With the Nokia Lumia 920 weâve been promised a hero device for Windows Phone 8, and indeed it has been defended several time before its release by Nokia and Microsoft â" in so many words. But is Nokiaâs Nokiaâs brand power enough to make us believe the hype? This is supposed to be a âfundamental shiftâ right along with the wave of Windows 8 touchscreen devices that are currently on their way to retail stores and homes right this minute â" is it time for Nokia to shine?
Hardware
The Nokia Lumia 920 is almost exactly the same device here on AT&T that it is internationally, close enough that youâll see some reviews just titling their articles âNokia Lumia 920â³ without the AT&T note. Because of this, Nokia wins serious points for keeping their industrial design standard at least here with this device. The Lumia 920 is a monster of a handset, certainly not paper-light the way its competition is, and not making any qualms about being thick, either â" but it is rather beautiful.
Just as youâll see me mention later in the review regarding the software on this device, I must note that, used in a world without competing devices in my backpack here to compare to, this machine is amazing. As it stands, the competition will not let go of our subconscious: the advertisements for the iPhone 5, the Galaxy S III, and the whole DROID RAZR family (on Verizon, in this case) are present in our visual environment without end. The two items youâre adopting here instead of âthinnestâ and âlightestâ are Windows Phone 8 and Nokia, your two new best friends. Have a peek at the column âSmart device specs are over, long live the ecosystemâ to explore this idea further.
The pillowy features of the casing that makes up the Lumia 920 as well as the bright color that makes up the bulk of the case are comfortable and fun. Nokia aims for a crowd that wants their smartphone to stand out as entirely unique amongst the many black and white smart devices on the market â" and it does just that. HTCâs own Windows Phone 8X has a bafflingly similar approach that youâll find we also had a relatively pleasant experience with, but Nokiaâs âsignature designâ here feels just about as true to their brand as any device on the market.
The display on the Lumia 920 is absolutely gorgeous. Itâs got all sorts of fancy terms running around in it like âClearBlackâ which is supposed to bring you super-deep blacks and âPureMotion HD+â for latency reduction â" all of it adding up to one lovely experience. You have âguaranteedâ 60FPS animations with PureMotion HD+ (if you need it) and the colors are true throughout the whole of the display experience â" and this is just about the smoothest experience weâve had with the Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 dual-core processor under the hood, and thatâs saying a lot. Itâs most certainly the most fluid experience weâve had with Windows Phone, without a doubt.
Youâve got a 4.5-inch IPS LCD display here, mind you, with a resolution of 1280 x 768 pixels across it, this bringing in one of the higher standard pixels per inch densities on the market. Right up near the top of the list in the world right now, in fact, with 332 PPI beating out the iPhone 5âs 326 PPI and the Nexus 4âs 317.6 PPI â" itâs not quite the HTC J Butterfly (aka the DROID DNA) with 440 PPI, but itâs certainly sharp!
Working with the device on a daily basis is rather enjoyable, if only because it feels really trendy to carry this machine around. Itâs bold, it extremely solidly put together, and itâs fun to use. This isnât a device Iâd recommend buying someone who is hesitant to carry a smartphone in the first place â" itâs made for people who love to stand out. The device loves to stand out so much that it doesnât sit flat on a table, it wants to wobble around and dance â" it does this both visually and physically, mind you.
The camera shutter button can be long-pressed to turn the camera on straight past the lock screen â" you donât have to press anything else to make this happen. This is a big issue for a lot of people, especially those who have kids or pets they want to take photos of on the run. Lucky you, too, as this machine is made to catch kids running around in the dark in photo form â" more on that in the shot-blasting section of this review.
Software
While we do have a full Windows Phone 8 review separate from this Lumia 920 post, you should know that Nokia provides just about as unique an experience on their devices as Microsoft allows. With their own suite of apps like Nokia City Lens and Nokia Music, youâre getting an experience thatâs simply not offered on any other Windows Phone 8 hardware brand. Because of the Nokia experience, the Lumia family is a Windows Phone 8 environment in and of itself.
If youâre pumped up about Windows Phone 8 and want to run with a company thatâs made the effort to be unique in this space â" unique in a good way, that is â" then Nokia is your only choice. This is unlike Android which still suffers from a stigma that exists around non-Nexus smartphones because Google wants developers to have a âpureâ experience on devices like the Nexus 4 â" but just like Samsung is doing with the Galaxy S universe, so too does Nokia bring a healthy family of apps and experiences here to Windows Phone.
One of the greatest things about Windows Phone shines clearly here with the AT&T version of the device â" if you donât want an app, you can just delete it. This should seem like a rather simple thing, but given the competitionâs unwillingness to allow such a thing without hacking their smartphone devices, Microsoft deserves a high-five for bringing it on again here â" if you donât want the always-excellent AT&T U-verse Live TV app in your library, you can simply toss it.
That said, this device provides a rather good collection of apps right out of the box. You can head to Nokia Music to listen to some tunes for free, AT&T has a barcode/QR-code scanner on the device straight away, and Office is here too, ready to bring you full document reading and editing as well as connectivity to Office365 on the web as well. You really donât need to download anything if you donât want to, this device is prepared to act on its own.
Itâs Nokia City Lens, Nokia Drive+ (Beta), and Nokia Maps that really make this experience a special one though â" and Nokiaâs been clear about that from the start. We saw this maps experience for the first time all the way back at CTIA 2012 and itâs only gotten better since then â" and real, I should say. Here in the real world, these location-based apps work. Nokia Maps hasnât lead us astray once, and the augmented reality involved in City Lens remains magic â" and most importantly, works exactly like Nokia said it would â" rather lovely.
Nokia Music is fun to use â" itâs still in more of an infant stage than it is part of a real ecosystem weâd support up and down, but it does work. If youâve already got an Xbox Music Pass, you probably wont end up using Nokia Music, but if you donât, itâs certainly worth trying out the free streaming action Nokia provides here first. Purchasing music from the Microsoft Store still works great, and the live widget showing what youâre listening to as well as the quick-access to your currently-active tracks with the physical volume button is useful as ever â" no other platform provides such a simple and well-working solution for smartphones as far as flipping through tracks goes.
Windows Phone 8 is an absolutely beautiful mobile operating system in both aesthetics and usability. Itâs certainly not perfect â" but if itâd come out back in 2007 and wasnât attempting to live up to the monster presence of both iOS and Android, it very easily could be the top mobile operating system in the world right this minute. As it stands, the biggest obstacle in Microsoftâs way, and the biggest factor you might want to look out for, is the fact that developers have yet to dedicate themselves to Windows Phone OS en masse â" not enough to tip the scales, as it were.
But over the past two years weâve seen Androidâs own âAndroid Marketplaceâ as it was called not that long ago turn into the Google Play multimedia environment and gain the support of just as giant a following in the developer universe as iOS has. There is no argument to be had at the moment for would-be detractors from Androidâs viability: their developer tipping point happened long ago, theyâve got all the apps you could possibly want. Windows Phone isnât there yet â" but itâs survived this long â" it certainly stands a decent chance.
Camera
This device comes with PureView â" Nokiaâs way of saying that theyâve dedicated their best workers in the imaging department to create a fabulous media experience. Whatâs that mean in the real world? It means that when youâre taking photos here, youâre going to have a difficult time taking something thatâs absolutely terrible. This cameraâs mix of hardware and software create a situation in which youâre going to be able to take still photos even with a shaky hand and will be shooting video with lovely results even with a little stutter in your fingers.
The colors can be odd â" while most of the time weâre getting photos that look good, often they donât appear to be âcorrect.â Have a peek at our Nokia Lumia 920 camera hands-on post (with bonus comparison to the Samsung Galaxy S III and see how diverse the photos can be. These color variations as well as the end result of photos that with one device appear to be much sharper than the Lumia 920 mean that weâve got software at work here that attempts to create for you a finished image â" not just something raw, but one that always looks âgood.â
Above youâll see three photos of the same subject matter â" notice how theyâre each ever-so-slightly different in their temperature and sharpness. While this has a little to do with the photographer and non-machine-precision, itâs not impossible to see how the Lumia 920 is processing differently â" the photo thatâs warmest was taken with the physical camera shutter button while the other two were taken with a tap to the screen.
Nokia offers a new way to work with your camera outside the traditional 3rd party app taking control of the camera â" Lenses that you download from the Windows Phone store that sit in a folder inside the camera. Of course the end result is the same: youâre still entering a separate app each time you work with a new environment, but itâs a more integrated and enjoyable way of doing things in the end anyway. Below youâll see an example of Cinemagraph, a âlensâ that allows you to make a gif with just one moving part from a short series of photos by holding your device still â" rather fun!
(Click image to see animated gif)
Finally have a peek at a gallery of photos here as well as an example video â" this device has amazing photography and video abilities, but weâre not done with it yet. Stick around SlashGear for additional comparisons to other devices in our Nokia Lumia 920 portal for sure. (See more examples in the larger gallery at the end of this post as well.)
Battery
The battery on the Lumia 920 is going to last you a full day if you let it â" what I mean is if you ram through it with nothing but on-screen action for hours at a time, youâll knock it out in less than a a couple of hours â" but thatâs not easy to do. Normal usage will give you at least a dayâs worth of web browsing here and there and photography on the regular. You might want to consider turning on the âBattery Saverâ mode, too, for extended life â" this option turns off all apps when youâre not actively in them and has everything but phone calls and texts coming in when your phone is asleep.
Wrap-up
The Nokia Lumia 920 is clearly the most unique Windows Phone 8 experience on the market today. Though the selection of Windows Phone 8 devices out in stores right this minute is extremely limited (the Lumia 920 itself isnât in stores at the time this review is being published), this unit will remain solid for some time to come. Nokia has made it clear that theyâre behind this device in a big way, and that their partnership with Microsoft makes their brand the one to team with for a âtrueâ vision of the Windows Phone 8 experience.
And trusting that talk of an âexperienceâ is quite suddenly much more important than it ever has been in the past. Microsoft has just launched Windows 8, Windows Phone 8, and Windows RT, each of them working with one another to create a family that Microsoft has bet it all on. Your trusting this device is inextricably tied to your trust of Microsoft as well as Nokia through the future. Remember â" itâs the ecosystem, not just the hardware, that youâve got to consider.
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