Nokia Delivers Maemo Mobile Phone N900
Nokia has begun its delivery of the Linux-based N900 mobile phone. The devices with the Maemo 5 operating system will compete with the iPhone and Android.
The N900 has all the standard features of the iPhone and Android, but, unlike the iPhone, has a virtual keypad as well as its own version of a side-slide keyboard. It's for phoning, but the main focus is its Internet capabilities. The Nokia website has a full list of its features and applications, of which we're only presenting a selection. An experimental KDE port is also available.
With a 600-MHz processor and up to 1 GByte of working memory, the Maemo device can run some of the more sophisticated applications fluidly. The 32-GByte internal storage and a slot for microSD cards provides enough space for many more applications, some of them available to users from Maemo.org. The device has a 3.5" touchscreen with 800 x 480 pixel resolution, as well as the slide-slide keyboard. In the usual Linux desktop style, users can choose from four personalized views, in landscape and portrait modes.
The mobile phone comes with a 5-megapixel camera in JPG with EXIF image formats, and has two video cameras that support codecs and streaming in the H.264, MPEG-4, Xvid, WMV and H.263 formats. The front video camera is a VGA webcam, while the "main" camera affords up to 800 x 480 wide screen resolution. The device supports 3D graphics acceleration on OpenGL ES 2.0. The supported audio formats include MP3, WMA, AAC, M4A and Wav -- but not Ogg. Music playback supports reading ID3 tabs and album art.
The N900 transfers network data over GPRS, HSPA, EDGE, WCDMA, WLAN (802.11b/g with WEP, WPA and WPA2 encryption) and as data modem via USB. It supports quadband mobile phone networks for EGSM and UMTS. Connectivity by Bluetooth 2.1 is also provided, as well as navigation via A-GPS with pre-installed Ovi maps. The N900 can be pre-ordered from Nokia for $649.
Gallery (6 images) |
---|
Comments
comments powered by DisqusSubscribe to our Linux Newsletters
Find Linux and Open Source Jobs
Subscribe to our ADMIN Newsletters
Support Our Work
Linux Magazine content is made possible with support from readers like you. Please consider contributing when you’ve found an article to be beneficial.
News
-
Latest Cinnamon Desktop Releases with a Bold New Look
Just in time for the holidays, the developer of the Cinnamon desktop has shipped a new release to help spice up your eggnog with new features and a new look.
-
Armbian 24.11 Released with Expanded Hardware Support
If you've been waiting for Armbian to support OrangePi 5 Max and Radxa ROCK 5B+, the wait is over.
-
SUSE Renames Several Products for Better Name Recognition
SUSE has been a very powerful player in the European market, but it knows it must branch out to gain serious traction. Will a name change do the trick?
-
ESET Discovers New Linux Malware
WolfsBane is an all-in-one malware that has hit the Linux operating system and includes a dropper, a launcher, and a backdoor.
-
New Linux Kernel Patch Allows Forcing a CPU Mitigation
Even when CPU mitigations can consume precious CPU cycles, it might not be a bad idea to allow users to enable them, even if your machine isn't vulnerable.
-
Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9.5 Released
Notify your friends, loved ones, and colleagues that the latest version of RHEL is available with plenty of enhancements.
-
Linux Sees Massive Performance Increase from a Single Line of Code
With one line of code, Intel was able to increase the performance of the Linux kernel by 4,000 percent.
-
Fedora KDE Approved as an Official Spin
If you prefer the Plasma desktop environment and the Fedora distribution, you're in luck because there's now an official spin that is listed on the same level as the Fedora Workstation edition.
-
New Steam Client Ups the Ante for Linux
The latest release from Steam has some pretty cool tricks up its sleeve.
-
Gnome OS Transitioning Toward a General-Purpose Distro
If you're looking for the perfectly vanilla take on the Gnome desktop, Gnome OS might be for you.
Sadly, this device will fail due to pricing
$650 isn't gonna work on the price. There are simply too many other options. A small number of cost-insensitive buyers will still purchase one.
I'm in the market for a new phone and an update for the N800. The features of this new device are too long to attempt to list. Nobody would read the entire list / article. A few months ago, I found an N900 review with about 16 full pages of detailed content. Even I, couldn't be bothered to read beyond the 6th page.
I'll probably retain the N800 and continue to tether it with a $20 bluetooth cellphone for emergency-only use. Or perhaps I'm not the target customer?