Nokia N85

Nokia N85 is a key product of the final quarter of 2008 and the first two quarters of 2009.
Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos

Let’s have a closer look at the positioning of N85. First of all, it’s meant to be a sequel to the musical N81 handset, claiming the throne of an ultimate gaming / music phone. The price bracket and target segment are all the same, as well as the starting amount of memory; on the other hand, every other aspect of functionality has been improved. Nokia N85 can also pass for a very good replacement to N95 8GB sporting almost the same functionality, yet implemented on a remarkably higher level. The same saying can be applied to the model’s positioning. The company are counting on N85 as the most likely candidate for becoming a mass market bestseller, massive investments being made into the promotional campaign. Nokia N85 has no direct competitors save for N95 8Gb, but in all senses the former is preferable. The price gap between N85 and N96 is going to constitute 100 euros, that’s basically how much you’ll be charged for the extra memory and the DVB-H unit. N96 doesn’t offer any other practical advantages, and N85 is obviously preferable for better materials, size, screen quality, design and battery life. A comparison article pitting N96 against N85 is already available on the site, we hope you’ve already had a chance to skim through it and come up with a pretty clear idea of how things go for these two models.

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos

Design and Ergonomics

Nokia N85 follows the style of N81, every corner and edge rounded, black glossy plastic stuck tight with the framing. This gives the hand a more comfortable, less edgy feel. The handset size is very modest, the measurements only counting 103x50x16 mm, which is slimmer than the wide and not as ergonomic N96. The casing is made from a glossy plastic, but it’s different from the one used in N96, it’s not as easily soiled and looks more expensive. Have a look at 6600 slide, and you’ll spot the analogy (except the latter’s having multiple metal parts). The style is maintained by an absolute smoothness of the buttons which have their markings automatically faded out in case a button is inactive in the current mode. At the same time, the buttons aren’t touch-powered and have a good mechanical feedback, though a bit too tight and not as perfect as in N81. The black N85 comes in two versions: one of them has the side edges and the back panel painted brown, the other uses violet.

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos

A small remark concerning the gadget design. According to the company representatives’ statements made exclusively for SMAPE.com, the current designer conception (N81, N85, N96 and the future portfolio entries) will go on existing in its current established form for an indefinitely long period of time, the metal parts traditionally reserved for Eseries gadgets. It’s hard to say how good or bad this thing is, we’d better stay neutral on this point and simply tell you a few more things on Nseries’ market perspectives. As long as the current design sells well, Nokia won’t come up with inventing something totally new.

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos

The quality of materials is very high, the assembly quality is next to ideal; there’s a slight play between the halves of the slider, being less than a millimeter, which is quite normal. The right edge of the casing houses the two-position volume control button, the camera launch / shoot buttons as well as the keyboard block slider. It now functions slightly differently from what we had before: the slider automatically returns to its initial position, unblocking the phone if it was previously blocked, and blocking it if it had been blocked.

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos

The left edge hosts only a microSD slot protected with a flash. The stereo speakers are shifted to one side, just like in N96. A variety of customization options like sound trajectory and special effects are available here. However, none of these tricks changes the sounding to much, the differences are minimal.

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

The upper edge has a microUSB slot, a power button and a standard 3.5 mm audio socket.

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos

The back panel of Nokia N85 is glossy, smooth and prone to growing worn spots and getting scratched. The elaborate pattern consisting of thin lines (which is a signature feature of the latest models by the company) helps to counter that. On the same surface you see the camera lens neighboring a dual LED flash. A 1200 mAh battery is concealed behind the battery bay cover. The inner surface of the battery bay cover hosts the FM antenna – take the cover away and the radio will refuse to work.

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos

Screen

The screen of N85 is identical in size to the original N95 (2.6’’) but bases off the AM-OLED technology. This helps to notch down the power consumption and gives a better looking palette. Oh well, the view angles also appear wider and the refresh rate is pleasantly high. On the whole, this screen is obviously better than the display of N95 8GB, - but don’t take this as an offense to the latter, its screen is just plainly good but N85 offers a perfection in this aspect. The high refresh rate is crucial for comfortable N-Gage gaming.

Nokia N85 photos_prezent Nokia N85 photos_prezent

Nokia N85 photos_prezent Nokia N85 photos_prezent

Nokia N85 photos_prezent Nokia N85 photos_prezent

Nokia N85 photos_prezent Nokia N85 photos_prezent

The image brightness is on a very high level, the traditionally available luminance sensor switches the brightness levels automatically depending on the environment. The maximum brightness level is stronger than in Nokia N96, though the colors aren’t as natural, rather sticking to an acid-like, overly vibrant palette. But on the whole this screen is actually one of the best screens available on the market.

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos

Keyboard, controls

The block of controls is remarkable for the availability of numerous dedicated media buttons which are rendered active only when you are working with the player – rewinding, play, pause, and similar features also found with Nokia N81 or N96. The only difference is that the dedicated buttons of N85 are totally flat and remain unseen until their markings are backlit in the active state. The buttons aren’t powered by the touch technology though, they’re simple mechanical units with a good feedback, bringing about almost no problems. Those are a great addition saving a lot of time and nerves when you’re about to spend a hour or two listening to your favorite music.

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos

A Navi Wheel is traditionally available, remaining active in all menus and lists. The sensitive area of the wheel is limited to a thin limbo running along the perimeter of the navigation element. Moving your finger clockwise or counter-clockwise allows for rapid playlist browsing in a corresponding direction. The light indicator sits right in the center of the Navi Wheel and can be easily turned off. It doesn’t carry out any special functions like a message or a call reminder, a feature still available on some older Nokia models.

Nokia N85 screenshots

The set of buttons residing on the moving part of the slider complement the controls surrounding the navigation button. The button markings change automatically according to the current mode: in the player mode, a total of four rewinding / play / pause / switch track buttons are active; in gaming, only the two central buttons can be used as controls; in the gallery, these buttons serve as zoom in and zoom out controls. The idea is close to what we see in some Motorola models, especially E8.

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos

The numerical keyboard is made from a solid piece of plastic; the buttons are very flat, yet have a great feedback and pose no practical inconvenience. The large size of the buttons eliminates the possibility of stray keystrokes. The keyboard backlight is of a bright white color, visible in any environment. The numerical keys are larger than on N96, the upper key row brings about no problems.

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos

Battery

Nokia N85 is coming with a new generation BL-5K 1200 mAh battery. It’s smaller than a standard Bl-6F battery with a same capacity, but doesn’t fit into the battery bay of N96, that’s a real pity. Combined with a power-saving OLED screen and the Feature Pack 2 platform, N85 has the longest playback cycle among all Nokia smartphones, even beating N78.

Nokia N85 photos

Nokia N85 battery
Phone Nokia N85 Nokia N95 8GB
Regular using 3,5 days 2 days
Multimedia cycle, video (3GP) 5:28 5:09
Multimedia cycle, audio (MP3) 26:45 10:27


Connectivity

The onboard Wi-Fi unit is served by a friendly WLAN Wizard which helps you to configure a web connection in no time. The options are rather few: firstly you are asked to create a connection, secondly you specify the default access point and thirdly you configure the network filter. The supported security standards are WEP, WPA and WPA2. The WLAN network detection timeout is also specified in the settings.

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots

The USB 2.0 wire data transfer speed reaches 4 Mbytes per second. The Mass Storage mode is fully supported, the user is free to choose in what way the handset will be used upon establishing a phone-to-PC cable connection: Mass Storage, PC Suite, Image Print, Media player. As long as the phone stays connected to the PC, the battery is being recharged. N85 is the company’s first smartphone sporting such a possibility. For instance, N96 doesn’t replenish the battery charge during USB sessions.

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Bluetooth 2.0 + EDR is available, supporting all the common profiles:

  • A2DP
  • Audio/Video Remote Control
  • Basic Imaging
  • Dial-up Networking
  • File Transfer
  • Generic Access
  • Generic Object Exchange
  • Handsfree
  • Headset
  • HID
  • Object Push
  • SIM Access
  • Serial Port

The A2DP support allows to use a wireless stereo headset, which worked just fine for us. The settings include the device visibility timeout and a list of blocked devices.

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

The Home Media application allows to interact with other devices using the UnPNP protocol was given a broader functionality in the new models starting from Nokia N81 (unlike the older N95 and N93). The earlier models only allowed to share the media content stored on the device, but now it’s also possible to play files accessible from remote sources right on the screen on the phone. We have tested this feature with a PC and it worked all right for us. Once the feature has been properly configured, a Broadcast Over Home Network option appears in the Gallery menu.

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Also, N85 is the first Nokia model two support a whole three WCDMA bands: 900, 1900 and 2100.

Hardware platform

The hardware platform of Nokia N96 cardinally differs from N85 and the rest of Nokia models, being a STn8815 Nomadics chipset by STMicroelectroncics. We were amused to watch incompetent people putting a huge equation mark between N85 and N96. N85 utilizes the same hardware as N78 and N81.

Nokia N85 photos

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos
Nokia N85 / N96

Nokia N85 photos Nokia N85 photos
Nokia N96 / N85

As seen from the test score, N96 displays a lower performance than N85 and a much worse one than N95 basing off OMAP 2420. The lack of a 3D accelerator is blatant in the JBenchmark 3D test. N96 lags behind in other tests as well. The gap may be accounted for by the use of a newly developed platform, while N85 employs a platform which has been through a long evolution of improvements and optimizations shared by Nokia N78 and N81 models. There’s little sense in repeating the de!--ions of this platform since it has already been dealt with in our review of Samsung i450. Despite the lags seen in the tests, N85 and N96 have identical audio quality, a bit above the sounding of N78 and a bit below than Samsung i8510 INNOV8. The audio quality provided by N78 seems to please the majority of the owners, so an even better sound is simply great.

Phone Nokia N85 Nokia N82 Nokia N96
Jbenchmark 1.0.1 Score 3232 5311 2796
Text 891 1419 710
2D Shapes 900 1303 682
3D Shapes 562 640 394
Fill Rate 369 336 224
Animation 510 1613 786
Jbenchmark 2.0.1 Score 548 568 358
Image Manipulations 244 410 182
Text 595 710 409
Sprites 470 520 365
3D Transform 1249 817 539
User Interface 576 476 398
Jbenchmark 3D HQ 195 973 155
Jbenchmark 3D LQ 380 1018 283
Triangles ps 43343 48330 34234
KTexels ps 3254 6393 2795
Jbenchmark HD Gaming Score 166 (5.5 fps) 91 (3.0 fps) 127 (4.2 fps)
Smooth triangles 110145 44190 68590
Textured triangles 82240 27310 56325
Fill rate, KTexels 2289 1107 2635

The model is running on the latest revisions of the Symbian operating system, namely ver. 9.3, S60v3 Fp2. There’s no support for the Fast Boot feature, though a full bootup cycle never exceeds 20 seconds.

Once the gadget has booted, there’s some 78 Mb of free user memory left out of 128 Mb in total. The same numbers are true for Nokia N78 and N96. The Heap and Jar sizes for the applications are unlimited. The device supports microSDHC cards up to 32 Gb, with a 8 Gb card arriving in the sales box.

The onboard accelerometer automatically switches the screen aspect depending on the smartphone’s physical position in space – everything’s identical to N96, N82 and other Nokias sporting this feature. The accelerometer functionality can be switched off at user’s will.

Nokia N85 screenshots

Software implementation

Nokia N85 bases off the S60 3rd Edition Feature Pack 2 platform. A comprehensive overview of the basic functionality provided by the platform is already available on the site so we won’t be repeating things once again in this article. The only noteworthy point is that the gadget comes with a variety of preinstalled games. Since Nokia N85 is marketed as a gaming smartphone, don’t be surprised to discover a whole ten games preinstalled on it, one of them being a fully licensed copy and the rest – demos. The high quality, large OLED screen provides for maximum comfort during gaming sessions. The preinstalled miscellaneous services are nothing very unusual – an online music store, a Share on OVI service and so on.

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

GPS

GPS is one of the hottest lines on Nokia’s priority list. Enormous amounts of money have been invested in this direction; multiple navigation companies were acquired and merged into the Nokia corporation, and the market expectations are amazingly high for the current year: a total of 35 million of GPS-equipped devices are estimated to be sold over the course of 2008, which is more than the whole market of navigation devices in 2007. No new Nokia smartphone goes without a GPS unit. Nokia Maps 2.0 is not just a cosmetic update but rather a comprehensive overhaul of the application’s interface. It grew to become more intuitive, informative and user friendly. Nokia Maps 2.0 is available for download at http://europe.nokia.com/A4984199


Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

A major addition is the dedicated pedestrian mode (Walk) which is an exclusive feature as stated by the company representatives. Pedestrian-friendly features include special voice reminders, step-by-step visual hints (e.g. the ‘footprints’), the onboard compass helps to indicate the wanted direction. The maps are incredibly detailed, displaying anything from highways to walking paths in a park. The compass needs calibration prior to starting work. The integrated accelerometer is what allowed for adding such a feature.


Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

The search interface is now improved, the search results can be sorted by a number of categories; a so-called quick search function is in the place, allowing for searching without calling on the context menu. Hybrid maps are a perfect addition to the two alternative viewmodes. The route calculation is done on the basis of the three values and can be dynamically rearranged in cause of sudden traffic jams; the map coloring is changeable between the day and night variations. Once GPS has been initiated, a small icon depicting a satellite is shown on the status bar at the top of the screen, that’s how you see when the positioning is being done. Nokia Maps 2.0 offers an impressive variety of features, keeping them together in a friendly interface which will never cause confusion to the newbies.


Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Multimedia Features

The multimedia player interface is pretty standard, showing no difference from Nokia N96 or N78, this kind of interface is common to all the latest products basing off the S60v3 Feature Pack 2 platform. The controls are very comfortable in operation, you can rewind, pause and play the tracks with the dedicated player buttons located on the upper half of the slider or the buttons around the joystick button. We had really no problems with the controls, the playback is easily controlled with a few taps (unlike in models which don’t come with dedicated player controls. For example, Samsung i8510 offers an even superior audio quality but it’s not too handy with playlists and track switching because of a lack of extra control buttons.

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

A total of five customizable presets of the eight-band equalizer give you unlimited power of tweaking and adjusting the sound to your liking. An eight-band equalizer is now commonly found almost with any multimedia device using FP2, while in the older days the equalizer normally would be a five-band one. The extra sound settings include balance adjustment, enhanced stereo sounding, bass boost and reverberation. A variety of content management options are available: sorting by performer’s name, album title, genre, repeated and random layback. The Album Arts feature allows for an album cover displayed all across the screen when a song from the album is playing. Actually S60 FP2 is remarkable for the best implementation of this feature. A number of visualization options are available, yet while you are watching the animation, it eats up some extra battery charge. The sound signal can be broadcast over a Home Media network. The Music menu item now has a Nokia Music Store subitem to be discussed in a later section of the article.

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

The following multimedia formats are supported by the handset:
MP3, WMA, Polyphonic ,XMF ,AMR (Voice Tag), AAC, AAC+, e-AAC+, Midi (SMF), SP-Midi, RealAudio 7,8,10, True tones, WAV and RA.

The audio quality provided by Nokia N85 is one of the best available from today’s market. It’s higher than N78 and N79 can offer and goes on par with N96. Some people whom we invited to test the audio quality of the two models claimed to have spotted a very slight difference, N96 allegedly sounding a bit more natural, however the difference, if exists, is simply marginal. Samsung i8510 remains the ultimate music phone, though, and it can’t be beaten by anything so far. That’s the best music solution and is going to remain such for about a year in advance, if not longer. On the other hand, the audio inferiority of N85 and N96 isn’t too big in comparison with i8510, thus making things complicated – a vast majority of the audience will probably never care about this slight difference in the quality of audio. Nevertheless the overall experience you get from using each of this models is apparently different. I8510 has the audio socket nested on the side edge, which makes it not too good for carrying in the pocket with the headset plugged in. There are no extra music keys, you always have to enter the player menu to switch tracks. N85 comes with two sets of extra controls, which makes a big difference. The continuous playback cycle is two times shorter with i8510. Also N85 offers a greater variety of music settings, a better looking player and an FM transmitter.

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

Nokia N85 screenshots Nokia N85 screenshots

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