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Other PDAs > Hardware Reviews > Review: Nokia N800 Internet Tablet Review: Nokia N800 Internet Tablet
By Troy Dreier
Software
The N800 runs on Linux and offers an Opera browser for Web surfing. It's fast and a pleasure to use, since it shows the entire width of a page, but it's not strong at displaying rich multimedia sites.
The Web camera seems like quite a plus at first, but the picture it produces is yellow, grainy, and extremely low-resolution. Pop the camera out and the Internet call software will open. The N800 will also let you make VOIP calls with Jabber or Google Talk, which are included. The company has announced that Skype support is coming in the middle of this year. Included software makes it easy to check POP3 or IMAP mail accounts and to check RSS feeds. A feed reader displays news updates on the front page by default. The front page also displays an Internet radio player that still carries only one station by default. You can add others, but that's a nuisance. Come on, Nokia; add a few dozen more to the menu.
The N800 also includes apps for instant messaging, playing songs (AAC, AMR, MP2, MP3, RA, WAV, WMA) and videos (3GP, AVI, H.263, MPEG-1, MPEG-4, RV), showing pictures (BMP, GIF, ICO, JPEG, PNG, TIFF, SVG-tiny), viewing PDFs, and storing contacts. When you have down time, you'll appreciate the four included games, which all offer attractive graphics.
What keeps the N800 (and the 770 before it) fresh is the generous developer community that's constantly creating new applications for it. While the device lacks PIM or editing applications, you can download them, as well as software updates put out by Nokia.
The company makes a developer kit available on the product page. Nokia has created a great community, but the product's lack of Java support has some developers tearing their hair out. Shortly before this review, online music store Rhapsody released an add-on for accessing the company's streaming music site. We were able to download it to the device and connect in minutes.
Performance
Along with the device, the package includes a soft cover (a nice change from the metal sleeve that came with the 770), a 128 MB miniSD card with adapter, an extra stylus, a USB cable, earbuds, a charging cord, and printed material. The battery is rated for 3 hours of browsing or 10 hours of standby.
With significant improvements over its previous versions, the N800 is an innovative product that deserves to catch on. While it won't replace your phone or PDA, it offers a multi-purpose portable connection kit that only a notebook can match.
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