MWC 2013: Nokia unveils new 105 and 301 featurephones, shipping soon to Kenya for $20 and $85 respectively
Two weeks after Nokia
announced a new Asha 310 dual-SIM smartphone for Asia, the Middle East, Africa
and Brazil, the Finnish mobile phone giant has lifted the lid on two new feature
phones on the opening day of Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona.
Nokia 105
Running on the Nokia
Series 30 platform, the Nokia 105 features a color screen and will be available
in cyan or black models. It will serve as the successor to the Nokia 1280
(which has a black and white screen), which shifted in excess of 100 million
units since it was launched in March 2010.
As with the 1280, the
new Nokia 105 will be aimed primarily at emerging markets and it will go on
sale around the world, including China, Egypt, India, Indonesia, Nigeria,
Russia, Vietnam and other markets in Africa, Asia-Pacific, Europe and the
Middle East.
During a pre-briefing in London last week, TNW was told that the 105 is expected to go on sale at the end of Q1 2013 for around $20 (€15) before taxes and subsidies.
The handset will
feature an FM radio, speaking clock and built-in flashlight (which beams out
the top of the device), as well as “up to” 35 days on standby (12.5 hours talk
time). We had a brief hands-on with the device and, well, it was extremely
lightweight. It could actually serve as a fairly reliable second handset for
those looking for basic mobile phone functions and who won’t have access to
charging facilities for extended periods.
It features a
1.45-inch ‘true color screen’, and unlike the recently announced Asha 310, only
comes in a single-SIM model. It will also come with Nokia Life, which serves up
tips on education and health, as well as entertainment topics, though is only
available in India, China, Indonesia, Nigeria and shortly Kenya.
Nokia 301
The second handset
officially announced today at MWC was the Nokia 301, which runs on the Nokia
Series 40 platform and features 3.5G (HSPA) and a smart camera.
Similar to the 105, the 301 sidesteps touchscreens to offer an alphanumeric keypad but this one sports a much larger 2.4-inch screen. Indeed, while it is still a feature phone, it certainly leans much closer towards the ‘smart’ fraternity.
The Nokia 301 features
a 3.2MP camera with a range of image-capture, editing and sharing options,
including ‘panorama’ for wide-angle snaps and group photos, letting you stitch
together individually shot photos to create a single scene. It also lets you
snap five frames in a row by clicking once, thereby giving the change to pick the
best of the bunch.
One particularly
interesting feature was the self-portrait mode, which helps users snap
themselves with the rear-facing camera (there isn't a front one), with voice
prompts guiding the user to position the phone correctly without needing to see
the screen. You can see our demo of this feature here:
Additionally, users
can post photos directly from their gallery onto social networks, and share
other content using Slam, which was first unveiled back in November for its new
206 and Asha 205 models. Slam works by transferring content such as images or
contact cards to an adjacent Bluetooth-enabled phone, without needing to pair
the devices.
The handset allows
YouTube streaming, while apps such as Facebook, Twitter and WhatsApp will also
be made available, while a ‘lite’ version of Mail for Exchange lets users check
work email and sync their calendars and contacts.
The Nokia 301 should
cost around $85 (€65), and will come in single and dual-SIM models. The
single-SIM should offer standby time of up to 39 days, while the dual-SIM
promises 34 days standby, with talk time of “up to” 20 hours. Oh, and it will
come in five different colors – cyan, yellow, magenta, black and white.
The 301 will be
available from Q2 2013, and will be available in more than 120 countries in
Africa, Asia-Pacific, Europe, India, Middle East and Latin America.
Meanwhile, stay tuned
for all our coverage from Mobile World Congress which you can follow here, and
where Nokia is expected to be making at least one more (bigger) mobile phone
announcement. It might even have ‘Lumia’ in its title, you never know.
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