Dont complain i have nokia n70 and it is much bigger than n73 so be happy.
It is a great phone so i dont give a damn if someone thinks it is big so
despite it s
size it is one of the best phones on the maket
I recently upgraded to the Nokia N73 also and I don't have an issue with
the size, at least I don't have to think if I am still holding it in my
hand.
If you want the smallest phone you can get with NO features then go for
the Motorola, I'm staying with Nokia and my N73. Symbian rocks!!!
--
The views I present are that of my own and NOT of any organisation I may
belong to.
73 de Simon, VK3XEM.
<http://web.acma.gov.au/pls/radcom/client_search.client_lookup?pCLIENT_NO=157452>
For example: John Smith - 14 Oct 2006 13:52 GMT
It is simply impossible to go back to an OS-less (ie - non-Symbian) phone.
It's like going from a PC to a Playstation.
Playstation - very good ... but a one-trick pony.
With a Symbian phone, you don't just get a phone - you get a palm computer
aswell.
That's why SE, Motorola, Samsung et al are all just also-rans.
When will they learn that people want flexible, customizable devices ?
Look at the N95 - all your devices in one.
Without Symbian it would just be a very capable phone ... but WITH Symbian,
it's a competition floor-wiper.
> I recently upgraded to the Nokia N73 also and I don't have an issue
> with the size, at least I don't have to think if I am still holding
> it in my hand.
>
> If you want the smallest phone you can get with NO features then go
> for the Motorola, I'm staying with Nokia and my N73. Symbian rocks!!!
Umm .... have you heard of eBay ?
> In the shop, it came down to two choices - the slimmest Motorola
> available, or the Nokia N73.
[quoted text clipped - 16 lines]
> Or am I missing out on some possible uses or advantages which may have
> previously escaped my attention?
Steve O - 14 Oct 2006 14:24 GMT
> Umm .... have you heard of eBay ?
You sell contract phones on ebay?
>> In the shop, it came down to two choices - the slimmest Motorola
>> available, or the Nokia N73.
[quoted text clipped - 16 lines]
>> Or am I missing out on some possible uses or advantages which may have
>> previously escaped my attention?
For example: John Smith - 14 Oct 2006 14:41 GMT
Whaddya mean contract phone ?
A phone is a phone, just swap your SIM over.
Sell your unloved phone, buy one you fancy instead - though not necessarily
in that order, for reasons of continuity.
>> Umm .... have you heard of eBay ?
>
[quoted text clipped - 20 lines]
>>> Or am I missing out on some possible uses or advantages which may
>>> have previously escaped my attention?
> In the shop, it came down to two choices - the slimmest Motorola available,
> or the Nokia N73.
[quoted text clipped - 16 lines]
> Or am I missing out on some possible uses or advantages which may have
> previously escaped my attention?
Mine is ok, though there are a couple of annoying aspects. I can't just
type in a number and phone it (I have to press a numeric key, then
end-call button, then dial the number for some bizarre reason.) There
was no way to switch off the flashing blue "energy saving" light, so I
painted over it ;-) Phone logs were buried about 4 levels deep when I
finally found them, but it's simple to move them to the top-level menu I
guess. It's too easy to open the camera by mistake when taking the phone
out of your pocket, and it crashes/resets too often.
Apart from that... ;-)
In retrospect, if I wasn't signed up for a year now, I probably would
have gone for a Sony Ericcson instead...
Steve O - 30 Oct 2006 05:28 GMT
>> In the shop, it came down to two choices - the slimmest Motorola
>> available, or the Nokia N73.
[quoted text clipped - 23 lines]
> no way to switch off the flashing blue "energy saving" light, so I painted
> over it ;-)
That annoyed me too - so I switched it off.
Wish I could remember how I did it so I could let you know.
>Phone logs were buried about 4 levels deep when I finally found them, but
>it's simple to move them to the top-level menu I guess. It's too easy to
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
> In retrospect, if I wasn't signed up for a year now, I probably would have
> gone for a Sony Ericcson instead...
I'm thinking of selling on ebay, buying a more suitable phone and having a
nice meal out with what's left over.
It's a good phone, but far too much phone for what I need - I think I was
oversold at the Carphone Warehouse.
Anonymous - 30 Oct 2006 07:15 GMT
>> In the shop, it came down to two choices - the slimmest Motorola
>> available, or the Nokia N73.
[quoted text clipped - 31 lines]
> In retrospect, if I wasn't signed up for a year now, I probably would have
> gone for a Sony Ericcson instead...
This "cannot type a number and call" must either be an operator specific
feature (operator specific SW on the phone) or a bug, on my S60 phone I can
dial normally from idle menu. Perhaps a SW update, when available, will
help.
The phone logs, if you mean last dialled, received & missed calls are closer
than they appear. Just press the green dial key and you are on the last
dialled numbers, navigate sideways and you reach the other logs. On any
phone it takes some time to get used to the features that make it easy to
use, specifically if coming from a different brand.
The camera should be a top quality cell phone camera. You cannot expect
similar quality from any of those at poor light conditions but at good light
(outside) you should get good quality, fully sufficient for photo prints.
If your phone crashes every now and then, you really do need a SW update.
Don't know your operator but US operators often lag in SW updates, unbranded
phones are often far better.