BlackBerry may be the name associated with QWERTY messaging phones, but there's a vocal cadre of Nokia users all too keen to talk about the merits of the Finnish company's keyboard-blessed candybars.
Though Nokia is switching its efforts from Symbian to Windows Phone in the next year or so, it’s efforts to break back into the U.S. market are already heating up. Today, the Finnish phone maker ...
The gadgets will be running Symbian Anna, which Nokia says will be the standard on a number of upcoming phones, even as Windows Phone 7 looms on the horizon. CNET contributor Don Reisinger is a ...
And now it's completely official: the new and freshened up version of Symbian we saw leak out over the weekend is indeed coming to Nokia's latest batch of handsets. The N8, E7, C7 and C6-01, the ...
Nokia has had several popular and affordable BlackBerry-style phones with front-facing keyboards over the years, including the E71 series–which also was subsidized on AT&T as the E71x, the E72, and ...
The Nokia E6-00 may struggle to get people excited, given Nokia's decision to start making Windows Phones in the not-too-distant future. Still, it's exciting enough to get its own spy-shot on a blog ...
The Nokia E6 is the follow up to last year's Nokia E5. It's a handset with a mini-QWERTY keyboard and a small screen, designed to appeal to business users and consumers with a serious text habit. For ...
Nokia E6, the Finnish handset maker's latest attempt at wooing loyalists of the brand, hit the stores in India earlier this month at a price of Rs 17,990. Specs: 2.46-inch display; 8 MP cam-era; 8GB ...
Nokia E71 had takers from not only the corporate areas but even the college-goers started loving it. Its successor E72 also enjoyed considerable success. And then came the E5 which is often touted as ...
Why you can trust TechRadar Our expert reviewers spend hours testing and comparing products and services so you can choose the best for you. Find out more about how we test. The Nokia E6 follows on ...
Nokia has been all over the news this year. Not so much because of revolutionary new devices, but more because of interesting (and slightly controversial) decisions to partner with Microsoft and begin ...