| 
enlarge
| Brand: Nokia Category: Wireless
List Price: $449.99 Buy New: $0.01 You Save: $449.98 (100%)

Avg. Customer Rating: 88 reviews Sales Rank: 698
Color: Black Media: Wireless Phone Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 0 x 0 x 0
Model: N75 EAN: 6417182678165
Release Date: March 9, 2007 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Promotion: Data not available Terms and Conditions Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
|
| Customer Reviews:
Best 3G Phone at Cingular/AT&T May 18, 2007 8 out of 9 found this review helpful
I've been using the N75 for a little while and it works great. The screen is amazing. It makes browsing the internet a true pleasure, which says a lot for a flip phone. Also, since it is an N-Series phone it's jam packed with multimedia features. The 2Mp camera looks better than other ones currently in the market and the MP3 player has this cool "stero widening" feature.
Top reasons I love this phone: 1. 2Mp camera and featues that makes uploading pictures, showing them in a cool slide show with music, transfering them to friends, and whatever else I want do very easy. 2. Great internet browser. It's 3G(super fast) and has neat browsing tools like going back over several past pages, a mini map to scan quickly over large web pages, and the ability to view every website I've been to. 3. The call quality is outstanding. It's a Nokia and nobody makes a phone quite a well as they do.
Things I don't like: 1. I wish it came with a memory card. I've got a lot of music and videos on there and need some space. 2. I wish it had a 3.5mm jack for headphones, but the adapter works okay and the loudspeaker's pretty loud. 3. I paid $250 for mine. I'm kicking myself after seeing this deal.
Comparison Review by SPECS & FEATURES to other MUSIC PHONES May 4, 2007 18 out of 23 found this review helpful
Here's why it gets five stars based, again, on its SPECS and FEATURES, and compared to hands on experience with Sony Ericsson's latest w810i, LG CU500, Samsung SYNC and Mot's KRAZR:
It's made by the most trusted cell phone manufacturer - Nokia
It doesn's cost $500 bucks, like the ipod/cingular entry will next month. It's $50 bucks through Amazon/Cingular.
It has stereo bluetooth transmissions (A2DP). w810 does not-most other cell phone music players do not, though they do have bluettooth, they are not stereo bluetooth enabled
N75 has the latest version of bluetooth, 2.0, allowing for multiple items to paired simultaneously, and hopefully creating better connections than bluetooth 1.2, which the other music phones have.
It has exterior music controls that are bigger and easier to operate than than the LG CU500, Samsung SYNC and especially the MOT Krazr verizon version (which are not buttons but which you slide your fingers across. They look cool, but are repeatedly by many users, hard to operate)
It's exterior controls allow you to start the MP3 player without opening the clamshell.
It's exterior display shows a playlist in a lateral fashion, like a streaming stock market ticker, making for intuitive use of the exterior playlist scroll button (positioned laterally and directing you as a backward/forward button which it doubles as within play mode of a song). CU500 has this scroll function, as does sync and perhaps the others, but on that small exterior display its setup for a vertical scroll on a harder to use, horizontally oriented button.
There is an an eight band graphic equalizer that lets you set each frequency range manually to your taste, allows you to create presets of these settings and which allows you to take one of the equalizers other standard settings and customize and save it (you want more base on the preset pop music setting? add it and save and you still have the phones original pop setting as well)
N75 has a 2 mp camera; a step up from cu500's 1.3 and beating or matching Sync, Krazr, w810
The N75 camera is oriented just like a digital camera, besting the cu500 and others, or matching the others.
The interior display measures 2.4 inches, bigger than candybar displays on others.
The memory card, which music lovers will likely swap with frequency, is on the phones exterior. CU500's is behind the battery and really does require the use of tweezers or needlenose pliers to get it out. Ball point pens don't even do it on the cu500.
AN IMPORTANT CAUTION:
While the N75 is rated for a 2 gigabyte micro sd memory card, as is the cu500, and the others, the other phones will not read 2 gb cards, but usually read the 1 gb cards well. If N75 reads a 2 gb memory card, it's a hands down winner because you won't have to swap out cards so often. Remember, its the memory capacity from one mp3 player and ipod to the next that you pay more money for.
Love the N75 September 21, 2007 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
I love the functionality of the camera/video. Once I purchased a micro-memory card at Costco, I was able to start taking alot of pictures and videos. While video taping you can use the volume button on the side of phone to zoom in and out, very cool! The phone also has a flash. I do like the feature of anyone calling from your contact list, it rings with whatever tone you choose and then it audibly states the persons name, so you don't even have to pick up the phone, you know if you want to or not. My husband is a contractor and very busy, so he enjoys the feature very much. We are still exploring all the features, but we definately purchased it for the camera/video because he takes alot of before and after photos of his jobs. This way he doesn't need to carry a camera, he has it all in one. Because he is a high minutes user, I think he tends to charge it everynite, unlike his former nokia 6102 that could go a couple days. I think because of the new N75 being full 3G service it uses more battery power. So he counts on having a car charger if needed.
Forget the negatives, this phone is great! January 10, 2008 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
I agonized over getting this phone for several months, mainly because of what people were saying about the weak battery. But boy were they wrong. This phone rocks. The battery is easily holding its charge, the reception is great, the phone is very cool, the screen fabulous, the features unbeatable. Basically, the NOKIA N75 is a "smart phone", which means it comes loaded with tons of applications. In addition, AT&T/Nokia also provide a CD disk, as well as a data cable. (Motorola does not!) Sure, it's a little fatter than my wife's RZR V3xx, but it isn't as long, and yes, it's bigger than the KRZR which I dumped because the first one was DOA and the 2nd started going bad after only one week. But this thing is dynamite. It's easy to read the screen, it has tons of applications, and the most important thing... it works as a phone! I mean, come on, isn't that the main reason we get cell phones anyway? We want to talk on them. And this is easily the best cell phone I have ever had. Run, don't walk, to get yourself one of them.
Best 'phone' available through a US carrier.... May 4, 2007 13 out of 17 found this review helpful
Europe and Asia put us to shame when it comes to carrier-offered phones. If we want a really good, do-it all phone in the US, the only way to go is unlocked, which usually means getting one sans-warranty. This is the first phone I have seen which has a feature-set to match most high-end phones available unlocked...amazing screen, excellent expansion options (both in memory and applications), very high-speed data connections - for e-mail, for web browsing, for sending mms messages - excellent build quality (Motorola will never touch Nokia in this). Quad-band, so it will work anywhere where there is a GSM signal. Props to Cingular/AT&T for finally bringing the goodness to the US.
|
|
|