Introduction
The Nokia XL goes where Asha never dared, 5" screen territory.
Windows Phone itself only recently got there, but the Nokia X family is
really an extension of touchscreen Asha "smartphones" rather than a
failsafe in case Windows Phone get messed up.
We say Asha "smartphones" because that's what Nokia chooses to call
them even if no one else would. Even the Finns eventually had to
acknowledge the limitations of platform - QVGA resolution kept screens
tiny and the app ecosystem never had much promise.
The Nokia X software is based on the Android Open Source Project,
just the OS without any of the Google stuff. The more advanced software
has opened doors to bigger, higher resolution screens and modern,
up-to-date apps, plus more powerful hardware.
The ease of customization also let the company create a unique, Nokia
experience with a blend of Nokia and Microsoft services filling in for
the missing Google goodies that we are accustomed to seeing on Android.
Here's the summary of what the Nokia XL has to offer:
Key features
- Quad-band GSM, GPRS, EDGE
- Dual-band 3G with HSPA
- Optional dual-SIM support, dual standby
- Nokia X software platform 1.0.1, based on the Android Open Source Project (4.1 Jelly Bean)
- 5" IPS LCD WVGA capacitive touchscreen, ~187 ppi
- 1.2GHz dual-core Cortex-A5 processor, Adreno 203 GPU, Qualcomm MSM8225 Snapdragon S4 Play chipset
- 768MB RAM
- Proximity sensor, accelerometer, display auto-rotation
- 4GB internal storage (1.2GB available to the user)
- Nokia HERE maps with free lifetime voice-guided navigation and offline maps support
- Data-efficient Nokia Xpress browser
- Nokia MixRadio
- Nokia Glance screen, double-tap-to-unlock
- 5MP camera, FWVGA video recording @30fps; 2MP front-facing camera
- microSD card support (up to 32 GB)
- Wi-Fi b/g/n connectivity
- FM radio
- Bluetooth v3.0
- Standard microUSB port, charging
- 2,000mAh Li-Ion battery
Main disadvantages
- Large and heavy for a 5" device
- Low screen resolution
- No Google services (Play, Gmail, Maps, Calendar, Drive), you can't even sync contacts
- Budget-grade hardware may result in system bottlenecks
- Poor video capture
- No smart dialing
- No document reader
The specs aren't meant to impress but, as an Asha alternative, the
Nokia XL prioritizes price over features. Indeed, the XL and its
siblings are cheaper than the revered Moto G (barring temporary
discounts and promotions).
We shouldn't discount the value of Nokia's premium services - HERE
maps with free offline navigation, MixRadio, Glance Screen and
double-tap to wake (trademark features that go way back). A familiar
brand name also counts for a lot, considering the Android low end is
getting populated with small brands with only the Lumia 520 / 525 to
fight back.
While the Nokia Lumia 520 has dropped to stunning prices of €100,
that's not without some subsidies from Nokia, Microsoft or both to boost
WP market share. The Nokia XL and its two shorter siblings instead
deliver hardware at its actual price, no catch.
It's a race to the bottom that in the long term will only get fiercer
as cheap smartphones become "good enough". Is the Nokia XL "good
enough" or perhaps even "better"? Flip to the next page and begin to
find out.
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