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Nokia E71 review

So there’s this phone called the Nokia E71. It magically showed up on our doorstep yesterday (shout out to FedEx Sameday!) and was begging for us to review it. Well, we’re not going to disappoint you. In fact, there will be no disappointment at all as you’ll see in our review. The Nokia E71 has officially entered the ring, and it’s coming out fighting. Spoiler Alert: we love this phone. Full review is after the break!

Design:

Obviously this is subjective, but this could really be one of the sexiest damn phones we’ve seen in a very long time. We could do without the tacky pattern on the back battery cover, but we’ll let it slide this time. The entire phone is chrome and while it’s definitely a fingerprint magnet (just have your assistant wipe it down for you) it looks really sharp in person. Everything is proportionate and sort of just works well together. The middle select key actually serves as the notification light, too. So when you have a missed event, the border around the middle key will glow white until you cleared the event, or until the expiration time you set for the notification light expires. It’s a nice touch and a creative way to get rid of the annoying older-fashioned status light. Oh yeah…did we mention this thing is thin? Seriously, we don’t know how they did it. Especially with everything that’s packed in here…man, that BlackBerry Bold is just huge compared to this. Everyone is going to have to step it up after this because as of now, we can’t find one single thing Nokia sacrificed to make the device this thin and compact.

Screen:

There’s a 320×240 screen on the E71 and it looks very sharp. It’s not as bright as the N95, but it’s very clear and easy on the eyes. Screen real estate isn’t a problem at all as we find it more pleasurable to use than an N95. Pictures and video look very detailed and clean. There’s a decent amount of contrast when looking at media, and you’ll especially appreciate the screen during some heavy web browsing.

Connectivity:

The world must be changing. Remember when Nokia would hold every single feature above your head and never give you the perfect phone? Well, we’re finally getting past that. We’re not positive if there’s support for the 2100MHz band here, so for now, we’ll assume it doesn’t have it and there will be a US NAM model, and European model. In terms of the hard connectivity specs, you’ve got a quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE phone with 850MHz/1900MHz UMTS/HSDPA support, Wi-Fi 802.11 a,b,g, Bluetooth 2.0, and GPS. Like most recent Nokia’s, the GPS is assisted by the network, but fret not because there still is a physical GPS chip in here.

Sound:

Like the E61 and E61i before it, the E71 houses a single speaker in the upper left of the phone. It seems louder than the E61 and it’s pretty clear for ringtones and alert sounds. Music sounds fine on it, but it’s not perfect. Bass is seriously lacking and you do get a “tinny” sort of sound. It is very, very loud, though, so you can be sure that alarm is going to get your ass out of bed in the morning.

Email:

What good would an E-Series device be without email? Besides the normal POP3/IMAP supported protocols, Nokia’s Mail For Exchange comes with the device out of the box and is incredibly easy to setup. The handset supports BlackBerry Connect (though we didn’t actually try it) and we’d imagine Goodlink as well. The messaging application had a little bit of a visual makeover, and it’s for the better. Text is extremely readable and emails look great. We’d have loved to see support for HTML email, but oh well.

Keyboard:

If there had to be one negative to the E71 (relax, it’s not the end of the world) it’s going to be the keyboard. Again, not a huge deal, but if we had to pick one thing to single out it’s the keyboard and it quite possibly won’t bother you. It did annoy us, though. Think of the physical keys on the E71 the same as the E61, just a lot smaller. They’re also not as squishy which is nice, and they’re pretty easy to press once you get it down. Our issue is, again, Nokia has not learned the basic keyboard layout and we personally can’t stand it. On a normal QWERTY keyboard the letter “z” is not directly under the letter “a”. It’s either under the letter “s” or somewhere in between the two. This makes typing a royal bitch if you’re not looking directly at the keyboard and is totally unnecessary. All they had to do is stick the damn period key in front of the “z” key and all would be well. Again, this might not be a big deal to you if you’re coming from a QWERTY E-Series already, but for us hardcore freaks who bang away constantly on the keyboard, we’d like the normal layout that’s used on basically every other QWERTY phone on the planet. Fix it please, Nokia. The keys have a nice white backlighting which makes them very easy to read. Just like the other models, the actual keys don’t light up, just the letters and symbols which makes for a very clean and sexy look.

Something also interesting is the inclusion of predictive text on here. You might be thinking why you’d ever need predictive text when you’ve got a QWERTY keyboard, but it actually helps more than it gets in the way. It sort of works like how the iPhone does. If you’re typing fast and accidentally misspell a word but keep typing and hit the space bar, it will auto correct and suggest that word for you. It can also save you a good amount of typing time as it will suggest words for you when you are halfway through them and a simple press of the space bar selects the suggested word and keeps you moving.

Expandability:

There’s a microSD card slot right above the microUSB port on the handset, so you should be able to expand the memory of the phone to the largest microSD card you can find. We haven’t checked data transfer speeds to the memory card over USB yet, but we’re assuming it’s on par with the rest of the Nokias.

Call quality:

Nokia and call quality go together like ham and burger. Kool-Aid and sugar. The E71 doesn’t disappoint. We’ve had such a pleasurable experience with it that we’ve been calling people randomly just to talk on the phone. In all seriousness, it meets or exceeds what we’ve come to expect and love from Nokia. A phone that excels as a phone, as it should. It actually went toe-to-toe with our BlackBerry Curve in terms of holding onto a signal in low coverage areas. And all you BlackBerry lovers out there know that RIM makes one hell of a cell radio in those things.

Battery:

There’s a 1500mAh battery in the E71, and with a full day of heavy use like constant email, phone calls, web browsing, and all around messing with the phone, we’ve still got around 2 bars left. There should be no concern with the battery life here.

Conclusion:

We’re at the end of the review, but by now, you’ve seen how impressed we are with the phone. It takes a lot to get us excited but the E71 has done it. This thing, in our opinion, is the best phone Nokia has made to date. That’s a very bold statement, we know. But this really is going to be the phone to beat by a lot of manufacturers. From the design, to the specs, to the size, the feel — it has the entire package. It’s not for everyone, though. Some people prefer a straight up phone like a flip phone, but in terms of a smartphone with a QWERTY keyboard, this takes the cake. It is just striking compared to the shit device the E61 was. It’s ok, we still love y’all that carry the E61, but this puts it to shame. One thing I personally can’t get over is the awesome dimensions of the device. It’s so perfectly thin, yet incredibly comfortable to hold and use. We just hope Nokia doesn’t wait too long to bring this to market as they need to strike now. Like right now. This second. After seeing all of the detailed shots and our impressions, how do you guys feel about the phone? Are you foaming at the mouth waiting for it or ice-grillin’ us?

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260 comment(s) for this post.

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  1. On May 25, 2008 @ 2:41 pm, Srwilliams Said:

    The handset speaker is extremely loud. Not idea about OTA updates, and Wi-Fi seems to be the same with regards to how it detects access

    BG:

    I am glad you mwnrioned the loudness of the handset speaker. I had a E61 and left it for the blackberry line for two reasons. One, the eRPIECE VOLUME WAS LOW AND THE E61 was designed with a sweet spot to where if you did not position the speaker exactly over the ear, you could not hear. You had to constantly keep moving the phone around to find the correct sweet spot to hear on the thing. This was due to the complete flatness of the front of the phone. It made it hard to know when the speaker was directly over the ear. I hope this has been corrected in terms of how the front of the phone is shaped, along with making the speaker louder. Could you please address this a little more.

    Also, Blackberry Curve speakerphone blows the nokia speakerphones away, which is really importANT for business users. Nokia is famous for making clear sounding, but low volume speakerphone. How is the speakerphone on the E71, is it as loud and powerful as the BB curve and hopefully the Bold

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  2. On May 25, 2008 @ 2:54 pm, npaladin2000 Said:

    In that case, it will be mine. Oh yes, it WILL be mine…

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  3. On May 25, 2008 @ 2:57 pm, gregory Said:

    on an average day in india, a very loud country, with an e51 and good ears, i still miss a lot of calls, and cannot hear many conversations in restaurants … just not enough volume … so i hope that changes …

    at least i can get them here unlocked, though the phone can do more stuff than the provider can…

    enjoy

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  4. On May 25, 2008 @ 3:17 pm, wasubo Said:

    looking good bg… i like this…

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  5. On May 25, 2008 @ 3:30 pm, Michael C Said:

    My E61 has 7 shortcut icons across the standby screen, I see 6 on the E71, so definitely a smaller screen. I agree with Kent, every time I look at my friends’ iPhone screen resolution I get jealous.

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  6. On May 25, 2008 @ 3:39 pm, Dion Said:

    I have the E61i and was so excited when it came out, but got very disappointed soon after, as the OS is sluggish, the built in e-mail/messaging application is slow (not M4E), scheduled e-mail checking (30mins only) did not work as suggested, access point (GPRS or WiFi) is slow at connecting, and I can keep going, but what’s the point.

    Basically, I hope the E71 is responsive and that many, if not all problems have been fixed.

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  7. On May 25, 2008 @ 3:46 pm, Toink Said:

    If by any chance you can test the wi-fi to connect to a wireless router with 802.11n (draft 2) set to mixed mode. I’d be very happy to know if it does indeed able to connect.

    Currently, my E90, E51 and E61i’s would not connect/see all of my draft-N 2.0 routers when they’re set in mixed mode. It’s a pain in the butt having to set the radio to G-Only just for my phones to connect to the wifi then set them back to mixed mode for my laptops to connect on N-mode.

    I got the Linksys, Netgear and D-link ones.

    By the way, you posted it’s got a/b/g wifi that would be better considering the current e-series only has b and g.

    I would appreciate if you can confirm this. Thanks!

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  8. On May 25, 2008 @ 3:46 pm, TareX Said:

    My opinion, a proud owner of an E65 for about a year:

    - This phone has already been beaten by Blackberry Bold on grounds of THE SCREEN.
    - Symbian is reliable and stable. But when 3rd part applications fill in the memory, it becomes very slow. It is also last-gen in its looks.

    This phone is an obvious better choice than Palm’s handsets. But I think that this is the age of Opera Mobile 9.5, touchscreens, and customizable start screens.

    It is the Excellent BEST choice for non-power users.

    PS - Playing GBA on that horizontal screen would make for an amazing experience!

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  9. On May 25, 2008 @ 4:06 pm, Abhishek Said:

    damn it.. Its the e51 stretched out sideways and the screen rotated! I am already in love with my e51 and now this comes! The e71! With a 3.2Mpx cam! With GPS! If this latest Nokia baby comes with s60 FP2 then i might consider giving up my e51..well thats not just one reason i might give up my ah-so-awesome e51 but the cam n gps has amazed me n am sure there will be some hidden features yet to explore

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  10. On May 25, 2008 @ 4:18 pm, Pete Said:

    So I take it you’re not going to give it away? I have to admit that is one of the most beautiful, professional looking devices I’ve ever seen. Good job-good review.

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  11. On May 25, 2008 @ 4:32 pm, gvg Said:

    is there any fm radio??

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  12. On May 25, 2008 @ 4:32 pm, Jeremiah Said:

    It would’ve been so absolutely perfect if it had a 3.5mm jack, but seeing as it’s an Eseries and not Nseries, I suppose it’s almost forgivable. Almost.

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  13. On May 25, 2008 @ 5:31 pm, James Said:

    @specced
    No I’m not teasing, it is being set up to launch on Fido. Also we might get it before Rogers and make it a fido exclusive. I’m not completely sure about that but come September there surely will be one of these bad boys in my hand.

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  14. On May 25, 2008 @ 6:16 pm, Bozo the Clown Said:

    Any guess on release date? Carrier? How does size compare to the Blackberry Curve? Call quality compared to the Curve? I love the Curve’s form factor and like the keyboard, but the voice quality is mediocre.

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  15. On May 25, 2008 @ 6:56 pm, Kev Said:

    i’m curious about the keyboard… is it small enough to be a pain to use? while the e61i keys are small, there’s quite a bit of travel between keys making it easy to hit the right keys, the e71 doesn’t have that and it looks like i’ll be hitting 2 keys at the same time, or hitting in between the keys. BG, do you see this as a problem at all? great write up though… i’m already sold on getting one despite my concern about the keys

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  16. On May 25, 2008 @ 7:46 pm, ZneDaddy Said:

    This thing still has the stupid pop port and not a real headphone jack? That will be a deal breaker, I’m tired of the idiot headphone dongle.

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  17. On May 25, 2008 @ 7:53 pm, parky Said:

    please show us the back cover you described

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  18. On May 25, 2008 @ 8:00 pm, KevinĀ® Said:

    Thats hot. Might have to ditch my Touch Dual if that comes out SOON. I only have 30 days to return my Touch Dual Nokia, lets go!

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  19. On May 25, 2008 @ 8:05 pm, RogerPodacter Said:

    anyone worried about the OS speed compared to the e61i, this thing will have FP1. anyone who has used FP1 phones compared to FP0 phones will tell you that the lag is totally gone. FP1 was already fast, basically instant speed like s40 phones, and now that demand paging has been added, its a friggin powerhouse. this phone will not be slow, and that huge battery in such a slim phone, WOW!! looks like this will be an addition to my n95-4. hope it will be released soon, rather than the sept release date rumored. nokia has no excuse, this is FP1 phone. standard cookie cutter at this point. i could at least see if it were FP2 or had back-ported features…but apparently it doesnt.

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  20. On May 25, 2008 @ 8:57 pm, GoGo Said:

    Big IF for me is the sound quality of the MP3 player. The E61 sounded aweful, even with necent phones…does this one have a 3.5mm jack and how does it sound? I don’t quite expect iPod sound quality…hold on…I actually do as it’s 2008.

    Is it ANYTHING like an MP3 player? Does the stereo wireless bluetooth sound ok as well?

    Thanks
    GoGo

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  21. On May 25, 2008 @ 10:05 pm, JAY Said:

    Im a very big fan of Nokia. Black Berries are nice tho. One thkng is if i get the Nokia i can keep my 15 dollar/month media net plan with the BB price soars to 50 bucks 60 if i want to teather.

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  22. On May 25, 2008 @ 10:43 pm, Jon Said:

    Can you tell me how much RAM it has?

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  23. On May 25, 2008 @ 10:46 pm, Rezanator Said:

    Hey BG, any chance we could get that theme on the E71 out?

    cheers for the pics and overview

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  24. On May 25, 2008 @ 11:15 pm, chaimav Said:

    Can you try pairing this with Ford Sync and report back which features work. Thanks!

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  25. On May 25, 2008 @ 11:57 pm, Ariel Said:

    Haven’t used Symbian in a few years but I must say I am extremely tempted to check this puppy out vs the Bold. Have been using a Curve (And RIM) for a while now though…
    Well its GREAT to see Nokia step it on a notch - Competition from another heavyweight will certainly spur innovation and create price competition. A win-win for the consumer!

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