Nokia may be seemingly in the dumps. Their line of Lumia smartphones has now been snatched up by Microsoft, and their line of Asha devices have been dropped earlier this year. But can Nokia come back?
In today's edition of P2TD, I am going to discuss the Nokia N1, and how it may effect Nokia.
In today's edition of P2TD, I am going to discuss the Nokia N1, and how it may effect Nokia.
The N1 is definitely an interesting device. Internally, it packs a 64 bit 2.4 GHz Intel Atom processor, accompanied by 2 GB of RAM, and 32 GB of internal storage. With a 5 MP front facing camera and an 8 MP in the back, it doesn't appear that Nokia is messing around when it comes to specifications.
On the outside though, we see a somewhat familiar design that could be placed back to the fruit-faced giant from Cupertino. Yes, Apple, and the devices are strikingly similar.
On the outside though, we see a somewhat familiar design that could be placed back to the fruit-faced giant from Cupertino. Yes, Apple, and the devices are strikingly similar.
At 7.9 inches diagonally, this device very much resembles the iPad Mini. The difference though is that the Nokia N1 will ship with Android 5.0, not iOS. (Duh...)
Nokia will place a price tag of $250 when the N1 comes out... soon. As for the release date, nobody really knows. To learn more about the N1, head on over to Nokia's site, linked down below.
Nokia will place a price tag of $250 when the N1 comes out... soon. As for the release date, nobody really knows. To learn more about the N1, head on over to Nokia's site, linked down below.
Now on to part 2 of this Nokia extravaganza; the effect.
As I mentioned in the intro, Nokia may seemingly be in the dumps. But, now with the N1 on the horizon, they may not be low for long. The device is definitely affordable at a whopping $250, and as far as specifications go, (and as long as all of Intel's praise is true) the Nokia N1 shouldn't have issues delivering power. We'll just have to wait and see, but as far as I can speculate, the N1 should sell.
On the consumers end, this definitely poses itself as the alternative to the iPad Mini for the Android world. That said, I'd buy one if I could. Having an "iPad Mini" that runs Android seems versatile, and I wouldn't mind having one myself.
That concludes todays P2TD, as I bid Power 2 YOU!
As I mentioned in the intro, Nokia may seemingly be in the dumps. But, now with the N1 on the horizon, they may not be low for long. The device is definitely affordable at a whopping $250, and as far as specifications go, (and as long as all of Intel's praise is true) the Nokia N1 shouldn't have issues delivering power. We'll just have to wait and see, but as far as I can speculate, the N1 should sell.
On the consumers end, this definitely poses itself as the alternative to the iPad Mini for the Android world. That said, I'd buy one if I could. Having an "iPad Mini" that runs Android seems versatile, and I wouldn't mind having one myself.
That concludes todays P2TD, as I bid Power 2 YOU!