Head to head: The Nokia N97 vs HTC Hero
It's.... Nokia's Symbian flagship vs HTC's Android flagship... Fight!
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Although the form factors of the N97 and Hero are slightly different, in that the former has a swivel-out qwerty keyboard, there's still much to compare here. And I'm not just talking about the Apple iPod-esque white colour schemes. The overall size of each is similar, both have similar target markets and have similar social ambitions, both are currently flawed, and both are flagships for their manufacturer.
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Let's see how the two devices stack up, spec by spec and feature by feature:
| Device | Nokia N97 | HTC Hero |
| Weight, dimensions, comments | 150g, 117x55x17mm (19mm at points), definitely 'smartphone-sized', not 'phone-sized'! | 135g, 112x56x14mm (21mm, if you take the big 'chin' into account), the chin looks weird but actually makes the Hero very secure when held one-handed. |
| Screen/mechanism | Double-jointed alloy hinge with solid ribbon cable barrier | Fixed screen, no moving parts |
| Display | 640x360 (nHD) transflective TFT, with resistive touch layer, bright, not too bad in bright sunlight | 320x480 TFT, with capacitive touch layer, almost unreadable in bright sunlight |
| Processor/RAM | 434MHz/56MB free (without Facebook widget) after booting. Speedy for most tasks, you have to hit the N97 with large web pages and multiple widgets to hit the RAM limit and start slowing things down | 528MHz/80MB free after booting, speedy for most tasks but slows down as you load up widgets and applications |
| Text input | Three row QWERTY keyboard, somewhat condensed layout, space bar optimised for the right thumb and most punctuation on functioned keys or dedicated symbol grid. Also on-screen T9-style keypad entry. | On-screen virtual QWERTY keyboard, portrait mode only in most applications. Writing aids help word entry, but text entry is fiddly for passwords, names and punctuation. |
| Base OS | Symbian OS 9.4, plenty of heritage, very function-rich | Android 1.5, responsive and modern, but incomplete in places and still feels a little unfinished |
| User interface | S60 5th Edition, largely tried and tested UI concepts, but with some distinct quirks for touch. Works well with d-pad and QWERTY keyboard, somewhat surprisingly, apart from the lack of a 'Ctrl' key and the resulting clumsy way copy and paste is implemented. | Sense UI front-end (home screens and 'scenes' [e.g. Home, Business, Social]), plus numerous re-skinnings of basic Android elements. As with Windows Mobile and iPhone keyboards, the text entry elements often obscure the main entry forms. |
| Firmware updates | Over The Air or via PC Suite/Updater. User Data Preservation. Current firmware state = buggy. | Via PC-hosted updater utility, thought to wipe the internal disk of data, so backups needed. Current firmware state = buggy. |
| Application set highlights | Ovi Store, Share online, File manager, Podcasting, Quickoffice viewers (editing version available as a paid upgrade), S60 PIM, Podcasting, Dictionary, Zip manager, Drawing, N-Gage game client, numerous Web 2.0 web site widgets, including Accuweather, Facebook, Qik, Boingo, YouTube, etc. Google Maps and Google Mail are free add-ons from google.com. | Android Marketplace, Quickoffice viewers, Footprints (instant geotagging utility), Google Talk, Google Maps, Google Mail all built-in, Peep (Twitter client), Stocks widget, Teeter (marble game), Weather widget, YouTube client |
| Web browser | Webkit based, Web next-gen, v7.1, with adequate Flash support, including video | Webkit-based, basic Flash support, videos play very haltingly |
| Navigation | GPS with Ovi Maps, with full voice route guidance on ad-hoc subscription model (first 30 days free though), GPS reception currently a little flawed, awaiting new firmware (etc.) Digital compass | GPS with Google Maps, no turn by turn navigation. Decent GPS signal, plus digital compass available. |
| Camera (stills) | 5 megapixels, Carl Zeiss optics, high quality, dual LED flash, superb results in average-to-good light conditions, camera glass scratch problems ruin LED flash photos though | 5 megapixels, average sensor, slightly washed out results, no flash, produces very poor results indoors. Focussing happens after pressing the trackball and the shot is taken 2 to 3 seconds later, making capturing a non-static subject tricky! |
| Camera (video capture) | VGA, 30fps, very clear for objects over 2 metres away(!), defocussed for close-up objects, audio is very good | CIF, 15fps max, very disappointing quality, audio very poor |
| Audio | Stereo speakers, moderate volume, tinny/narrow frequency output, excellent through headphones | Loud mono speaker, decent quality for music, good through headphones, though no EQ control |
| Video | MP4/WMV videos play back well, also BBC iPlayer compatible in the UK | MP4/WMV videos play back acceptably, no iPlayer support |
| Electrical | microUSB data and charging, 3.5mm audio jack with TV out, 1500mAh battery | miniUSB data and charging, 3.5mm audio jack, 1350mAh battery |
| Network specs | Quad band GSM, Tri band 3G | Quad band GSM, Dual band 3G |
| Wireless specs | Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, FM radio, FM Transmitter (surprisingly useful, for playing music and podcasts in the car) | Wi-Fi (auto-connects, iPhone style), Bluetooth |
| Capacity (Gigabytes) | 32GB internal mass memory, plus microSD expansion (under the battery cover) | microSD expansion (under the battery cover) |
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I know I'll get shouted down for being biased, but, just as for my N97/Touch Pro 2 head to head, the Nokia N97 simply outguns the opposition - here by an even bigger margin. it's not all about specifications, of course, and I've tried to put real world observations in where necessary. But in this case, the specifications don't lie - the N97 simply does most things better and for longer than the Hero. Whether it's playing music or taking photos or handling email or browsing the Web or.... simply making phone calls, the N97 wins out.
Both devices are flawed at the moment and both are awaiting a major update - yet even here the N97 wins, since its update will be over the air and won't disturb your data (hopefully). The HTC Hero does have its strengths - there's a brave attempt to include social messaging within the fabric of the phone - it asks for Twitter, Flickr and Facebook logins when you set it up - yet it's a little half hearted - there's not even a Facebook widget or application included out of the box.
Being smartphones, both the N97 and Hero are fully extensible with third party applications, though again the Hero can't catch up - the third party software scene for Nokia/Ovi is just as 'vibrant' (read 'loads of apps, most of which are unspectacular' - but that's another rant for another day) as that for the HTC Hero and Android. And a number of the star turns (e.g. Google Maps & YouTube) are common to both anyway.
Ultimately, the Hero is a cool toy for the mobile professional, while the N97 is a serious attempt at a 'multimedia computer' (to use Nokia's term). Yes, you currently need to make a few (temporary) allowances for the latter to fully take on its role, but you also need to be patient with the Hero - I experienced several application crashes and some functionality is just not there yet in its 'out of the box' state.
Still, the Hero represents the current state of play in the Android world, with an ever-improving base OS and an innovative and highly customisable homescreen and widget set-up by a manufacturer. It'll be interesting seeing where this has got to by 2010 - combine it with a decent QWERTY keyboard and we'll have ourselves a real contender.
Steve Litchfield, All About Symbian, 11 Sept 2009
Published by Steve Litchfield at 17:46 UTC, September 9th 2009
Categories: Hardware
Platforms: General, S60 5th Edition
Feature Discussion
It's true but it' not fashionable to say so.
Whoever designed the Hero package with that bent chin must be a practical joker surely? What an awkward shape to have to pocket. That's the stupidest piece of design I've seen for a long time.
Having picked the Hero to pieces over the last week, I think my comparisons are fair. The device is simply very weak in some areas. Whereas the N97 is potentially awesome and held back at the moment by memory restrictions, a few bugs and a dodgy camera glass shutter.
I liked the comparising , trying to get away from the bias of all day commercial pushing .
Keep on doing the work !
:) Regards jApi NL
The Hero isn't laggy at all and is a pleasant change from the aging Symbian OS which needs a complete overhaul.
Another one that can't differentiate between Symbian OS and S60.
Nothing much wrong with Symbian OS.
- the N97 was the reason (test drive for three weeks), why I bought the HTC Hero
- the HTC Hero is the reason, why I consider going back to Nokia (most likely the N900 as I can't stand S60 anymore)
And the long:
The N97 is a disgrace to Nokia and N-Series (although it fits nicely as the successor of the N96 catastrophy), and while I loved the screen, the camera and some snappy performance, the half-cooked firmware just killed the experience for me. Cannot believe, there are no "phone managers" (whomever has the responsibility for a released phone) being fired at Nokia. You just can't treat your flagship like this.
On the other hand I cannot imagine the HTC Hero not lagging for someone. With around 600 contacts and above 100 sms, the HTC Hero (or Android?) is dubbed "lagmaster" in my dictionary from now on. Give to it the 10% call drop rate, the mandatory recharge around 3pm, the subpar camera and it is futile to try to love the things which are truly great about the Hero. Not when I cannot make a phonecall in a snap (neither in 30 seconds).
However, Steve, take another look at the Android Market. I think it is more vibrant than Ovi Store. (Astrid and Locale comes in mind, as two everyday treats.)
Nothing is or will ever be better than a NokiA as far as he is concern.
No wonder Nokia is going down in flames.
Instead of innovation they spend their money paying sites like this to spread their propaganda. As if it is gonna change anything.
Talk about losers!
I got the HTC Hero on a free upgrade just to play with. In a few hours it won me over completely. The UI is well t thought out and a delight to use. Apps are linked together so emails, texts and Facebook details are linked ti the contact they relate to. The battery life is equal to the N97 (people getting poor battery life are running notorious background apps such as Locale). The touch screen is so much nicer that the resistive of the N97, responding to very light touch. The N97 wins on camera and sound output but that is all. However A2DP Bluetooth support is so much smarter on the Hero that cordless, portable speakers work intelligently and give way better sound than either anyway. Synchronisation with Google of calendar and contacts just happens. It's brilliant.
Moreover I have been sing S60 and have been a fan of N95 but now i think s 60 needs a change about the way it looks like even with the s60 5th edition there is nothing new than the Touch feel I mean Icons look the same and menu are in the smiler way so here is my opinion if i have to choose a s60 5ht edition devise i will go with samsung Omnia HD at-least i can have a better camera and a better touch screen with a better build quality of course.
For me the design of N 97 is all crap, I personally liked the 5800 and would love to get my hands on the new E 72 and N900.
And guys please stop praising S60 find the draw backs as well then only you can improve.
Regards
Sandy
I think that HTC did a stupid thing when they released the phone before the newest update, but hopefully some reviews will test the phone with the new software. And when it comes to the facebook app... yes it has one.. came out last week :)
The main problem with the Hero is that it needs some attention. In order to make it smooth one needs to run an apps killer from time to time (I do it 2 times a day) which takes about 3 secs.
And the battery life... well, that is what I miss from Nokias devices, the battery runs for maximum of 1,5 days and with my music usage I have to charge it every night. But then again iPhone is the same..
btw... Nokia devices music players will never win against a device that has Spotify in it ;) (ok its coming for symbian also in the future, but for now)
ankero
For example in screen displays you say:
N97=640x360 (nHD) transflective TFT, with resistive touch layer, bright, not too bad in bright sunlight.
Hero=320x480 TFT, with capacitive touch layer, almost unreadable in bright sunlight.
What would you define as a scale to which you could apply to those two statements? What is the difference between "not too bad in bright sunlight" and "almost unreadable in bright sunlight"? First off, in bright sunlight you would cup your hand over either device to make it readable. Secondly by saying what you did, you are showing your bias in very clear colours.
Given a choice between a transreflective TFT screen and a capacitive screen, I go for the latter as it is much clearer and needs a human-touch to activate it. I would say that this is 1-0 to the Hero.
In the next section about processors and ram you are wrong again. Perhaps you have a dodgy Hero or its just your bias showing up again, but my Hero does not slow down once all the widgets are going. I also popped a class 6 SDHC card in and it zips along at a surprising speed. So not only is the hero quicker than the N97, but it is getting a firmware update very soon to make it even quicker! 2-0 to the Hero.
Text Input, I love the onscreen keyboards of the Hero. Anyone who buys a touch-screen device with a physical keyboard, IMHO, is a bit of a whimp! The software controlling the suggestions that pop up as you type with the Hero is excellent and make text entry (even with a full QWERTY keyboard in portrait mode) easy and painless. The N97 is going to break. How long it will take is a matter of time, but that physical keyboard with its definate clunk will break. 3-0 to the Hero!
The Ovi store is rubbish. I talk from experience, I upgraded to the Hero from an N95. Ovi store for the N95 is appauling. The Android market (v1.5) is a little difficult to find what your after, however it is well populated and an update and improvement is on it's way. So to me, that looks like 4-0 to the Hero.
I wont bother going on, just like you I could pick faults in the N97 and show how biassed I am in favour of the Hero. Somewhere between the two of us the truth lies, however I would suggest that it lies closer to the Hero than the N97!
Symbian, S60 and Nokia could all soon become synonimous with the word Dodo. Symbian is definately a deadend. I suggest you start searching for a catchy URL that incorporates the word Android in it as it will be the future, whereas Symbian is going the way of the past.
So even Nokia are moving away from symbian in their 'true top end' mobiles. Feeling like your getting boxed in to a long corridor with no exit? That would be symbian and its imminent death is just around the corner!
sorry to say that, but your comments show that IMHO you do not seem know very well what is really going on:
- you mix up Display technologies (transflective vs. reflective) with touch input technologies (resistive vs. capacitive).
- you never heard about maemo but care to judge.
- you are talking about the death of Symbian OS around the corner - which is by factor 3 the world market leader in mobile OS.
- you call me whimp. I will not buy anything without a physical qwerty.
To me this sounds not very much based by facts :)
Best regards,
Corwin
Sure, AAS does have a general Symbian/Nokia bias, but that's to be expected, but they have hardly been uncritical of Nokia recently...
Maemo (whatever it is) is the linux based OS that Nokia used on the N800 and N810 and now its successor the N900. They have been selling Maemo devices for years.
Nokia have announced the new Symbian/S60 devices N97 mini and X6.
And this is moving away from Symbian?
Nokia have included cellphone connectivity in the latest maemo based device, the N900 which will take some sales at the top of the range, but is pitched principally as an Internet tablet.
The Symbian roadmap is laid out and available for all to see, it involves the QT front end which will develop away from S60 (and Maemo will be going QT too) but Symbian is here to stay according to the horse mouth.
Another post suggested Nokia is "going down in flames", and that somehow Steve Litchfield is responsible.
I have to read AAS just for entertainment value of laughing at some of these people.
>>Does anyone take Steve seriously anymore?
More and more people, actually, if subscriptions to my Phones Show and traffic to AAS is to be believed....
>>Instead of innovation they spend their money paying sites like this to spread their propaganda. Talk about losers!
Nokia don't pay us a penny. Would be nice if they did, mind you, in view of the editorial space we give them 8-)
>>vs. Handango InHand). It'd be interesting to see AAS biting the hand that feeds it, and personally I'm curious about which hand would end up being bitten.
I've never been a Handango fan, so will let Rafe jump in and attend to this!
>>Hero rocks , more to add Hero has got a lot more potential as it carry the solid Android
Both devices have lots of potential, but the N97 delivers more functions out of the box, IMHO.
>>And guys please stop praising S60 find the draw backs as well then only you can
We've criticised S60 often here on AAS, suggesting many ways it could be improved/tweaked. At heart, Ewan and I are rabid Psion/Series 80 fans anyway 8-)
>>Ok, sure Hero has some flaws but since the new update all of them are past history.
Glad to hear it. I'll be revisiting this head to head once the N97's update is also available.
>>smoother. Of course Steve could have done some work and try out the custom ROMs that people have built
No, no, no. I don't 'do' unofficial baked ROMs or device hacks. I try to review things as they are 'out of the box', for real world new users.
>>The main problem with the Hero is that it needs some attention. In order to make it smooth one needs to run an apps killer from time to time (I do it 2 times a day) which takes about 3 secs.
Indeed. Like Windows Mobile, going so over the top on multitasking that EVERYTHING stays running all the time has its own drawbacks and hit on battery life. Symbian OS's way of doing this is about right, IMHO.
>>This guy needs to find a new sponsor so he could stop advertising about crappy nokia
Exactly where do Nokia sponsor me? They haven't sponsored anything I've done for well over six months now and they certainly don't sponsor AAS.
>>He is the only reviewer on the planet who thinks the n97 is better then the htc hero
I doubt that VERY much.
>> next month he will be saying the n97 mini is better then the iPhone
The iPhone 3GS is STUNNING and I'd love to own one. But I'm not rich enough. Not many people are.
>>N97=640x360 (nHD) transflective TFT, with resistive touch layer, bright, not too bad in bright sunlight. Hero=320x480 TFT, with capacitive touch layer, almost unreadable in bright sunlight. ...By saying what you did, you are showing your bias in very clear colours.
Not at all. The N97 can be read in the sun, the Hero can't. I was TRYING to explain the difference and obviously didn't do it clearly enough. Quantatively, if you take the Nokia N95/N96 and iPhone as 10/10 sunlight readability, the N97 would be about 7/10 and the Hero about 3/10. Capacitive means NOTHING for readability without a transflective layer behind it.
>>Symbian, S60 and Nokia could all soon become synonimous with the word Dodo. Symbian is definately a deadend.
Hmm..... And exactly how does Nokia's massive dominance of the phone world(wide) market share and Symbian's massive dominance of the smartphone OS world(wide) market share fit into your 'dodo' theory?
>>If symbian is so great, why does it appear that Nokia is moving away from it?
They're not. They're expanding their platforms. And expanding their use of Symbian. Both at the same time. It's Series 40 which is gradually being phased out, over the next 5 or 6 years.
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