portable wifi
radio -- with tiny, stereo speakers that are loud enough to fill a
room. Eventually the iPhone will be able to do this as well (I know one
station that does -- WFMU).
Note that Nokia has released the N810 -- which includes a GPS.
Besides some other minor differences (memory card size/placement,
amount of on-board ram) it is the same hardware as the N800, and the
N800 is half as much as a N810.
| By | Booyah Guy (NYC, NY) - See all my reviews |
I am a self-professed gadget addict, so the Nokia N800 was something I had to get my hands on.
Once I picked it up, there was no going back. I plunked down by cash and started fooling around.
Here are the pros and cons as I see them.
As of now, there is no PC sync, so this is not really intended as a
substitute for a PDA -- however I use my company's web-based intranet
(webexone) to keep of all of my appointments and N800 works flawlessly.
It appears that somebody should be able to code some kind of sync for
the PIM programs that exist for the opensource Maemo (Nokia's brand of
embedded Linux, which also was used on the N770) -- however, I'm not
sure whether such programs, with Mac OS X or Windows synching
capabilities would match the gnu-ethos of this product.
A few things I can suggest, based on my experience:
1) Invest in a good case for this device. And if you are going to
use it as a media player at the gym, be careful that the device for
which you forked over four hundred clams doesn't go flying. Mine did,
suffered nary a scratch (thanks to a solid build quality) -- but this
thing has a gorgeous screen that just seems to cry out "crack me!"
2) Invest in bluetooth keyboard for writing long emails. The Nokia
SU-8W was my weapon of choice. It's pretty good too -- I have a few
nitpicks, though:
The Fn button is needed to activate the number keys (which are
basically merged with the top row of the "QWERTY" row of keys (Q=1,
W=2, etc). Once you click on Fn it stays on -- which can be a bit
maddening at first. because if you subsequently hit those letter keys,
they will still appear as numbers until you deactivate the Fn. You
might prefer another keyboard, but I've since grown used to this one.
Also -- it seems that when multiple bluetooth devices are used at
once (like dial up networking over your cell plus the keyboard) that
the keyboard becomes very sensitive, and if you don't tap carefully,
aalll offf youuurr texxxttt might loook likkke thhisss. This is avoided
by typing carefully, but I'm still checking to see if this is an issue
that can be addressed in another way.
All in all, I'm very pleased with my purchase. I justified it as a
business expense, and as such I am able to deduct it -- which amounts
to a pretty solid defacto discount. I was able to use my existing 2 GB
SD cards to expand the memory by 4 GB. Pretty funny when I recall that
my first Mac had an external hard drive with a whopping 20 MB -- the
hard drive cost me more than this device!
Battery life is also very good. I get about 3 hours of solid
surfing via wifi, and about 5 hours via bluetooth. If I leave the phone
in standby I can still be alerted of instant messages via GAIM and the
power will last for days. I go to work with a full charge and leave
work with a full charge. Installing programs, such as GAIM is a snap
once you add the repository urls to your application manager. Once you
do, the system maintains a catalog of all of the available programs and
you simply click to install a ton of programs.
The screen on this phone is amazing. If your vision supports it,
you can actually view a regular web page at 800x400 pixels. You can
zoom in on text fairly easily by using the rocker buttons on the top of
the device.
Only on one occassion did I need to install a prerequisite program
(Maemo Mapper) because GAIM (open source instant messenger, which rocks
BTW) was dependent on one of the same files installed with the mapper.
Another cool thing about this gadget (my phone is a PPC 6700) is
that virtually all of the software is free. For my phone, I've spent
hundreds just trying to get some decent functionality. The Opera
browser rules and the few sites I cannot access with Opera can be
opened with Mozilla (MiniMo). Now, if someone just ports over a lite
version of Open Office I'll be in gadget junkie heaven.
As of this writing, the Maemo (Nokia's Linux port) version of
Abiword (a full word processor) has not been ported to the N800 yet. It
sounds like it's just a matter of days or weeks.
Anyhow, this device does a lot of the kinds of things that the
coming Apple iPhone is supposed to do well. In that regard, it's kind
of like a test platform for Nokia's next generation of phones. The open
source community is very supportive and if Nokia ever decides to
release a phone running the Maemo platform, they will give Apple a
serious run for its money. You can do everything via this device, and
if you run into something it cannot handle, you can use it to log in to
a PC somewhere via VNC.
The Nokia N800 is an awesome platform. The built-in video
conferencing is usable, but it's no replacement for desktop video
conferencing solutions -- however it was actually better than some
desktop programs I've tested. A version of Skype is rumored to be on
its way (Gizmo Project already works perfectly). If that version of
skype supports video, look to the Nokia N800 to compete heavily with
the slew of skype phones (such as the Netgear SPH101, which I sold once
I got this bad boy) since you can use the browser to log in to any
public hotspot (most "skype phones" do not allow this).
| By | Anton Kulchitsky (Fairbanks, Alaska United States) - See all my reviews |
It is hard to say how long I was waiting for this! Nokia the Great
finally made a second version of their Iternet Tablet with real Linux
aboard. How nice. I went to Amazon and ordered it as soon as I could.
In spite of Amazon is just excellent store in sence of speed. This time
I was unlucky because they used some side store for the order.
Unfortunately, I got all periferal equipment two weeks earlier than the
device and could not be the first writing the review. Sorry for this.
The toy is just a dream. It has the best screen I have ever seen.
Just look, it has a better resolution than a desktop I used just 5
years ago! The picture is beutiful. You can scale the image very easily
by +/- buttons. The software is also very useful. Internet browser is
fast and handy. Especially if you use it in full screen mode.
Nokia has probably the best antenna engineers in the world. Such a
small device has a better network detection than my PowerMac and any
other laptops I tried. It detects even 4 additional networks around my
house locating on 1 acre of land (hey, neighbors, always protect your
WiFi with a password!) which my laptop cannot.
And yess! It is a normal Linux device. I was able to get terminal
on it, gain root access and finally ssh to the device from my PowerMac
and from my Linux box. I was able to install software I like. And yes,
it is free as well. I also write my own software and can do whatever I
want. However, you do not have to be a Linux geek to enjoy the device.
It is a good computer even without it.
Nokia N800 supports many languages as well. I was able to type
Russian. It also has a writing recognision system for all available
languages.
The device is pretty fast. It contains 330 MHz TI processor in it.
I extended memory with 2GB flash card. I have read that you can extend
the flash memory up to 8 GB. I was able to use Stowaway bluetooth
keyboard for PDAs with it.
Finally, the device users is a good community with a very popular
and useful web sites and forums. They are always welcome to help you.
A couple of sad things or blunders the device have:
1. There is no hard case provided. Terrible. Even when you lock the
device, you can lose all the power just putting it in your pocket. I
got this a few times already when device switch the screen on and
waiting when you would push the proper button. Hey, Nokia, give me a
hard case!
2. I have a "shadow" or a small dark area on the right part of the
screen. It is not considered as a problem enough to exchange the device
by Nokia. Please, be advised of the problem though it is not very often
to happen. It is an interference of LEDs behind the screen which
happens when they are shifted a little. That what I was explained. You
probably better buy somewhere where you have money-back option. I got
the problem.
3. All buttons are not fixed firmly. It looks cheap on a $400 device.
4. Camera is not good. I would prefer to have a device without it
than such an easy-to-break one. It makes N800 heavier and thicker but
does not contribute much in functionality.
5. I would prefer to have more options for a device mechanical
support. Now you can set the "leg" in two positions: just one position
before most comfortable one!
These 5 issues are enough to rate the item by 4 stars only.
However, Nokia N800 is so unique that worth buying for sure. It is
still much better than any PocketPC or Palm I had a chance to try.
PS. Some people complained it does not have a sync with a PC. It is
not fully correct. 1) It can be connected with a PC by USB cable
(applied). You can enter a Research and Development mode and do
whatever you need with the device. 2) You can use ssh from or to your
machine to upload or download any files from outside. You can use rsync
for syncronization or archiving. 3) Flash cards are very protable.
I also forgot one disadvantage. There were no terminal in the box.
I needed to install one. Moreover, you need to make some tricks to get
a root access. Even MacOS X has a terminal. I have no idea why Nokia
did not do this.
| By | Barry T. Campbell (New York, NY) - See all my reviews |
You succumbed to an early case of iPhone lust, but then you started thinking about it: Do you really want your mobile telephone, your iPod, and a small-form Internet tablet all in the same device? What's the battery life going to be like on that bad boy if you're using it for all three purposes? Do you really want a single point of failure for all three functions?
I already have a nice, rugged, compact cellphone that pulls a great signal and, you know, makes and receives phone calls. That's truly all I want out of a cellphone. It does those things just fine.
I doubt that anyone is going to improve, any time soon, on the form factor, the ease of use, or the bang for the buck of Apple's 8GB iPod Nano. Even Apple.
And I certainly don't have a burning desire to get sucked into an expensive monthly data-rate plan on a two-year contract with AT&T as a precondition of spending $500-700 on an iPhone when it comes out.
But, you know, the "Internet device in the small-but-usable" form factor is still very attractive. Cellphone screens are just too small for extended Internet use, but there are times when you don't want to be lugging a laptop around with you.
The clever Finns at Nokia have an answer to this dilemma: the N800 Internet Tablet.
If you're usually near a WiFi hotspot (in New York City, I'm rarely more than a hundred yards from one, and my office and apartment building are thoroughly saturated) this might be the device of your dreams.
The N800 runs an embedded variant of Linux (really), gets its Internet access via WiFi (although it's also capable of matching up with your Bluetooth-enabled cellphone), weighs about seven ounces, is roughly three inches tall by six wide, and half an inch thick. and has a nice, bright wide screen for your webular activities, plus a built-in webcam for still pictures and videoconferencing.
To put the size specs in perspective, it's about half again as big as an Altoids tin, but thinner. :-)
It ships with the Opera web browser; a dedicated RSS reader; e-mail and chat clients; a media player (audio/video) and a host of similar tools; you can also download all kinds of third-party software for it already, including Gizmo (and soon, Skype) if you'd like to use the tablet as a Voice Over IP (VOIP) telephone.
The resolution on the wide, bright touchscreen is an astounding 800 x 480; if you have a pair of middle-aged eyes, built-in switches on the top of the device makes zooming in and out for easier reading a breeze.
Data entry is in three modes: handwriting recognition, which works okay, and two different sizes of virtual keyboard, one that works well with the included stylus, and one that works well with my fat fingertips.
Rated battery life is about four hours of constant use or ten days of standby; in practice, due to Nokia's excellent power management features, I can use the device on and off all day long without recharging, and that's all I really care about.
The only downside, so far: there are very competent text editors, and even a port of the GNU spreadsheet application, but there is currently not any way to edit (or even reliably read) Microsoft Office documents on the N800.
With improved browser support coming, however (a port of Mozilla Minimo is actively in the works) offering access to online applications like Zoho or Google Docs, this problem will soon be solved.
I've had my N800 for about a week now, and after putting it through its paces, it has earned itself a permanent place in the manbag.
And now that the FAA has given the greenlight to WiFi on airplanes (some US carriers may be rolling that out as soon as early 2008), this will be the device that I whip out if I want to get a little work done in my coach seat.
edit @ 14 Dec 2007 10:01:43 by pittayut ( shopkeeper )


