It has the same keyboard spring mechanism as the Nokia N97 mini, but has like the N8 an anodized aluminium casing. All this is different from the bulkier and heavier E90.[3]
Compared to the Nokia N97 mini and E90, the E7-00 has a multitouchcapacitive touchscreen. Unlike the N8, N97 mini, and the E90, the E7-00 has an Active-matrix OLED (AMOLED) ClearBlack technology with a slightly lower resolution than the E90.[3]
Vlasta Berka, general manager of Nokia Singapore, Malaysia and Brunei, talked about the trend of users who are using their smartphones for business.[11]
Design
Dimensions
Size: 123.7 mm × 62.4 mm × 13.6 mm (4.87 in × 2.46 in × 0.54 in)
Weight (with battery): 176 g (6.2 oz)
Volume: 97.8 cm3 (5.97 cu in)
Keys and input methods
Full QWERTY keyboard
Home key, power key, lock key, camera key, volume key
Finger touch support for text input and UI control
On-screen alphanumeric keypad and full keyboard
Possibility to use capacitive stylus
Full screen handwriting recognition
Handwriting recognition for Chinese
Appearance
Anodised aluminium casing available in dark grey, silver white, blue, green and orange
Display and user interface
Screen size: 4"
Resolution: 16:9 VGA(640 × 360 pixels) AMOLED
16 million colours
Capacitive touch screen
Orientation sensor (Accelerometer)
Compass (Magnetometer)
Proximity sensor
Ambient light detector
Personalisation
Up to three customisable home screens: menu, widgets, themes, shortcuts, icons, customisable profiles (with an update of Symbian Belle you got a six home screens with some new and enlarged widgets)
HSDPA Cat9, maximum speed up to 10.2 Mbit/s, HSUPA Cat5 2.0 Mbit/s
WLAN IEEE 802.11 b/g/n
Capability to serve as data modem
Support for Microsoft Outlook synchronisation of contacts, calendar and notes
Memory
Internal memory: 16 GB, not expandable.
Operating frequency
GSM/EDGE 850/900/1800/1900
WCDMA 850/900/1700/1900/2100
Automatic switching between WCDMA and GSM bands
Flight mode
Connectivity
Bluetooth 3.0
HDMI
High-Speed USB 2.0 (micro USB connector)
Micro-USB connector and charging
USB On-the-Go
Standard 3.5 mm AV connector
FM Radio
Built-in wireless b/g/n connectivity adapter
Criticism
The Parliament of Finland bought 200 E7s in spring 2011; by late April 2012, over 50 of these phones had been serviced under warranty. Most of them were fixed by OS update [12]
The E7's battery is not user-removable,[13][14] although unofficial online tutorials on how to replace the battery exist.[15]
Being one of Nokia's first phone designs without a dedicated connector for charging, the USB connector in the E7 is also used for charging, and is a common point of failure.