Nokia might be pushing at the high end of the smartphone world with its Lumia 800 and Lumia 710, but the company also has a budget series, Asha. The Nokia Asha 201 is designed for the chatterbox.
And
costing around £65 SIM-free it sounds like a steal, with its QWERTY
keyboard just crying out to be typed on. Our sample came from Vodafone,
which sells it for the even cheaper UK price of £45 on pay as you go.
At
that price you clearly have to expect some less than stunning
specifications. Probably the lack of 3G and Wi-Fi will put many people
off immediately. And then there's the small screen (320 x 240 pixels),
and the rather old hat Symbian S40 operating system that holds
everything together. But
that low price beckons, and there's a quoted seven hours of 2G talk
time from the battery to lure you too. You've got various colours to
choose between depending on where you buy from, with eye-watering shades
of green, blue, pink and orange all in the mix as well as more
standard, and less frightening black and white. The
Nokia Asha 201 is a smallish handset considering it totes a mini QWERTY
hard keyboard, and light too, thanks to its plastic shell. At 105g and
measuring 115.4 x 61.1 x 14mm, it's a good size and weight for small
hands and pockets. We bet that youngsters are high on its target list. The
build is reasonable, but not outstanding. The plastic feels solid
enough, but on our white sample we could see the join between the
pearlescent white backplate and the edges of the phone, which we found
irritating. There's
a microSD card slot on the right edge, under a hinged cover. You'll
need to use this to boost the 10MB of built-in storage. Other than that,
all the ports and connectors are on the top, with the bottom and left
edges clear. So,
the top edge has headphones connector, USB port and a connector for the
tiny round pin Nokia mains charger. No, you can't charge over USB. There's
no volume rocker or shortcut button for the 2MP camera. Meanwhile, the
front of the Nokia Asha 201 houses a physical mini QWERTY keyboard and a
nice arrangement of buttons. The
central D-pad has a ring where the top and bottom edges move you
through the main screen (it's not a touchscreen), while a press on the
right edge takes you to the calendar, on the left edge to messaging.
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