Nokia Unveils New Multimedia Phones

In a press event in New York Tuesday, Nokia announced several new phone models, focusing on multimedia. Three of the phones are special black music editions of previously released models, while the other two highlighted at the event are completely new devices.

Nokia said it will release black versions of its N70, N73 and N91 models. In addition to the new color scheme, capacity has also been increased to 1GB, 2GB and 8GB respectively. The devices include support for podcasts, FM radio, and a music recommendation service.

The N70 and N73 are expected to become available in October at a price of 350 ($448 USD) and 450 euros ($576 USD) respectively. The N91 is expected to be available by the end of this year at a price of 550 euros ($704 USD) before any carrier subsidies.

"Music is an essential part of our daily lives and it has the power to evoke memories and change moods," said Tommi Mustonen, Director, Multimedia, Nokia. "With our new Nokia Nseries Music Range, we hope to enhance those personal experiences and make them even more special."

In addition to the device refreshes, two new "multimedia computer" phones have been released. The first, the Nokia N75, is the smallest Nseries device to date. The device sports a clamshell design, and includes play and pause plus rewind and fast forward buttons on the front of the device.

The N75 will support MP3, M4A, AAC, eAAC+ and WMA music formats, and has a microSD slot to add additional capacity. Also included is FM radio functionality, and a 2-megapixel digital camera. Support for W-CDMA, EDGE, and standard GSM/GPRS networks is included.

Although no price point was announced, the N75 would be available initially in the United States during the fourth quarter of this year.

Finally, the N95 has seemed to take the spot as Nokia's top-of-the-line Nseries model. A candy bar slider phone, included in the device is integrated GPS functionality, 5-megapixel camera, and support for high-speed HSDPA networks.

Unlike normal slider phones, the N95 slides two ways. One way will reveal a telephone keypad, while sliding the other way would reveal dedicated media keys.

"This single device - which fits easily in your pocket - can replace stand-alone devices that you no longer need, whether it's your music player, your digital camera, PDA or navigation device. Most importantly, the Nokia N95 is with you and connected when you want to use it," said Anssi Vanjoki, Executive Vice President of Multimedia at Nokia.

The N95 is expected to start shipping in the first quarter of next year at a price of 550 euros ($704 USD) before any carrier subsidies.

2 Responses to Nokia Unveils New Multimedia Phones

Nokia Unveils New Multimedia Phones

Nokia on Tuesday introduced three new phones, as well as announcing several partnerships aimed at further solidifying its leadership in the mobile multimedia category.

The devices would join Nokia's N Series line of "converged" devices, which offer several different entertainment options in a single electronic device. The partnerships are intended to support these new handsets.

Nokia said it expects the market for converged devices to grow to 100 million units in 2006 and 250 million by 2008. Third-party research showed that 53 million devices were sold in 2005, with Nokia accounting for more than half that number.

"Nokia Nseries brings mobility to those experiences which used to be linked to a place or a single purpose device," Nokia executive vice president and Multimedia general manager Anssi Vanjoki said in a statement. "Our goal is to make it easy for people to have their favorite experiences with them all the time."

Vanjoki added that Nokia has sold some 5 million N Series phones since their launch last year.

The new Nokia N93 will double as a video camcorder that can be connected to the user's television screen. The phone has a 3.2-megapixel camera along with DVD-like video capture and video stabilization features.

Additionally, Adobe has announced support for the N93, teaming with Nokia to provide a complete video editing solution. The standard sales pack of the device would include a copy of Adobe's Premiere Elements 2.0 and Photoshop Album Starter Edition 3.0, the company said.

The Nokia N73 can be used as a digital camera, and packs in stereo speakers with 3D sound. A 3.2-megapixel camera is included, as well as support for uploading photos to the Yahoo! Flickr website.

Yahoo has joined forces with Nokia to support the N73, as well as for the N93 and N72 announced Tuesday. The functionality to upload the photos would be built in directly to the Image Gallery application of each device. No additional software would be needed, Nokia said.

The Nokia N72 is the third new handset from the company. Its focus will be on digital music, with an integrated audio player and FM radio. Additionally, the phone will include a 2-megapixel camera.

The N72 is slated to become available in June, with the N73 and N93 launching in July. Unsubsidized prices will range between 320 euros ($396 USD) for the N72 to 550 euros ($681 USD) for the N93. All phones will be released in Europe first, and no release dates for other markets were announced.

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