There’s another departure – the battery is permanently installed. To be fair, it is possible to get out, but it takes a special screwdriver to remove two screws near the bottom end of the device. Clearly, Nokia wants to say – like Apple – that battery replacement isn’t an issue.

With no back cover to pop off, the only place to put the SIM card and the micro-SD card is on the side, under two rather awkward flaps (left). It takes standard SIM cards – of course – unlike Apple’s micro-SIMs. And the micro-SD slot takes cards with up to 48Gbyte capacity – which is going to be useful when the pictures you take on it will be a couple of Mbytes each (see below).

There’s a micro-USB connector which Nokia cleverly allows to act as a host (so it can read Flash drives).

Elsewhere round the side of the phone there’s a sliding button to lock the screen, a camera button, volume / zoom controls, an HDMI-video output under a flap at the end of the phone, and a button under the screen to handle menu operations. And there’s also a socket for the power adapter. About which I will now grumble.

Nokia’s non-standard charger

[Update: Apparently this section is controversial. What I originally wrote follows, with additions in italics. l’m reporting my results here, and interested in any other information people have – Peter Judge]

When it comes to charging the phone I’m very surprised to see Nokia making a decision I can only describe as arrogant. The United Nations ITU-T has designed a “universal charger” using a micro-USB connector. Nokia has even signed up to the idea. Henceforth all phones should charge using micro-USB, and that should see the end of the tonnes of power-adapters produced and thrown away every year.

Apple’s iPhone doesn’t use the universal charger, of course, because Apple has invested way too much in its proprietary iPod/iPad/iPhone connector, and in any case at the other end of the iPhone cable, there’s usually a USB connector, so it’s universal at the other end.

But look what Nokia’s done on the N8. Just like every other phone maker (except Apple), it’s put in a standard micro-USB adapter for data. It’s on the side of the phone. But while other phones, including Blackberries and HTC Desires, use the micro-USB for power as well as data, Nokia doesn’t.

The N8 has the tired old 2mm Nokia adapter socket on the bottom. On the plus side, this does mean you can use previous Nokia adapters to charge it. On the minus side, the Nokia jack is fiddly and vulnerable to getting bent, and generally it’s not even as good as micro-USB!

I feel petty going on at this length, but Nokia’s refusal to adopt the universal charger – after it signed up to it – could just be symbolic of the way it tends to ignore the rest of the world.

[[As you can see from the comments below, other people doubt my results here. I have been made aware that I’m reporting something that appears to vary from the published Nokia specification, but I assure you, when I plugged a working micro-USB charger into the N8, there was no indication it wsa charging. It is possible that the production N8 models will charge that way. I can only say that the phone I had definitely did not indicate it was charging over USB.

The Nokia E81 which has been my main phone for the last year certainly doesn’t charge over USB, and as you can tell, I’ve not been enjoying the 2mm jack it does charge with. At first sight it looks as if the N8 is following the same pattern, but some of the helpful comments have pointed out, the N8 also includes the ability to act as a USB host, which could explain why it still needs a separate charging socket (to charge the phone while loading data from a USB device).  I think there is more to find out here, but whatever we do find out, I’m still disappointed to see a non-standard charger hanging on here, even if there’s a reasonable product decision behind it instead of “arrogance” – Peter Judge]]

This

If Nokia does support USB charging, I initially did don’t understand why it has built in a separate power connector and supplied a non-standard power adapter as well – Peter Judge ]

Symbian is still clunky

My first reaction to the phone OS is disappointment. I don’t know how much of a change I expected in the Symbian operating system, but there’s not much altered. To be honest, it’s unreasonable to expect anything major, as it would be very hard to utterly change the user interface at the same time as solidifying the OS enough to turn it loose as open source.

What greets you on the N8’s home screen is very very like what I saw on the N97’s home screen – an interface that a colleague described as “a set of fridge magnets”.

Symbian^3 is supposed to be more of a social networking creature, with multitasking widgets busy in the background. Maybe, but we found it fiddly to add apps and change widgets around, and the OS’ insistence on pushing Ovi at us made us feel Nokia was trying to push us into a walled garden with fewer flowers than Apple’s App Store.

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Peter Judge

Peter Judge has been involved with tech B2B publishing in the UK for many years, working at Ziff-Davis, ZDNet, IDG and Reed. His main interests are networking security, mobility and cloud

View Comments

  • Retard---You CAN charge over usb or mini plug. If you don't know what your talking about you should keep your "opinions" to yourself. Dumbass.

  • Your article has at least 1 glaring error, which is a HUGE error.

    The microUSB port on the Nokia N8 not only handles data connection from a computer, it also handles CHARGING (your claim that is doesn't is wrong), and it also handles OTG USB - meaning with a supplied cable you can connect the N8 direct to USB flash drives.

    So, this means Nokia gives you 2 different charging options for your device...Nokia's pin chargers, and microUSB charging.

  • Wow, a whole paragraph on how the phone wont charge via USB when it actually does in addition to having a separate charger. For someone who obviously had the phone in their hand you really did your research. Another incorrect and seemingly baseless review to ignore.

  • Did you really use the N8? Did you just said it can't charge thru USB? All reviews I read said that IT CAN. 4 pages of waste of a review then. My 10-year old nephew would have done a better review.

  • Thank you for your comments.

    I can only say that the phone I had definitely did not charge over USB. I checked it, and I am quite able to tell, and I don't think we need to be rude about this.

    It's possible that the phone I had was an earlier pre-production model than the ones you have apparently all seen. Or maybe there was some fault in it. I made it clear that anything in my review might be down to having a pre-production model, and will be interested to know if this was the case.

    I will update my review to say that others apparently have different results - and strong feelings on the matter! I'd also be grateful for links to these reviews you mention.

    Also... if Nokia DOES let the phone charge over USB.... why does it provide its own proprietary charger as well?

    Peter Judge

  • My information on the USB charging is from the Nokia (Australia) site under Specifications > Connectivity. As the phone seems to be made to not require a computer connection, I think the two options is a great idea. Next time you are at work ask how many people have a Nokia charger on them, than ask how many have a mini USB cable!

  • "I don't understand why it has built in a separate power connector and supplied a non-standard power adapter as well" - Peter Judge

    Just shut the #%^^ up, ok? Having a really bad review is enough and you just updated it worse. Stupid, stupid moron.
    Isn't having 2 ways(USB and power adaper) to charge a phone a really, really, great idea??

    Do yourself a favor by removing this terrible review, get a new job and STFU. PLEASE.

  • "I don't understand why it has built in a separate power connector and supplied a non-standard power adapter as well" - Peter Judge

    Just shut the #%^& up, ok? Having a really bad review is enough and you just updated it worse. Stupid, stupid moron.
    Isn't having 2 ways(USB and power adaper) to charge a phone a really, really, great idea??

    Do yourself a favor by removing this terrible review, get a new job and STFU. PLEASE.

  • Hey judge..u said something about why will nokia supply us with a charger if u can charge it via usb!! Well the same reason blackberry and samsung are doing it!!I bet u don't even own a mobile!

  • Thanks again for your further comments.

    Jason - I checked and I'm the only one in my office with a Nokia charger. There were a total of five micro-USBs when I asked, from HTC and Blackberry phones.

    I don't buy the idea that Nokia is any sort of standard, and don't get how they sign up to the universal charger and then don't deliver it.

    Yes - I see the website that it will charge over micro-USB - but I begin to suspect they dropped thisbecause the USB connector can also act as a host.

    I still don't see any confirmation that it does charge over USB in reviews - my N81 certainly didn't.

    Thanks @duncan, for the point about USB hosts, my CMS keeps refusing to publish your thought though...

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