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Here's the Nokia N9 MeeGo phone and you can't have it (review)

By | October 13, 2011, 5:30am PDT

Summary: The Nokia N9 MeeGo-powered smartphone is starting to ship in select countries and I’ve had the chance to spend a bit of time with it.

I have been a Nokia fan for years and in late 2009 I bought the Nokia N900. This device is a bit clunky, but it is extremely powerful and does an excellent job with online service integration and communications. Earlier this year Nokia announced, and then shortly after effectively killed, the Nokia N9 MeeGo device that is now shipping to people outside of the United States. You can check out several photos of the device and some MeeGo screenshots in my image gallery along with a hands-on video and some initial thoughts below.


Image Gallery: Check out some photos and screenshots of the Nokia N9 MeeGo device. Image Gallery: N9 retail box Image Gallery: Nokia N9 in hand

Why can’t I have one?

The Nokia N9 was announced in Singapore in June and then just a few days later Nokia CEO Stephen Elop announced Nokia would not return to MeeGo even if the N9 is successful. Nokia is committed to Windows Phone for the high end and it seems the N9 and MeeGo is another one of their experiments like the N900 and Maemo was a couple years ago. Unfortunately, if you think what I showed you looks attractive and something you might want to try it isn’t going to be easy or cheap to get one in the United States. Here is the official Nokia statement regarding the Nokia N9:

After the very positive reception to the launch of the Nokia N9, the product is now being rolled out in countries around the world. At this time we will not be making it available in the US. Nokia takes a market by market approach to product rollout, and each country makes its own decisions about which products to introduce from those available. Decisions are based on an assessment of existing and upcoming products that make up Nokia’s extensive product portfolio and the best way in which to address local market opportunities.

The N9 is selling in 16GB capacity for EUR480 (about US$650) and 64GB capacity for EUR560 (about US$755). It feels like a very high quality device, but these prices are even out of my price range for a device with a limited ecosystem and support.

In the box and first impressions

The Nokia N9 comes in a simple blue box with a full scale image of the device and application launcher page on the front. Inside you will find the N9, USB cable, USB a/c charger, stereo headset, and Quick Start Guide.

After pulling the N9 from the box, I was immediately impressed by the sleek feel of the N9 including the high quality feel of the plastic. The display is soft and smooth and I can’t stop myself from rubbing the display with my finger. The glass on the display is curved and molds around the edges into the front shell. The design is fantastic and if Nokia brings a Windows Phone device in this form factor I know what device I am going to buy.

Specifications

Specifications for the Nokia N9 include the following:

  • MeeGo 1.2 (Harmattan) operating system
  • Penta-band 3G radio and quad-band GSM radio
  • 1 GHz Cortex A8 processor
  • 3.9 inch FWVGA 854×480 pixels AMOLED display
  • Antiglare polarizer and Gorilla Glass integration
  • Preinstalled 16GB or 64GB storage
  • 1 GB RAM
  • 8 megapixel camera with dual-LED flash and Carl Zeiss optics
  • Proximity sensor, light sensor and digital compass
  • Integrated A-GPS
  • Wi-Fi (802.11 a/b/g/n)
  • Bluetooth 2.1
  • NFC-enabled
  • 3.5 mm headset jack
  • 1450 mAh lithium-ion battery
  • Dimensions: 116.5 x 61.2 x 12.1 mm and 135 grams

The battery is non-removable and there is no expandable storage capability. A microSIM card form factor is used in the N9. TV out is functional through the 3.5mm headset jack and Dolby Mobile sound is present. It is nice to see integrated WiFi hotspot capability, but the HSDPA radio looks to be limited to 14.4 Mbps.

Walk around the hardware

The Nokia N9 hardware is absolutely beautiful and I am having a hard time putting it down. The glass on the front is curved and designed to give it a wonderful feel. The back is angled nicely at the four corners and it is tough to stop rubbing such a nice back design.

The front is dominated by the 3.9 inch display and unlike every other mobile phone there are no physical or touch capacitive buttons on the device face. Everything is controlled via touches and swipes. There is a front facing camera down in the bottom right corner, but I have yet to figure out how to access it.

There are volume buttons and the power/lock button on the right side of the N9. You will use the power/lock button quite a bit since there are no other buttons on the front to turn on the display.

There is nothing on the left side and the only thing on the bottom is the mono speaker.

The 3.5mm headset jack, microUSB, and microSIM card slots and openings are found on the top of the N9. You press down on one side and let the door open straight up to access the microUSB port and then slide the other door over to have the microSIM card try pop out.

Nokia has a solid 8 megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss optics on the back of the N9, about 1/3rd of the way down from the top and in the center. Two LEDs are placed near the camera lens with at least one app present to use it as a flashlight.

Quick thoughts on the software and performance

MeeGo reminds me a lot of Maemo and webOS with a similar application launcher, visual task manager, integrated service functionality, quick launch bar (brought up like the webOS bar with a swipe from below), and more. Swipes similar to the QNX OS are used too. You swipe from off the display to the center to unlock the screen and to go back to one of the three home screens when you are in an application.

The three home screens consist of the application launcher, task manager, and notifications/feeds. You can move app shortcuts around the launcher page and scroll up and down to view the apps you have installed. The task manager shows you live thumbnails of open apps and I was able to run 27 apps at once (I’ll test it out and see if I hit a limit) with very little impact on the device (shown in my video). The notifications/feeds screen show you new text and IM messages, email, missed calls, social network updates, and news service updates in one easy view.

I have only been using the N9 for a few hours so cannot comment on battery life, camera performance, and a host of other functions, but will be spending more time with it and report back on my findings. It really is a slick device with a nice OS, but it is also sad that so few people will ever be able to experience it.

Please let me know if you have any questions on the Nokia N9 and I’ll work on a follow-up article after spending more time with the N9.

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Topics

Matthew Miller started using a Pilot 1000 in 1997 and has been writing news, reviews, and opinion pieces ever since.

Disclosure

Matthew Miller

Matthew is a professional naval architect by day and a mobile gadget freak at all other times. He purchases his own devices and then sells them on eBay or Craigslist to buy more. Many other devices are sent for review on a 30-day loaner basis and then returned to the carrier or manufacturer. If any are provided as “long term loaner units” this will be clearly disclosed in his reviews.

Biography

Matthew Miller

Matthew Miller started using a mobile devices in 1997 and has been writing news, reviews, and opinion pieces ever since. He is a co-host with GigaOM's Kevin Tofel on the MobileTechRoundup podcast and an author of three Wiley Companion series books. Matthew started using mobile devices with a US Robotics Pilot 1000 and has owned over 125 different devices running Palm, Linux, Symbian, Newton, BlackBerry, iOS, Android, webOS, Windows Mobile, and Windows Phone operating systems. His current collection includes an HTC Radar 4G, Dell Venue Pro, Apple iPad 2, HTC Flyer, Samsung Galaxy Nexus, Nokia N9, Apple iPhone 4S, MacBook Pro, and many more, along with tons of accessories and classic devices like the Apple Newton MessagePad 2100 and Sony CLIE UX50. Matthew can be found on various discussion forums under the user name of "palmsolo".
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Nokia N9 will live
kuganena 18th Oct
Nokia has consistently said, that the N9 user interface will see new coming in other phones. The OS may not be Meego, but on the other hand they have not said that it would not support qt apps. So, it is not actually so dead. N9 is available for US customers in web shops, just use search engine...
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Who cares
wkulecz 13th Oct
Its too expensive and we can't buy it, so who cares!
@wkulecz: ... blatantly similar to that of iPhone).
@DeRSSS Ha ha ha. You are a good laugh
@wkulecz Expensive? That 64GB model is cheap, compared to 64GB iPhone 4S and has double RAM, NFC, better camera, better display, more powerful OS, simpler user experience, world-wide 3G, better reception etc. You can get it from Amazon unlocked.
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I guess
wkulecz 13th Oct
@Guestion

Well I guess a Bently is cheap compared to a Rolls ...

A 32GB SD card is maybe $35 at Fry's, so why is it somehow worth $100+ inside the phone? Much as I'd love a real Linux based phone to play with, no external storage is a total showstopper.

My wife's Android phone only had 2GB but I removed the micro SD card, copied the data on it to a spare 8GB card from one of my cameras and presto, she's got 4X the storage for free.
Even if we never see this phone offered, it's still satisfying to see Nokia come up with something completely innovating like a button-less phone before anyone else.

People appreciate companies like Apple when they innovate so I think Nokia is due the same appreciation for pulling off something so interesting.

Even car companies do one-offs just to show a working version of a new concept to show it can be done. Nokia will find a way to incorporate this type of innovating thinking on future products (as they've been telling us), so this isn't a dead end street.

Running 27 apps simultaneously, there's not an app for that.
@kymics
It's a fair point, but let's keep in mind the central point. Nokia has expended all this effort to make a very good and possibly great phone and won't sell it in the US.

If this is them clearing the development pipeline and keeping volumes low to avoid manufacturing scaling costs, I can appreciate that that looks good on the spreadsheet.

To the consumer, it might look like Nokia being confused. Maybe the identity as primary Windows Phone partner will turn the company around. It still seems plausible to me that Elop's plan may be to set Nokia up, via indifferent results, for acquisition by Microsoft.
@DannyO_0x98 Did not Microsoft already make a downpayment for Nokia? I personally think that the purchase plans are already in the works, just being kept on the quiet side, while they work with the EU regulators to make deal formal. Elop is there to make Nokia look bad, so regulators will not cause issues with the Microsoft takeover. If Microsoft is assigning Nokia patents to a Canadian patent troll firm, that speaks louder than any press release. Microsoft is also set to get payments from the troll firm.
  • Flagged
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@Kymics
guihombre 13th Oct
The buttons are on the side, but if 'buttonless' was the only claim you can come up with then that's pretty weak.

To me, it's just an iPod only with worse icons and a box that shows they're just not trying.

In that market they are up against my current favorite, the Sony Ericcson 'Ray' which is just a stunning little phone, price is $400.

I originally posted a reply with a youtube link, but found that comments with youtube links get blocked. If you do a search on [Sony Ericsson Ray] on youtube, you can see some reviews, which really show you how tough the market is Nokia's trying to compete against.
@guihombre

Heh, that's a low-quality Android phone. Your current favorite? Come back when you have tried it. I bet you will.

N9 is example of extreme product design, beautiful hardware combined with the most powerful OS with simple, fast and intuitive user experience. No Android device comes close.
@kymics
Not very "satisfying" to me when I see a company shoot itself in the foot by putting all it's eggs in one limited basket(i.e. WP OS ). Nokia is bowing to M$ in the U.S. market, and I think it will unfortunately lead to their downfall. Only time will tell for sure.
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Sea Ray / 800
WebSiteManager 13th Oct
Isn't this the phone rumored to be very similar to the Nokia Sea Ray / 800? Any discoveries that may be of interest for those waiting for Sea Ray?
@WebSiteManager

Yeah, the Searay (Windows phone) has the same body, except it has an additional metal button on the side as all Windows Phones have to have a dedicated (proper) camera button.

What's quite exciting is that the Searay isn't the top of the range Windows phone that Nokia will announce on the 26th (oct) - The have a higher spec phone called the Ace. Apparently it's got a 4.3 inch screen.
This is why Nokia should not have sold their soul to Microsoft. Had Nokia offered a phone like this un the US, I would certainly of considered it. But since Nokia has decided that they hate the US customers, I will instead be buying an iPhone.
@Rick_Kl who are you kidding? Looking at your comment history, you wold anyway have brought iPhone happy Why don't you just accept - you hate Microsoft and anything even remotely related to it. Why the facade?
@sunilgmishra Had Nokia not sold their soul to Microsoft, the phone would be compelling enough for me to actually try it out. In the end it is what works best for my wants that gets my money. I do find the UI on Windows Phone to be messy and butt-ugly. I also find there are too many apologists for Microsoft???s bad behavior, which I believe is part of the Religion of Microsoft. Other companies get grilled over things like antennas and location tracking. The Windows phones were having similar issues, with the antennas. Yet no 1,500 blogs complaining about it. Microsoft claimed the high ground on location tracking, yet they not only track the end users, but keep the location data on a remote server, of an unspecified length of time.
@Rick_Kl

Should HAVE
@Rick_Kl

What makes you think Nokia hates US customers? I think it's the other way around. That's why they thought no matter how good phone they make, US customers don't want it. Microsoft is their only option now.
@Guestion My first three cellphones were Nokia, but then they stopped shipping then better models to the US, As a result I moved to Motorola phones. Putting all your eggs in an untested basket, is not the smartest thing to do. To pin your company???s hopes on a phone OS, that the public has in large, rejected could be what finally kills Nokia as a phone maker.
OMG! if you squint your eyes it looks like a iPhone! Here comes the Apple lawsuits. happy
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Yep, that's a rectangle alright. Call Apple Legal!
Dietrich T. Schmitz * Your Linux Advocate 13th Oct
nt
@Dietrich T. Schmitz * Your Linux Advocate
Until you learn ANYTHING about trade dress law, you would be well-advised to keep your stunningly ill-informed opinions to yourself.
Hint, it is NOT about being a rectangle.
But good job being the sheep, blindly following internet memes.
@deusexmachina????
Gees, some people just don???t have a sense of humor! Must be a Apple fan boy.
@Muskie Mike
Finding things funny that are actually stupid is not having a sense of humour.??
I hate it. Looks just like an I-phone, icons and all. At least apple changed the icons so theirs did not look just like another palm when they copied the palm interface. The only true inovator I've seen so far in smartphones is palm, everybody else is just copying. To bad palm had no vision.
@Matthew Miller...You said it and I'm with you on that (at 4:22-4:25)! This form factor (the Harmatten-Meego OS not so much) is what has really caught the eye and kudos by many on the tech blogs.

I am really looking forward to your review on the Nokia WP device with this form factor; there are many of us waiting for the most sleek phone design for WP, and Nokia is sure to deliver.

Nokia, my money is yours when yours as soon as you release the Nokia WP devices happy
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dead end OS
.ray 13th Oct
It's a shame suck a beautiful phone had to run a dead end OS. BTW I don't understand why apple fanboys feel the need to make sarcastic remarks about the box and the design, when they obviously don't want to know about anything that isn't made by the most anti-competitive company in the world.
I cant wait fir trhis phone to be available. Of all the old phones I have had. NOkia phone where always the most reliable and rugged.

If this translates to the N9, my iphone 4 will be gone in a second.

I hope developers get onto this platform and create a range of solid apps for it. I would hate to see Nokia dissapear from the phone business.
The phone has been received extremely well practically everywhere. SW support for the next years has been promised, apps can easily be ported from Symbian.
The country variant list on the Firmware server has just been extended to include more countries, even Germany.
There is a possibility that there is a slight, yet unannounced, change in roll out plans.
Many doubt that WP will be a success outside US. N9 could be plan B.
@Sxxx

A major update will be released very soon according to recent tweets from N9 dev team.
@dansus what's their Twitter account?
Stephen Elop is The Evil in his purest form.
@robnaj

Amazon, Expansys, Play.
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Popped up in the latest Vodafone brochure in my letter box, with a price of NZD999 unsubsidized.
The phone looks and sounds like the best phone on the market, period. I wish you showed how fast the browser is and also if it is capable of "flowing" the text on webpages. Also, it would be great to know what the actual battery life is.

Thanks for a great intro! I live in Thailand now and Nokia has announced the phone here. Sounds like a winner.
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Contributr
More coming soon
palmsolo (aka Matthew Miller) 16th Oct
@Milo B I wanted to get some first impressions up, but will follow up with more. I am LOVING this phone and it is likely I will have to get one for myself soon too happy
I would like to know how long people actually own a smartphone for? The reason I ask is because even if the N9 is the only phone with the Meego OS, Nokia has committed support to the OS until 2015, by which time I will probably be looking at buying my second phone after my N9.
Additionally for those interested in only apps if you run the Alien Dalvik program on your N9 it allows you to use Android apps.
Finally I see no physical resemblance to any Iphone, the big plus for me is the N9 having an open source OS and the community support that comes with that, Maemo being a perfect example.
I plan on picking one up on my travels abroad next month and am really excited for this device. I only have one question. I'm a Google voice subscriber and use I use it exclusively. You mentioned in your review that Google has options for 'mail chat and calls' could you elaborate a bit on that for me? How is the voice integration specifically? Could you post pictures of the interface? Ive looked everywhere on the web and havent found any answers.
Cheers!
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OS upgrade
shajiwahab 14th Oct
Hey Mathew...quite an impressive video. I have a question..If Nokia does eventually launch the Windows platform for its OS in the future and decides to retain the same form factor as the N 9 i was wondering if I could buy the N 9 now and then upgrade or change over to the Windows OS once its out..Thanks..once again..nice video but at the end of it i was thinking to myself...you didnt tell us how to make calls wink
@shajiwahab

No, it runs a different cpu, WP port wont be possible until MS updates the micro code.
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video call
g.Na 15th Oct
quite disappointed coz N9 didnt support video call (only thru Skype, Gtalk, ect.) front cam not functioning.
@Matthew

You dont need to press the side button wake it, just double tap the screen then swipe to unlock.
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Contributr
Awesome tip, thanks!
palmsolo (aka Matthew Miller) 16th Oct
@dansus Wow, how did you discover that? I will add some of these tips in my next post on the N9.
Here are some stuff I would like to see: OVI store. QuickTime playback. Availability of a Shazam type app. Music synching. Video playback on a tv.
This is a phone that Nokia could release that is a contender for the smart-phone crown, only Elop doesn't want anything to compete with MS Windows Mobile 7 (which is having a hard time competing with iOS and Android). This seems like another in a series of bad moves for what should be a market competitor (who was once one of the leaders).
hi, I am very keen in getting N9 but have 4 concerns...

I was fiddling with a N9 and saw a documents app. It claims to be to read opendoc format and microsoft documents and pdf. will you be able to review that?
does it include powerpoint and excel format as well?

is there any app for ereading? such as sony reader, amazon, or kobo? or something that at least handle epub?

how about library books like overdrive?

lastly, are there any bible apps?

thanks!
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Nokia N9 will live
kuganena 18th Oct
Nokia has consistently said, that the N9 user interface will see new coming in other phones. The OS may not be Meego, but on the other hand they have not said that it would not support qt apps. So, it is not actually so dead. N9 is available for US customers in web shops, just use search engine...

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