The 10.1-inch booklet is 3G mobile phone maker Nokia’s belated attempt to join the netbook party. Like its competitors, it is for casual Web-based tasks designed. Nokia, however, has used his experience to create, customize mobile devices to 3G booklet containing additives, to help lift it from the crowd. The most important of these include battery-friendly internal components and an integrated HSDPA modem that enables users to surf the Web, where they can always a 3G mobile signal to find.
The booklet 3G can late to the party, but it is easy to see why – Nokia designers have spent a lot of time to ensure that it is one of the best looking netbooks to market. Our test unit, the lid is in the usual shiny black plastic wrapped (a white version is also available), but the main part of the device is made of aluminum and sports a contrasting black keyboard and glass black screen clad finished bezel, which all give it looks like a miniature Apple MacBook. The extra metal does not do 3G booklet very hard, either – it is 1.2 kg on the scales, and it is extremely thin, just 20mm thick.

While newer netbooks are making use of the latest Intel Atom N450 CPU, 1GB RAM couples Nokia’s efforts with an Atom Z530 – a chip launched almost two years ago. Before you mentally Cart Nokia engineers in the lunatic asylum, remember that the Z530 was only less popular than the once ubiquitous N270, because there are several enhancements that it made more expensive. It is important that its thermal design power (TDP) of 2W noticeably lower than the 2.5 W TDP of the N270, that is, it consumes less power and does not require a fan to keep cool.
The booklet 3G SIM card slot lives under a flap on the right side, along with an SD card slot. Nokia was also clever in the choice of the booklet 3G chipset. It uses the Intel SCH US15W used instead of the traditional Intel 945GSE Express used in netbooks circa 2009 or the newer NM10 Express, 2010 in most models. These power-saving advantages. The US15W itself has a maximum TDP of 2.3 W, which consumes compared to the 945GSE of 6W. The US15W even compares positively to the new chipset NM10′s 2.1W TDP. All in all, the booklet is a 3G components of TDP 4.3W, what is more impressive than the TDP 8.5W a N270-based netbook, or 7.1W TDP of a modern N450-based computer.

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Nokia choice of components makes the booklet 3G less dependent on the network, but that has not stopped the Finnish company to install a mammoth battery anyway. The supplied BC-1S Nokia battery has a 3840 mAh, 57Wh rating of a whopping 16 cells. Compare that with the 4-cell, 4400 mAh battery, which have in the current crop of Atom N450 netbooks and you begin to appreciate how much juice this machine has available. The device is expensive, but. When the BC-1S goes wrong, you have to pay a whopping 80 pounds to replace it – about double the price of a standard battery in something like an Asus Eee PC.
Most of the netbooks run at about the same speed. The booklet 3G is no exception. Despite using a relatively old CPU and chipset, its PCMark05 score in 1418 is on par with pretty much any other Atom-based Netbooks come we have.

Where the booklet 3G features but their battery life. Despite their age, half the netbook’s low power CPU and chipset – in connection with its enormous battery – the booklet 3G least a very impressive six hours and 45 minutes in the Battery Eater Classic test intensive. This test runs the CPU at 100 percent, is exhausted to the battery, and represents a worst-case scenario for battery life. By using more efficient, we expect 3G booklet somewhere recently in the region of Nokia claims 12 hours.
The booklet 3G offers many ways to connect to the Internet. It ships with 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi has an Ethernet port for hooking it up to have Web via cable, and is one of relatively few netbooks to integrated 3G modem.

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Unlike most netbooks 3G, the SIM card slot is not unfavorable hidden under the battery – it lives under a door on the right side of the netbook, which means you can the 3G SIM card into your regular 3G mobile phone the and the booklet from the pop-3G in seconds, without turning off the computer. The booklet also has a built-A GPS device and a copy of Nokia Maps, so you can it as a navigation system of the species used.
The booklet 3G keyboard takes a while to get used to it, because, although the keys are well distributed, each key is very small. The trackpad is certainly big enough, but lacks multi-touch gestures and his choice of keys have to travel so little that if it were not for the loud click you make when you press them that you think they were broken off could be granted. The strange thing is that the netbook has an accelerometer, although there are no applications available to use it.

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We are quite happy of the booklet 3G screen. It is not perfect – look closely and you can see individual pixels – but we must give credit to Nokia for the supply of a 1280-pixel-X720 panel, the more viewing area than the 1,024 x 768-pixel panel on the Most 10.1-inch displays offer. We are also grateful for the HDMI video output, although it is the lack of a more traditional analog D-Sub output rue, if you have an old monitor or projector.
Conclusion
Nokia is several years late to the shindig netbook, but its 3G booklet is dressed so fashionable parties and so damn long – without the need to recharge – that we had happy it inside. Note, however, that competitors like the Samsung N150 are much cheaper and comparable battery life.

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