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Nokia N97/N97 mini: part 3 - Camera, Multimedia and wrap-up

In part 1 of this review series, I looked at the hardware, design and build quality in the Nokia N97 and N97 mini. In part 2, I looked at the OS, The Interface, The Apps. Now, in this, the final review part, I look at the camera, multimedia and then I wrap up with my verdict of both devices.

N97 mini camera

Camera

Let's be clear about this. Once upon a time we had smartphones with 1.3 megapixel cameras that took half decent photos in good light, capable of being printed out at 6" x 4" with only a little embarrassment. Then came the 2 megapixel N70 which took things to a whole new level, quality wise, and then the N93 and N73, both with 3 megapixels and auto-focus. Then the ground breaking N95, with the first phone 5 megapixel camera, producing shots that (after the initial firmware was fixed) were at the time stunning.

But it's all relative. Critics of phone cameras over the last five years have rightly pointed out that in anything other than optimal light conditions, a standalone camera with far bigger lens with take far better photos than (even) an N95. And, taking back to back photos using the N95 and the N97 phones featured here, I was struck how advances in camera processing algorithms in the intervening years have meant that the N95's images are definitely inferior, on average. 

And yet, we're now spoiled. The Nokia N86, with its focus (pun intended) on photography, the Samsung i8910 HD, the new Sony Ericsson Satio, and others, all 8 megapixels or more and with bigger sensors, bigger apertures, brighter flashes, and so on, have all provided us with a new benchmark. Whereas claiming that the N95's camera could replace a standalone was only true under certain conditions, this new breed of phone camera gets us a whole step closer to the claim being valid.

With the N97's 5 megapixel unit being largely comparable to the N95's, camera algorithms aside, where does that leave us in terms of camera performance on the N97 and N97 mini? Firmly back in casual snap land, it has to be said. Now that the 'bar' has been raised elsewhere, the imperfect 5mp photos don't seem at all special - certainly good enough for that special one-off photo you needed to grab quickly and with the N97 the only tool to hand, but not good enough for anything remotely arty or semi-professional.

There are a couple of other factors, too, unique to the N97 units, but have a look at some example photos first: (click each to enlarge or download it full-size)

Click to download or enlarge Click to download or enlarge 

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A small photo set taken today in weak winter sunshine. Note the camera glass/lens flare in the second shot - this was on the N97 mini and was down to the various layers of glass and plastic and not due to explicit scratching

Click to download or enlarge Click to download or enlarge 

Two shots in very low light, with the N97's camera doing surprisingly well, pointing towards a decent size aperture and sensor

Click to download or enlarge Click to download or enlarge 

Two macro shots in weak sunlight, good detailing here

Click to download or enlarge Click to download or enlarge

An ad-hoc indoor shot (from SEE 2009 and taken at 3mp), typical of something you'd take because the phone was on you and it was spur of the moment. Right, some great colouration in this winter sunlight shot

With the original N97, the camera protective shutter problems (still evidenced in units bought new in Nov 2009 that have been sitting on shelves for a few months) mean that it's common to see scratches on the camera glass. These add lens flare when shooting with flash or into the sun and, as described in part 1 of this review, have to be fixed by Nokia replacing the offending glass and mechanism with a fixed part. The N97 mini also has an issue with shooting into light, with the very exposed camera glass collecting and refracting bright light sources in unwanted ways, as shown in the second photo above.

Regardless, I'm still more than happy with the N97 camera unit in terms of ad-hoc quality. And, in controlled environments, for semi-pro shots as well, for Internet use. The dual LED flash does a good enough job for close subjects when called upon (e.g. down the pub), but as a better photographer than me once remarked, when was the last time a flash photo on any camera phone made its way into your 'best of' album? I'll not veer down the road of ranting about needing Xenon flash here, but..... The dual LED also works for 'fun' night time videos, though the quality is ultimately unsatisfying and you also run the risk of blinding your subjects!

In terms of interface, nothing has changed since that seen first on the 5800 - which is a shame. The confusing mix of pop-up panel of actions and traditional 'Options' menu is a downright mess and Samsung and Sony Ericsson's camera phones both win out here. More work needed here, Nokia, in terms of minimising screen taps and increasing usability.

Camcorder

As with stills/photos, we came quite a way in this decade, from phones which could only shoot video at 176 by 144 pixels at 15 frames per second through to full VGA at 30 frames per second, through to .... oh, hang on, we're still there. In fact, video quality on the N97 and N97 mini is arguably worse than that shot by the N93 in 2006 and the N95 in 2007, with lower quality encoding and 'inifinite' focus, meaning that any subjects nearby (e.g. people) are blurry.

Here's an example clip, shot this morning on the N97 mini in the default 'High quality, widescreen' setting (there's a full VGA setting as well, which adds extra vertical resolution, but you'll get the idea):

As you can see (despite YouTube's efforts to add extra artefacts), there are distinct problems with lens flare (again), with the encoding of areas of greenery and with general 'mushiness'. In contrast, video from the older N95 and N93, and video from the new N86, is much crisper, thanks to dedicated camera/graphics electronics. It seems that trying to encode MP4 purely in software is part of the issue (along with the lack of pre-set focus in video mode) and the end result is that, again, video capture on the N97 and N97 mini is strictly for 'fun' use or for only in an absolute emergency. Again, the 'bar' for phone video capture is higher than this.

Video playback

There are numerous routes to video playback on the N97 and N97 mini. Here are just a few:

N97 playing back iPlayer programme

Although holding the N97 in landscape mode in both hands works well for short periods, the automatic 'propping up' of the screen when the keyboard is slid open works even better, alleviating the need for an N96/N86/N900-style kick stand. With speakers (see below) on the bottom-front corners, video sound is then directed towards the viewer.

Overall, the N97 variants were fine for my multimedia needs, but less experienced users may well grumble when 'that trailer' that they downloaded doesn't play on their brand new 'multimedia computer'. Nokia, discuss and then go program. I'm also going to call Nokia out for their overly confusing 'Videos and TV' front-end app - having downloaded a video (e.g. via iPlayer), it's then often five or six taps to work your way through 'Videos and TV | My videos | Downloads' - wouldn't a simple flat file list be so much quicker and simpler?

Music playback

S60's Music player hasn't changed significantly over the last few years - it still produces great sounds, is competent without being flashy at organising music and is utter rubbish at handling album art. Regarding this last point, I can see no reason at all why Music player shouldn't do something with 'Windows Media player' album art JPG files and why it can't also do something with iTunes artwork. The programming involved is fairly trivial, yet 90% of my music shows up in S60 Music player with a default icon instead of album art.

Screenshot Screenshot
Left: where, oh where is all my lovely album art? Right: an impressive array of smartphone accessory drivers 

Still, it's the music that counts and I've no complaints here. Both N97 variants come with decent in-ear headphones and the sound quality is excellent. There's A2DP, of course, for sending music to Bluetooth stereo headphones, plus the 3.5mm port also handles 'TV out', letting you pump music through a composite cable to a Hi-Fi.

Then there are the stereo speakers. And I'm going to be critical again, I'm afraid. Nokia showed with the N95 and N95 8GB, with the 5800 and, arguably even with the N96, that they can produce a smartphone with speakers that are pleasant to listen to. Noone's asking for High Fidelity here, just something that doesn't hurt the ears when listening to a little light music or a podcast while doing the washing up. The N97 and N97 mini's speakers are very treble-heavy, to the point that the sound produced can be be described as 'piercing'. I'd much rather have had something quieter and with better tone.

I would have mentioned listening to Internet Radio in the previous paragraph, except that it's AWOL, sadly. My hunch is that the guy behind this application left Nokia some time ago and they haven't found anyone who understands his code... This is a major unique selling point of S60, as far as I'm concerned, and Nokia should give getting Internet Radio back on track some priority.

There is FM radio, of course, but this is patchy, only picking up a couple of stations in any particular area, and also requires the headphones to be plugged in, to act as the aerial. As a result, I don't 'tune in' very often. Nokia Music Store is here, should you feel the need to grab DRM-laden tracks over the air - it's not a bad system for emergency use (e.g. you're on the way back from a concert and want to grab the artist's latest single), but the use of DRM will come back to bite you at some point in the future - when you switch phones or desktops or both - so it's not something I'd recommend wholeheartedly.

Photos

As with videos, the front end to Photos is somewhat over-complicated, but it works well enough for casual use, providing folder overviews and touch-flicking from photo to photo. There's good integration with Ovi, Flickr and Vox, but that's as far as it goes - you'll be researching third party tools such as PixelPipe if you want to automate spreading your media a little further.

When viewing a photo, there's no double-tap or gesture to zoom in - instead, you tap to bring up a zoom bar and then drag the zoom handle up and down (or use the side-mounted volume up/down buttons) - it's all a bit clumsy and a spot-based (i.e. you know what you want to zoom in on) system would work so much better.

Screenshot 

Zooming is also slow in that the current view is crudely zoomed (and thus becomes blurry), and then, a few seconds later, up comes the higher quality rendered version. I'm guess it's done this way to save on RAM, but it does rather leave you explaining to your friends "And here's the view from my window - I'll zoom in on that tower. No, hang on, it's coming. It'll look clearer shortly.... hang on..... there we go". Yet another casualty of the relative (designed) shortage of RAM in the device?

Gaming

With no graphics chip inside, expectations haven't been great in this department for a couple of years now. When the N97 was launched, the S60 5th Edition version of Nokia's N-Gage client wasn't ready, but it duly came over the summer. And then N-Gage itself effectively got cancelled, in that plans to merge titles into the existing Ovi Store were announced. With the result that the N97 mini also doesn't ship with N-Gage on board. All rather ironic.

Screenshot
N-Gage still showing up in the N97 classic as an option.... 

There are plenty of games in the Ovi Store, of course, but there are only a handful ( a dozen or so) of titles that are really worthy of installing and playing over the long term. And they're somewhat swamped by Java titles that aren't properly optimised for S60 5th Edition and by trivial titles with little ongoing appeal. Still, you should be able to find a title or two to help you while away some free time - just don't expect iPhone-quality titles or quantity.

N97 mini and N97

Wrap up, Nokia N97 and Nokia N97 mini

As with every other handheld and smartphone since the dawn of time (1995), the N97 and N97 mini aren't perfect devices. The N97, in particular, was beset by issues at launch, from buggy and incomplete firmware to a defective GPS and camera slider. But remember that here I'm reviewing the two devices as they are now, off the production line in November 2009. And, viewed in that light, the N97 variants present different attributes for different owners.

The N97 'classic' (as this will no doubt start to get called) now works generally very well, with the v20 software fairly intuitive and (relatively) fun to use, with the GPS now at 70 to 80% the efficiency of that in other models and with the camera protective slider replaced with a redesigned back section. The N97's main weaknesses are:

In contrast, the N97 mini feels like a far more polished product, with extremely high build quality, no creaks and a stainless steel back cover. It's also, significantly, smaller, narrower and thinner than the N97 classic, making it more suitable for mass market use. And the weak GPS and challenged internal disk has been beefed up significantly (256MB more). Thus solving all the issues of the N97 classic? Well, yes, but the N97 mini's weak points are:

On balance, most people would take the N97 mini when given the choice of the two models - it's simply a better phone. BUT, the six million dollar question for the power-user readers of All About Symbian is whether it's worth an N97 owner paying again (or at least taking a small loss by selling on eBay) to switch to the N97 mini? I'd say not. With v20 firmware and a trip to a service centre, the N97 classic is now working well and I don't see a pressing need for most owners to change over - at least not to another 97-variant.

There are plenty of other options for people who do feel the N97 has let them down, of course. The N86 has a far better camera, better GPS, and has a host of comparable gadgets, but at the expense of a much smaller screen and no qwerty. The iPhone 3GS has a slicker UI and superb app ecosystem but has multitasking issues and, again, no qwerty. The HTC Touch Pro 2 has a better qwerty keyboard but is also large and has, arguably, clunkier software. The Nokia E75 has a better qwerty keyboard, but far smaller screen. There's no obvious choice on any front though.

I'd advise N97 owners to sit tight, enjoy their still-being-upgraded smartphone investment. And I'd advise someone eyeing up buying one of these two phones to go for the N97 mini unless they really, really need the larger screen, memory and FM transmitter.

Steve Litchfield, All About Symbian, 17 Nov 2009

N97 mini shows lower, sleeker rear profile

Published by Steve Litchfield at 9:14 UTC, November 16th 2009

Categories: Hardware
Platforms: S60 5th Edition

News Discussion

Hih
Comment: Bravo! Well done Steve. Nice wrap-up. :icon14:
Unregistered
Comment: The N97 mini is much more good-looking and classy than the N97 classic. I love the rear view of the N97 mini. It's so elegant and sexy. I'd go for the N97 mini.
Steve_R
Comment: Has anyone else noticed that when you upload a video from the N97 to YouTube in 4:3 ratio it comes up as High Quality? Yet when using 16:9 it does not.

I thought it may just be my N97 that was/wasn't doing it, but it would seem that the Mini is suffering the same problem too.:rolleyes:
slitchfield
Comment: The 16:9 videos don't have high enough pixel count for HQ. They're only 4:3 videos with the top and bottom chopped off - why would you want to shoot at a LOWER resolution?
Unregistered
Comment: Great review. I do have a question though. Currently there are some great deals available on the N97 'Classic', and therefore can be had for up to $300 less (180 Pounds) than an N97 Mini. Would the Mini be worth that much more if I was trying to decide between these two?

Thanks,
Adam
slitchfield
Comment: [quote=Unregistered;447725]Would the Mini be worth that much more if I was trying to decide between these two?[/quote]

Eek, £180 is a lot. No, get the N97 classic. In fact, go for whichever is cheaper generally. Both have their plus points, after all!
Abushaheed
Comment: While the article is well written (as usual) and does give the potential buyer a lot of useful information to consider, the conclusion lacks any mention of the Samsung Omnia as a possible alternative to both phones mentioned in the article. It seems to me that although the Omnia hd lacks significant firmware support and shares some of the weaknesses of the N97 (limited C: storage, S60's inconsistent UI) that it is in many other ways (RAM, Screen, GPS, Camera, Video play back/recording) superior to either of these phones. After all, firmware updates just fix the bugs and offer improvements that should have been taken care of BEFORE launch! Of course all manufacturers are guilty there!
slitchfield
Comment: [quote=Abushaheed;447730]the conclusion lacks any mention of the Samsung Omnia as a possible alternative to both phones mentioned in the article. [/quote]

That's because it's not an alternative, IMHO. An alternative is something I would recommend to a friend and, in Samsung's current confused support state, I wouldn't wish the (otherwise superlative, specs-wise) i8910 HD on my best friend - he'd simply be phoning me up every day asking how to do stuff or work round problems or omissions. 8-)
Unregistered
Comment: Very truthful review, thanks. The only thing that bothers me is comparison made at the end. I think, WM software is much superior to Symbian in most angles (just as with Iphone there are tens of tasks, that Symbian just can't do, but WM can). Secondary IMHO best device of Symbian is Omnia HD, which is not only better in multimedia (camera, playing etc.), but in overall perfomance comparing to n97 - even typing on onscreen keyboard, at least for me, is faster then on n97 hardware one.
snoFlake
Comment: Good review Steve, really enjoyed it and I think a very balanced and insightful summation.

I'd love to spew more hatred at my N97 becasue I think it's represented hideous value for an alleged flagship, Nokia have failed to get on top of the situation and so many of the problems were blatant even pre release. I questioned the restricted C: and under specced RAM but we were given assurances by Nokia and most of the review sites that all was well in the release write-ups. But I think the reality of day-to-day usage has exposed the hardware paltform as inadequate and as you observed the money saved by Nokia vs the anguish (and frantic extra coding) has to be a terribly poor business descision (unless they wanted to make the N900 and Satio look good).

The software was appalling at release and I can't see how after being released over 6 months after announcement and on a very similar platform to the 5800 these problems weren't caught before it got out the door. I realise they were rushing to get it out to challenge iPhone but still what have they been doing with S60 for the last 2yrs? So it's a shame that enhancements that Nokia had promised at release (like kinetic scrolling) have got caught up in just being seen as bug fixes or stuff that should havce been included at rerease and of course they must've diverted resources that could have been used in making more "candy" into making the pesky thing work.

However the Mini does look like an all round improvement and more assured renditioning of the device and maybe they can rescue something out of this platform but I think they will have to let the price drift a bit (look at the Classic prices being quoted on this page). It's undoubtedly a missed opportunity and those that bought into the Nokia Kool Aid that this was their iPhone beater are going to be pretty sceptical next time they claim something similar so they have squandered a lot of goodwill at an inopportune time in the business (ie when they're being genuinely threatened).

Will I upgrade/get rid of my N97 - no I agree with you (although got mine at half price - mind can't get more than that on ebay/recyclers anyway) I'm just going to sit it out mainly cos having changed it I'm on SIM only contract now for another 11months. But I think I'm going to feel a slight pang of would've could've should've evey time I use it. It's going to have to impress me mightily for the next couple of years (I hate changing phones) for me not to be very wary of a Nokia (my first) handset again.
Unregistered
Comment: If the omnia HD is getting recommended, I feel that the satio should get recommended to. I had a satio to test and I have just fallen in love with it. It's media capabilities and experience with it are fantastic.
Unregistered
Comment: [quote=Unregistered;447732]Very truthful review, thanks. The only thing that bothers me is comparison made at the end. I think, WM software is much superior to Symbian in most angles (just as with Iphone there are tens of tasks, that Symbian just can't do, but WM can)[/quote]

Please can you elaborate and explain what theses tens of tasks that Symbian can't do are?

WM has always been the black sheep and still is more than ever.
Unregistered
Comment: Script for a jesters tear by Marillion in your you music library....excellent
Unregistered
Comment: Nokia for years have kept doing the same idea,release an mobile then a couple of months later release a more up to date mobile,the mini N97 looks just the right size an built better than the N97,hope Nokia stop this trend as its very annoying for buyers as you do not want to worry all the time you buy a Nokia mobile then a better version comes out,N73,N95 an N97,all did the same but why couldn"t we get a more up to date N86 as well
malerocks
Comment: [quote=Unregistered;447757]Nokia for years have kept doing the same idea,release an mobile then a couple of months later release a more up to date mobile,the mini N97 looks just the right size an built better than the N97,hope Nokia stop this trend as its very annoying for buyers as you do not want to worry all the time you buy a Nokia mobile then a better version comes out,N73,N95 an N97,all did the same but why couldn"t we get a more up to date N86 as well[/quote]
1st you criticise Nokia for always releasing improved versions of their existing phones and then you say you want them to release a improved version of the n86. :) You just contradicted yourself. :)
FYI, the n86 is an improved version of the n85 and was originally to be named as the n85 8MP - just like n95 8GB, n97 mini, n72 ME and so on.
Unregistered
Comment: just a little side note re the zoom on the picture viewer. Quite by accident i discovered you could zoom in and out using the volume rocker. This seems to be much easier the using the touch screen zoom control which is sometimes useless. But maybe everyone already knew this? I just noticed you didn't mention it in the review..
slitchfield
Comment: Hey, nice tip!! I'll amend the main review text as well!
TheUndertaker
Comment: well actually, the nokia's version of s60v5 real player supports

mpeg4 video upto nHD 640x360
h.264 mp4 video upto 320x240

and this applies to ALL of nokia's s60v5 devices, be it n97 or even a 5230. they all have the same 434mhz cpu and 128mb ram. hence they are all (strangely) capable of handling the same media types.

thats the reason why when you play mp4 h.264 videos, even if they are a little higher than 320x240, the player skips video playback. it is capable of playing these videos, but it might result in shuttering while playing these videos. hence the cap is set at 320x240 QVGA.
Unregistered
Comment: I am not able to find a pouch for my N97 which has a button type. With the normal magnetic type pouch, the camera will open automatically and active the camera which will result automatically unlock the phone. Could you please suggest a pouch which has button to close instead of depending the magnetic? Any way, your review is very very good. Thank you for your review. I am a N97 classic owner.

Mathews
Vincemy
Comment: Thank you, Steve, for the very good and detailed review.

I just bought my N97 mini about a week ago and I can't find the utility program for screen shot. Would appreciate if you could advise me where I can download the program. Thanks.
colin37400
Comment: The review fails to mention that the music player struggles to deal with a large amount of music on the E: drive.

This is a serious issue. I have 20gig on there and switching between lists in the music player can be v e r y s l o w. Sometimes literally five minutes between opening the music player and eventually getting to the album and track I want.

Not good enough for a device one of the main selling points of which is its 32gig internal memory.
malerocks
Comment: [quote=colin37400;447922]The review fails to mention that the music player struggles to deal with a large amount of music on the E: drive.

This is a serious issue. I have 20gig on there and switching between lists in the music player can be v e r y s l o w. Sometimes literally five minutes between opening the music player and eventually getting to the album and track I want.

Not good enough for a device one of the main selling points of which is its 32gig internal memory.[/quote]
Which is why you should go for the mini :) Hopefully, the phone does not have issues handling just a 8 GB disk.

But good point though.
Tomtomtom
Comment: Great review, thanks!

I'd additionally like to know how well the device handles documents (xls, doc, ppt, pdf). I currently own the N82 (which has served me very well) and on that device opening large office documents was simply impossible: either the sw would crash or scrolling/flipping pages would take forever.

Is the N97 strong enough to satisfyingly handle mid sized (20 pages word doc, 40 pages pdf) documents?

Also if someone could report on how well editing word doc's works (with paid sw), that'd be great!

I'm commuting daily and would love a small device on which I can read office docs and especially type some quick word docs every now and than, thus not having to lug around my laptop all the time.

Thanks,
Tom
Tomtomtom
Comment: Oh and: How's the battery life realy?

I've searched the web but answers are hard to come by. Some few complain about it needing several recharges to get through a day, others say it's on par with other phones.

Can you give us some numbers on how long it lasts under heavy and mild useage?

Thanks again!
JayTay
Comment: [quote=Tomtomtom;447978]Oh and: How's the battery life realy?

I've searched the web but answers are hard to come by. Some few complain about it needing several recharges to get through a day, others say it's on par with other phones.

Can you give us some numbers on how long it lasts under heavy and mild useage?

Thanks again![/quote]

For the N97 or the Mini?

My Mini lasts about a day with pretty heavy usage, some Ovi Maps, lots of browsing and Gravity and Profimail open on and off throughout the day. On average usage (browsing, Gravity and Profimail open sporadically) my battery is down to just under half by the end of the day.

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