Nokia has announced a pair of new Asha touchscreen phones, and made a point of labeling them as smartphones. So, what has changed?
Nokia has announced a pair of new Asha phones, the Asha 308 and Asha 309, which as touchscreen devices join the previously released Asha 305, Asha 306 and Asha 311. While we, and everyone else, referred to them as âfeature phones,â according to Nokiaâs press release, the Asha phones have earned âfull smartphone classification from global market research companies and analysts such as GfK and IDC.â
So, you may be thinking, the Ashaâs run Symbian Belle? Nope, the 308 and 309 still use Series 40 as their operating system, except itâs now called âNokia OSâ according to the specification pages on Nokiaâs website.
The press release continues to refer to the 308 and 309 as smartphones, but looking back at the release for the Asha 305, 306 and 311, they were âtouch screen devices,â with a âsmartphone-likeâ experience. What has changed about Series 40 between early June, July â" when Nokia still referred to it as a feature phone OS â" and now? Not much, as this is manipulative marketing at its best.
It has been a long-time coming too, as the new generation of Series 40 phones have been blurring the line between feature and smart devices for a while, and when Nokia sold its 1.5 billionth Series 40 handset it paved the way for the change by describing them as âsmartphone lite.â
Asha 308 and 309 features
Hereâs what you need to know about the new Asha phones. The Asha 308 is a dual-SIM variant of the Asha 309 and aside from this feature, theyâre both identical, so weâll concentrate on the 309. A 3-inch capacitive touchscreen is your window into the world of Nokia OS and it has a resolution of 400 x 240, while the little device weighs just 104 grams and measures 13.2mm thick.
Thereâs a 2-megapixel camera on the back, plus Nokia Maps, Wi-Fi, a microSD card slot and an FM radio are all to be found inside. The Nokia Xpress browser compresses webpages for speedier (and cheaper) browsing, thereâs access to an app store and a Facebook and Twitter app come pre-installed. Electronic Arts also provide 40 free games to download. Both Asha phones connect only to a 2G network.
While the hardware specification doesnât scream smartphone, the software is more convincing, and although itâs easy to sneer at Series 40, thereâs no denying it looks polished and really quite flash in the video below. To us, âsmartphone-likeâ is still the best description of the Asha range â" particularly for those without 3G â" but thatâs not going to sell any phones for Nokia, at least not where it counts.
Smartphones sell
Feature phone sales are dropping in the USA, but the Asha range isnât aimed at those with the means to purchase a Samsung Galaxy S3 or an iPhone 5, itâs for markets where those devices are either prohibitively expensive, or donât offer the right feature set â" dual-SIM for example. These emerging markets are prime Asha hunting ground, but for Nokia to do business, it must compete with endless cheap Android smartphones.
With the software looking its best and installed on full, capacitive touchscreen handsets with a cool, colorful style; the only thing left was to convince the public that theyâre buying a fashionable smartphone and not a feature phone thatâs one step away from the grave. A task which starts right now.
Nokia will release the Asha 308 and Asha 309 before the end of the year, and both will cost around $99.
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