Nokia X1

Nokia’s new X1-01 is another in its line of super-cheap mobile phones and a variant of the X1-00 we tentatively associated ourselves with a couple of months ago. It’s the mouthy little brother of the X2.

The significant difference between the X1-00 and X1-01 is the latter’s dual SIM capability. Should you have done your homework and ascertained that one network is better for international phone calls and another tops for texts, you can put in a SIM card from each network and have the phone switch between them automatically. You can even assign a different ringtone and logo to each card.

If you thought the Motorola Gleam was basic, it’s a smart phone in comparison. We’re usually guilty of believing that everyone wants and can afford an advanced retina-splicing, Android shuffling, app guzzling, 3D high-definition touch-to-pay handset. Of course plenty of people don’t, and though Nokia is particularly aiming the phone at emerging markets, it’s due to launch everywhere in the not-too-distant future.

One commenter on Nokia’s official blog summed up its appeal perfectly: “The X1-01 is a great phone. I am fed up with the ‘smartness’ of today’s phones. All we do is to get dumber. Why on earth do you need a dual core processor to calculate 2+2? If you want to play a realistic 3D game go play football!”

Running super-basic Symbian Series 30, you’re pretty much stuck with what’s onboard, which isn’t much. It’s got an FM radio and MP3 player. It even lets you send texts and make phone calls. There’s a 3.5-inch jack for connecting headphones or a sound system, plus a torch on the top.

We’re still rather worried about that humungous speaker on the back, able to deliver 106 phon. Forget the science bit — each ‘phon’ may as well represent an elephant stamping on your head. That’s what it will feel like when teenagers, miffed that their parents bought them this instead of an Atrix, play their bangin’ choons at full pelt on the bus, the Tube, the train, in the park, sitting on the garden wall outside your house…

Maybe kids are particularly nice, quiet and respectful in Finland. Or perhaps Nokia is unleashing its evil streak. If it’s going to lose market share, it’s taking the entire adult population down with it.

You’ll certainly hear the phone when it launches in the UK — it’ll likely cost under £30. If you’re looking for a cheap and slightly more subtle smart phone, check out the Vodafone Smart instead.

Check Also

8 New Google Products We Expect to See This Year

Google’s device line could end up having a particularly important moment in 2023. The company usually announces new Pixel products throughout the year. Google is expected to release its first foldable phone this year, however, which would directly compete with Samsung’s proven line of Galaxy Z Fold devices. Google also introduced its own ChatGPT rival, …

Nokia X1

The wait goes on for Nokia’s first Windows Phone 7 smart phones to make their debut, but the company still has some other tricks up its capacious Finnish sleeves. The X1-00 is its latest music-focused handset, and while it’s unlikely to go on sale here in the UK, it still has some interesting features.

Nokia says the orange phone is aimed at “music lovers and the next billion”, with a SIM-free price of €35 (around £30) designed to make it affordable for people in the developing world. Which is frankly a relief, because if British teenagers ever get their hands on the device, public transport will become even more hellish.

We’ll explain. The X1-00 has a meaty speaker on the back that’s rated at 106phon — a measure of how loud it sounds. “106 of them is enough to rattle your window frames, apparently,” explains the Nokia Conversations blog. “The frequency response has been tweaked somewhat, though, so that the sound remains undistorted at higher volumes, unlike most mobile phones.”

See what we mean? A gang of teens pumping out tunes on the X1-00 would be enough to clear a bus in seconds.

The handset comes with a built-in torch and a claimed battery life of 61 days’ standby time. There are also five phone books, with the aim of catering to families who want to share the device between them.

Or as the blog explains: “Less than €35 isn’t very expensive for people in western markets, but if you can divide that five ways, then it becomes accessible to people for whom that’s nearly a month’s salary.”

The X1-00 isn’t a Symbian phone, and it’s not even a Series 40 phone: the handset runs the most basic Series 30 OS. No, there most certainly ain’t apps for that.

Check Also

8 New Google Products We Expect to See This Year

Google’s device line could end up having a particularly important moment in 2023. The company …

Leave a Reply