Nokia X Android smartphone:
Review
By design, Nokia's new Android smartphones
will underwhelm users of high-end phones. The Nokia X line was created with
emerging markets in mind, so the company emphasized keeping prices low, meaning
the user interface is relatively simple.
The home screen resembles the one on Nokia's Windows-based Lumia
phones, even though it's Android underneath. But Nokia Corp. added a Fastlane
feature, a screen with quick access to your most-used apps. You get to it by
swiping from the left or right edge of the home screen or tapping the back
button at the bottom.
The basic Nokia X phone costs 89 euros ($122)
and has a 4-inch screen, measured diagonally, and a 3 megapixel camera. A X+
version with an SD storage
card costs 99 euros, while an XL with a 5-inch screen and 5 megapixel camera
goes for 109 euros.
Reduces the time spent on customizing gadgets,
getting the icons for the most-used apps on the main home screen. The nice
thing about Fastlane is that you don't have to spend any time on that. Your
favorite apps are just one swipe away - sort of.
The top of Fastlane shows you what's coming
up, whether that's alarms about to ring
or future events in your calendar. Below that are your recently used apps. The
ones you just used will be at the top, so you don't have to scroll down.
For some apps, you get information that normally comes with
notifications, such as previews of text messages or alerts that three people
have tried to reach you on WeChat, a Chinese social network. You see small
versions of recent photos and can tap for the larger version in the photo
gallery app. You see calls you missed, songs you heard and websites you
visited.
It could get overwhelming, so you can block
certain apps and certain notifications from appearing in Fastlane. In the
settings, you can also add a shortcut to one social network, such as Facebook
or Twitter.
That's where Fastlane can improve -
understanding better which apps I use most over a period of days or months and
creating a section at the top for those.
Why not make sure the most-used apps are
stored as favorites at the top of the screen? Nokia says it's considering that.
Likewise, if I haven't used something for
months after using it daily, Fastlane can assume I've grown tired of it and
automatically remove it. Myspace anyone?
Nokia doesn't plan to make Fastlane for its
Windows phones, and I doubt it'll extend it to rival Android phones, such as my
Samsung Galaxy S III. It's something it wants to keep exclusive to its own
phones to compete.
That's understandable, yet a shame.
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