phones, namely the N2700 Classic, N6303 Classic and N6700 Classic, which
serve to build on the success of the N6300 and which will, Nokia hopes,
prove somewhat more successful in galvanising consumer interest than the
N6301 and N6300i - neither of which proved quite as popular as Nokia
would have hoped.
Boasting HSPA-based 3G connectivity which, Nokia claim, results in data
transfer speeds up to 10Mbps, the N6700 Classic which is the higher
specified of the newly announced trio of Classic handsets, comes with a
2.2″ 320 x 240 resolution display with Ambient Light Sensor
technology, a 5 megapixel, 4x digital zoom autofocus camera with LED
flash capable of recording video at 640 x 480 resolution at 15fps (or
352 x 288 at 30fps), and quad-band GSM/EDGE and 3G capabilities (3G
reserved for Europe).
Positioned in the middle of the new handsets, the N6303 Classic comes
with a similarly specified display as the N6700, as well as a 3.2
megapixel 8x digital zoom autofocus camera with LED flash, a 3.5mm
headphone socket to compliment its DAP capabilities - with Share on Ovi
on offer - and offers MP3, AAC, MP4, AAC+, enhanced AAC+, H.263, H.264
file format support. It also has an integrated FM tuner offering RDS
support.
The N2700 Classic, as you’d expect, offer rather lesser
specifications with a rudimentary 2 megapixel 4x digital zoom camera
sans flash, a smaller 2″ 320 x 240 display though it does come
with DAP functionality (again with Share on Ovi support) and an
integrated FM tuner with RDS.
All three handsets are expected to commence shipping in Q2 with the
N6700 Classic retailing for around $309, the N6303 for $178 and the
N2700 for around $86.
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