Typical price: £269
What is it: A top-notch smart phone, though it hides the fact behind a plain design
What we think: Billed as a business phone, the E60 could have a wider appeal beyond the suits and shiny shoes
Nokia E60 Review
Reviewed on: 23 November 2006
The biggest show-off in Nokia's E series is the E61. Its keyboard and widescreen scream 'I'm a mobile email machine' to anyone who cares to listen. But the E-team is four strong, and in our experience it pays to watch the quiet ones. The E60 is a case in point.
Not showy in design terms this handset really packs in the features, and just a few omissions and design errors -- such as there being no FM radio, a reliance on RS-MMC cards, the mono earbud and the absence of a camera -- stop this 3G handset being an absolute star turn.
Design
The E60 looks like a fairly basic candybar phone. It is not especially small or thin -- in fact, by today's standards you might class it as a bit on the bulky side. At 117g it doesn't compete with the sub-100g brigade, and at 49mm by 115mm by 17mm, it can't challenge the thinnies either. But it is a classic candybar shape, and the besuited should find pocket space for it.
The screen is a little less tall than we might like, but it makes up for that by delivering 352x416 pixels, 16 million colours and being able to be switched into wide format by holding down the Nokia menu key and choosing from a range of options that become available. This is great for things like viewing Web pages.
The number pad is large, its number keys spaced by vertical strips designed to help you avoid hitting the wrong key. We aren't the biggest fans of Nokia's mini-joystick approach to navigation, but the one here works as well as any we've seen, and beneath it the menu key is well placed to use alongside it for moving between applications and folders in the main menu.
The 0 key at the bottom of the keyboard doubles up as an Internet key -- you press and hold it to access the on-board Web browser.
The E60 is pretty basic as far as colour scheme goes. It is almost entirely silver with a strip of black down the left and right edges. In the centre of these is a series of metal strips of different lengths, some of which are purely for design. On the left the strip includes volume buttons and a button that on a long press launches voice control and on a short press starts the voice recorder running.
The right edge has a covered slot for the RS-MMC cards you can use to expand on the 64MB of included memory. You'll need dual voltage cards. RS-MMC is a strange choice of card format -- these are nowhere near as popular as formats like miniSD and microSD. Still, at least the slot is easily accessible, so cards can be hot swapped.
Features
The E60 is the kind of phone business users are likely to go for, and its lack of a camera can be seen as something of a lure to those companies that feel worried about camera phones. As this is a 3G handset, though, the camera's absence means no video calling, which some might find a pity.
Tell us what you think
Do you own this product? Want to share your experiences with other CNET UK users?
Write your own review of the Nokia E60
Can't find the product you're looking for? Want to suggest a product for review?
Special Offers from our Sponsors
Latest Mobile phone Reviews
BlackBerry Storm 2
Clicking touchscreen may be useful for clumsy people, but ditching the Qwerty keyboard has its drawbacks
INQ Mini 3G
Sluggish at times, and not the easiest phone to use, but it offers a great range of features at a low price
on Mobile Phones
Samsung S5560 and B3410: Festive phones from Carphone Warehouse
Carphone Warehouse is offering two exclusive new Samsung handsets in time for Christmas -- the S5560 budget smart phone and B3410 social-media jobby
More:
- 3 to let mobile-broadband punters cancel contracts over poor 3G coverage
- BBC scotches new iPlayer iPhone app rumour
- Make an iPod touch into an iPhone with 3's MiFi bundle
- Motorola Milestone: The Droid drops exclusively on eXpansys until 2010
- Sony Ericsson Aino has touchscreen problems -- but it isn't dead yet




