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NOKIA 8 OFFERS A MIX OF THE FAMILIAR, THE UNEXPECTED, AND SOME NOVELTY TECH TECHNOLOGY

Launched next month, the smartphone is perhaps not exciting but it certainly delivers, David Waywell discovers

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When the new Nokia 8 arrives next month, it will find itself in a marketplac­e saturated with products but surprising light in innovation. It is a peculiar time for mobile phone manufactur­ers who are experienci­ng something of a lull in their industry. Foldable flexible screens and new power sources may be touted for the future but, in the immediate here and now, manufactur­ers are looking for unique ways to make their hardware distinctiv­e.

The result, it’s fair to say, has been a succession of novelties and the kind of functional­ity you never knew you wanted. For a while, Samsung tried hard to convince people that the curved displays were the future, but that was always the case of a manufactur­er searching desperatel­y for a real-world applicatio­n for cool new tech. Whatever the popularity of its Edge devices, they never changed the industry. The same is true of fingerprin­t scanners and pulse monitors: neat and occasional­ly useful but not all that groundbrea­king in the way, say, the move to the touchscree­n was in the original iPhone. Near Field Communicat­ion was one of the few notable successes, especially once it made electronic payments possible, but, again, the “electronic wallet” only takes us so far in the search for the next big thing.

The logic, then, suggests that new phones should not be all that exciting. Nothing, however, could be further from the truth. When technolog y plateaus, companies find time to perfect the state of the art and that’s what we might be looking at in the form of the new Nokia 8.

The specs are seemingly impressive, but also what you’d expect from a high-end phone in 2017. Performanc­e should be there in the form of the Snapdragon 835 system on a chip, combined with a more-thanhealth­y 4 or 6 gigabytes of RAM, depending on the model. The heat produced by this kind of processing power is dissipated across the phone’s aluminium body by water-cooled heat pipes that we have already seen on previous Nokia phones. Externally, the phone follows the slim curvy design aesthetic that is now quite common. It means, at first glance, the Nokia 8 looks like many other phones out there but that is not a bad thing. This is about finding that sweet spot in current design as well as tech. Metrics about the 5.3-inch Gorilla Glass 5 screen (hardly the biggest) or the 7.9mm thickness (meaty compared to the competitio­n) become, in a sense, less important than the refinement­s and it’s here that Nokia looks like it might be on to a winner.

For a start, Nokia has sensibly chosen to provide a stock Android 7.1.1 (Nougat) experience, promising a quick upgrade to 8.0 (which Google has codenamed “O”) when it arrives. That might sound uninspired, but the result should be a true Android experience, not compromise­d by the various skins, launchers, and other “bloatware”.

This emphasis on what the user experience­s is commendabl­e in an industry that too often tries to dictate how we use our gadgets. This is becoming one of the emergent trends of recent years. It’s certainly the kind of self-awareness that comes with maturity. Apple, for instance, has quietly gone about refining its hardware line by reducing functional­ity of its software. It has recently introduced ProMotion to its iPads, producing 120hz refresh rates that translate into smoother scrolling and increased responsive­ness as users swipe, move, and otherwise interact with the interface.

In terms of the Nokia 8, the emphasis on the user experience produces a phone that looks to what the user wants and needs. There are, for example, two 13-megapixel cameras on the rear, with Carl Zeiss providing the lenses.

This might seem like overkill but the second camera is designed to work in monochrome, giving improved results for users shooting in black and white. It’s not clear that users will find the phone’s much-touted #Bothie feature useful (combining images from front and rear cameras into a single side-by-side shot), but what is key here is that content producers will find a lot to like about the Nokia 8, not least the ability to stream live to Facebook or YouTube. This focus on content production explains why the audio is similarly high spec, with Nokia’s Ozo Audio using three microphone­s to capture 360- degree surround sound.

It surprised few when Microsoft sold Nokia to HMD Global in May 2016, given the company’s Windows Phone had made minimal impact.

The latest Nokia perhaps shows that Microsoft made the right choice.

Not because the phone is any sense bad, but because so much of it is simply familiar.

Android is now a mature OS and deserves to be shown off with hardware that follows its improved design.

The Nokia 8 looks like many other phones, but this is about finding that sweet spot in current design as well as tech

 ?? Bloomberg ?? Slim specs, dual cameras and Facebook/YouTube streaming all point to Nokia having a winner on its hands
Bloomberg Slim specs, dual cameras and Facebook/YouTube streaming all point to Nokia having a winner on its hands

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