

Design
The N900 is best described as chunky. The phone won’t fit into a pocket on a pair of skinny jeans and tips the scale at 181g. It also doesn’t have the typical tell-tale signs of a phone since there are no Call and End keys. In fact, there are no physical buttons on the front. Littered around the sides are the mini-USB port, volume control, power nub, camera shutter, keylock slider, 3.5mm audio jack and a stylus slot.
The heft of the N900, however, delivers a very solid feel despite the plastic battery cover at the back. Like the earlier N810 Internet Tablet, the N900 has a QWERTY keyboard hidden under the generous 3.5-inch 800 x 480-pixel touchscreen. Sliding the phone open feels like there are two pieces of rough plastic gliding over each other–we wished the mechanism was a little smoother. However, we like the initial resistance which prevents accidental opening of the keyboard and the final snap into position.
The N900 has a resistive display. This means it requires a slight pressure to register a command and, of course, it’d work with a stylus. So instead of flicking (which works occasionally) on the display, you’d have to tap-and-hold-and-swipe across the panel. We didn’t encounter any crippling issues with the screen as it was very responsive and the software is finger-friendly, so there’s hardly any need to reach for the pointing device.
There’s not much space between the buttons on the three-row keyboard, but at least the keys are adequately sized. They have a non-slip texture and a slight bump each, which makes it easy to feel each key apart, contributing to a decent typing experience. The spacebar is placed off center toward the right. We didn’t have any issues with this, but if you use your left thumb out of habit to press the space bar, you may find this layout slightly inconvenient.
Features
Maemo 5
The N900 runs on the Linux-based Maemo 5 operating system. Users who are familiar with the Linux operating system can probably identify with the interface of the N900, but Nokia users who are used to the Symbian S60 software may find themselves stumped by Maemo 5 initially.
The N900 is designed with the desktop experience in mind, so the device is used almost entirely in the landscape mode. Right now, only the dial pad, contact list (when accessed from the dial pad) and the gallery can be used in portrait mode. The onboard accelerometer also lets you rotate the phone to get to the dial pad (no smart dialing, though) automatically.
Think of the interface as a three-level menu system. The top layer consists of four home screens which you can customize with widgets, shortcuts, Web bookmarks and contacts. You can also download different themes, change the background and remove the panels if you don’t need that many home screens.
The second layer consists of two components. By default, it goes to the main menu, but if you have applications running in the background, it’ll bring up a window that shows all the active programs. From here, you can toggle between different apps or close them by tapping on the x indicator. The main menu has 15 icons and these are the ones which Nokia deems important enough to put it on the first page of the menu. The rest of the apps goes one level down in “More…”.
To quit any of the menus, simply tap on an empty area on the screen. It can be confusing and first-time users may wonder where to tap. And since there are no physical buttons, going back to the home screen requires a few taps, depending on how “deep” you are into the menus. There’s also no option to rearrange the applications, so you’re stuck with the default layout. As you install more programs, these are added to the bottom of the expanding list.
The limitations of the operating system don’t just end there. The N900 doesn’t support multimedia messaging (MMS) which, frankly, isn’t a big deal, but it’s annoying to know that it’s lacking the feature until a firmware upgrade fixes this. The device has a FM transmitter/receiver, but doesn’t support FM radio out-of-the-box. Fortunately, there’s a plugin which can be downloaded to enable that. The N900 supports Microsoft Exchange, but only the 2007 version and not 2003–an instant deal-breaker for us. To download content from our server, we had to connect the N900 to the PC via the mini-USB cable and synchronize with the PC Suite application.
Web browser
Now that we’ve got our grouses out of the way, let’s focus on where the N900 truly shines, its excellent Web browser. This is based on Mozilla technology, offering both AJAX and Adobe Flash Player 9.4 support. This means you can view Flash content including videos and games directly from the browser. It’s fast in rendering Web pages including content heavy sites. YouTube and Vimeo video-sharing sites also gave us pleasing results. They weren’t particular fast (this would depend on the speed of your data connection or Wi-Fi network) or offered the best quality clips, but we definitely could watch some videos while passing time or during short commutes. Playing Flash games (which are generally more resource intensive) on some of the sites that we tried was very laggy, so that’s a little disappointing.
Messaging
On the N900, SMS and instant messages are integrated in Conversations which displays them in a threaded format. It’ll also support Ovi by Nokia, Skype, Google Talk, Jabber and SIP. We had no problems with the interface layout although more IM programs would have been sweet. And like most current Nokia smartphones running on S60, the N900 handles email accounts with ease. Setting up Gmail on the device took only a few seconds, but we were soon disappointed to find that it doesn’t synchronize with other Google services such as Calendar, at least not without some manual configuration. Alternatively, you can use Mail for Exchange to work with Google Sync to synchronize Google Calendar and Contacts. For those who have Outlook (running on Exchange 2003) synced with their Google accounts, this is one workaround to get contacts and calendar entries to the device without connecting to the PC Suite.
Navigation
The N900 is currently preinstalled with a barebones version of Maps. This is in stark contrast to Ovi Maps which is now already in version 3.0 on Nokia S60 smartphones. There are no turn-by-turn features or 3D imagery. To be fair, Nokia said that the Maemo OS is still in its early stages and improvements are definitely on the cards.
Applications, Maemo Select and Ovi Store
Right now, there are about 47 applications available for Maemo 5. These can be downloaded from Maemo Select and subsequently on the Ovi Store. Nokia said the latter is expected to be available before the end of the year, so it could be anytime now. By the time the device reaches the hands of consumers next year in Asia Pacific, things should already be up and running. There are already a few applications which we found useful such as Skype for VoIP calls, Qik for live video streaming, MaStory for posting to blog sites, Mauku for Twitter and widgets like Conversations which displays incoming SMSes directly on the home screen, Facebook tickertape, news and weather updates.
Games
Gameplay was excellent for the few that we tried. Graphics were smooth and that’s probably due to the 3D graphics accelerator onboard and the display held up well. See our video of Bounce below.
Music/video player
The N900 can handle the standard array for music and video formats. You can play MP3, WMA, AAC, M4A and WAV audio. For video, MP4, AVI, WMV, MPEG-4, Xvid, 3GP, H.264 and H.263 are supported.
[Damian Koh]



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