Live photos of Nokia 7900 Prism
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Table of contents:
- Positioning
- Design, size, controls
- Display
- Keypad
- Battery
- Memory
- Camera
- USB, Bluetooth
- Performance
- Themes, applications, games
- Impressions
Sales package:
- Handset
- Li-Ion battery (BL-6P)
- Charger (AC-6)
- Wired stereo-headset (HS-82)
- USB data cable (CA-101)
- User Guide
Positioning
The Prism collection offers all fashionistas out there three phones – the more mass-market Nokia 7500 Prism and two senior devices – the Nokia 7900 Prism and its iteration, the Crystal Prism. Essentially, these handsets target women as their main audience, and while the Nokia 7900 Prism can qualify as a unisex model to a certain extent, so men can actually go for it, the Crystal Pink is heavy on pink and this very women-centric.
In our review on the Nokia 7500 we mentioned that the fundamental difference between it and the 7900 positioning-wise is brought about by the materials used and size, while the Nokia 6500 Classic is somewhat in between. In fact, the latter served as the prototype for the Nokia 7900 Prism, and the truth is, the list of differences between them is pretty shallow, however the 6500 Classic is versatile as far as its target demographic goes, whereas the Prism is a clear-cut feminine phone.
The maker never aimed t to make a mass-market solution for everyone; on the contrary, the senior member of the family was meant to drive the sales of the junior offerings. Basically, that’s how things stand these days, the Nokia 7500 enjoys some sales largely thanks to its elder brother, as not everyone can afford it – this approach to selling phone duos has been around for a while and usually works a treat.





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Nokia on the fashion market – marginal notes |
Design, size, controls
The Nokia 7900 Prism is available in two flavors – black and golden, however the front plant is always decked out in black plastic. The Crystal Prism, apart from a different rear plate, boast a faceted crystal embedded into the navigation key, which is a direct reference to the Nokia 8800 Sapphire Arte, where they used a synthetic sapphire. Unlike the Arte, though, the Crystal Prism’s fact sheet doesn’t specify what gem the phone retains, but it is still synthetic and thus has no real value to it. Rounding out the story about the color schemes, we can’t overlook the white edition of the Nokia 7900 Prism, and this time around it is all white, including the front fascia. Regrettably, it is a limited offer available only on select markets. As far as other bits and pieces go, we can expect new iterations and editions of the Prism collection, although there won’t be a great many of them – probably one-two new offerings at best.

















Display
The phone utilizes a 240×320-pixel OLED display measuring 2 inches from corner to corner; capable of up to 16 million colors (the same unit is retained by the Nokia 8800 Arte). Unlike the Nokia 6500 Classic (TFT), here the user is enabled to adjust display brightness. The display found in the Arte is pretty good and puts up a relatively bright picture.
Many were curious what can an OLED-display bring what a TFT unit is incapable of. The answer isn’t as clear-cut as you might think at first – it is more appealing largely to the fact that it consumes less energy, hence the ability to adjust display brightness, which the predecessors lacked. Compared to the Nokia 6500 Classic, the Nokia Prism’s display holds the upper hand not thanks to its brightness, but juicer colors; although they may seem less natural at times, they add up to a picture that looks smoother and a tad blurry, and thus more eye-candy. While the Prism’s display looks like a winner here, in real life, given its dark color schemes, you simply won’t see the difference.
The OLED display is a better performer under direct sunlight, plus the bundled ambient light sensor adjusts the screen’s backlighting automatically, rendering texts more readable, especially indoors.
The display accommodates up to 8 text and 3 service lines. The font is pretty big and certainly readable; its size can be altered.
Back to the table of contents >>>
Keypad
While idling, the Prism shows no captions on the keypad, presenting the user with a flat black surface, which makes the phone somewhat quirky and not like any other solution. By default all keys are lit in purple, although you can pick one of the 49 backlight colors in the settings. This is an unusual feat that first came along around 5 years ago in a handful of affordable models, but never made it to the mainstream (although they didn’t sport such a bevy of colors).


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Battery
The Prism utilizes a 830 mAh Li-Ion battery (BL-5P), rated for 300 hours of standby and 3 hours of talk time. In Moscow it lasted around 3 days with 2 hours of calls and up to 4 hours of music. It takes the Prism around 2 hours to charge up.

Memory
The handset ships with 1 Gb of bundled memory and no memory card slot. The Prism’s storage is divided up into sections for music, video, images and around 22 Mb for PIM applications – organizer, phone book, SMS messages.

Camera
The Prism packs in the same camera module as the Nokia 6500 Classic. This handset has a 2 mpx camera (CMOS) which is not that much by today’s standards, but it is still pretty much sufficient for a mid-tier offering. Unlike some solutions that come armed with 2 Mpix cameras, Nokia has decided not to bet on the camera part in the Nokia 7900, it is more of an optional feature here. This is why camera’s module picked for the Prism is one of the cheapest units out there, and provides pretty poor quality. Shooting in the dark with the Prism may give you a hard time, since the exposure settings go up even the slightest movements of your hands can ruin the shot. What is more, for the Prism “in the dark” is synonymous to a cloudy day outdoors.
- 1600×1200;
- 1280×960;
- 800×600;
- 640×480;
- 320×240;
- 160×120.
Two lower resolutions were added for creating photos that would fit as wallpapers for the display. Three JPEG compression types are supported: basic, normal, high. Considering the fact that photos do not blow your imagination away, it is better to go for the top quality, it won’t get any worse after all.
The shutter sound can be disabled, also there is a 8x digital zoom, but there is no reason to use it. You can save photos in the internal memory.
Some effects can be applied to the already made photos, should they be used initially – it is up to you to decide. Such effects as False Colours, Greyscale, Sepia, Negative, Solarize are available.
For those who love to shoot a lot of photos at once, there is special mode for you – the camera makes up to 3 shots at a time, all settings remain similar to those selected for the single shot mode, including the resolution. There is an auto-timer for self-shots.
Video. The handset allows recording video in 3GP format, available resolution – 128×96 pixels, or 176×144 pixels. There are three recording quality settings available. You can limit a recording’s length, but it also can be unlimited, so you will keep capturing videos until the memory runs out (memory card or internal storage). Effects can be applied for video just as for still images, they are all the same.
Video sample (3gp, 272 kb) >>>
Back to the table of contents >>>
USB, Bluetooth
USB. The Nokia 7900 comes with the microUSB socket, housed on the top edge of the phone. This socket is used for plugging in a data cable (the phone starts doesn’t start charging up, though). The vendor says the handset supports USB 2.0, and it does indeed, in the USB Mass Storage mode the USB connection offers 500-600 Kb/s (topping out at 800 Kb/s). This is slower than the Motorola RAZR2 V8, which also comes installed with the microUSB-socket.
Upon successful connection you can pick one of the following modes: USB Mass Storage, Nokia Mode (PC Studio) or Printing&Media. The 7900 also supports the MTP mode.
Bluetooth. The handset comes with EDR-enabled Bluetooth 2.0. The following profiles are supported:
- Dial-Up Networking Profile
- Generic Access Profile
- Generic Object Exchange Profile
- Object Push Profile
- Serial Port Profile
- Handsfree Profile
- Headset Profile
- Synchronization Profile
- Basic Image Profile
- File Transfer Profile
- HID (host) Profile
- Stereo Advanced Audio Distribution Profile
- Advanced Audio/Video Remote Conference Profile
The Bluetooth implementation is, as always, nothing to complain about, we encountered no issues with handling this type of connections. The stereo-headset also worked fine.
Back to the table of contents >>>
Performance
The phone is a typical offering for its generation – no bells and whistles here. Compared to Sony Ericsson’s solutions, the Prism is quite a mediocre performer.




Themes, applications, games
The handset boasts a number of themes that substantially alter its style, seem to be well-elaborated, meshing with the handset’s overall image. Coming preinstalled are around 9 themes, which, couple with the backlight colors, do a pretty good job keeping you content with how your phone looks.
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Impressions
The volume of the Prism’s polyphony is high enough to make sure you will hear it in various environments. While it sounds a tad muffled as opposed to phones enjoying two speakers, the Nokia 7900 Prism is still loud enough. The reception quality was never an issue with the handset either. The vibro alert is average strength-wise, but it does the job even if the phone is stuffed inside a pocket.
The Prism is a pretty decent fashion-conscious solution that can get women interested, all thanks to the light indicator and keypad backlight adding more value to the phone. Also among the positives are the handset’s materials and build quality. But since the Nokia 7900 Prism is more of a complement to the Nokia 6500 Classic, it should be viewed as a niche offering, which is quite potent at that, given its current price tag (320-340 Euro). In its turn, the Prism Crystal will retail for around 375 Euro when it arrives in April.
As far as designer solutions go, it is a very rare occasion when we actually manage to come up with either direct or indirect rivals to them, for they are designed by people with sometimes polarized tastes, making for differently looking phones and thus little to no overlapping of ideas and concepts. But to my great surprise, the Nokia 7900 Prism does have a brother in arms – the Sony Ericsson T650i that also comes with a variety of light effects for its keypad, yet only one color for the key backlight, sports a metallic casing (unlike the Prism’s patterned body, it is smooth), Prism-grade display, ring tones volume and functionality and a slightly better camera. Basically, they have a lot of things in common, down to their price tags. But the thing is, they are still different – while the Prism is a very women-centric solution, the T650i caters for the tastes of both men and women. That’s the difference and that’s what makes the Prism a better way to go for women. Other than that, the Nokia 7900 Prism has no direct or even indirect rivals, that’s why it will sell well among its target audience.


























































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