Nokia N810 WiMAX
Published by Sierra Monica B., on April 2nd, 2008 9:59 am, in the categories: mobile phones

Nokia has announced the N810 Internet Tablet WiMAX Edition, the company’s first mobile handset featuring Worldwide Interoperability for Microwave Access technology which enables high-speed wireless data transfers over wide areas.
Starting this summer, the WiMAX capability will give the US users a full Internet experience from anywhere, without access limits such as hot spots, and with up to 10Mbps download speeds.
Surpassing the limited range of few hundred feet permitted by the Wi-Fi technology, WiMAX network reaches three miles and using the Nokia N810 Internet Tablet with the Mozilla-powered web browser the user can surf the Internet with easy on a 4.13-inch large touch-sensitive display using the sliding QWERTY keyboard, to read the latest news feeds, find weather forecasts or sports news, as well as get in touch with friends and colleagues via Voice over Internet Protocol and Instant Messaging.
The built-in camera lets the others you are chatting with to see you.

Also, the N810 Internet Tablet WiMAX Edition comes with the Rhapsody online music service, a door to millions of songs just for you.
Other features include GPS navigation, media player, 2GB of internal memory with the possibility to add up to 10GB via a microSD card, Bluetooth, the OS2008 operating system with its email client, Chinese language support, RSS feeds, and Seamless Software Update functionality.

"By delivering the kind of open Internet experience that consumers previously only expected on a desktop PC, the Nokia N810 WiMAX Edition is a compelling example of how next generation broadband wireless technology will not only change the way people think about the Internet, it will change the very nature of the Internet itself," declared Ari Virtanen, Vice President of Convergence Products for Nokia. "Much in the way that the evolution of the fixed Internet from dial-up to broadband enabled a host of new Internet services and changed people's expectations of what an Internet experience should be, the transition to a broadband Internet experience set free from the constraints of a fixed network will spark the next wave of new mobile Internet services, and will forever change the perception of what the Internet can be."
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