Nokia unveiled the Lumia 920 and Lumia 820 way back in September last
year and it took quite a while for the phones to find their way on to
Indian shores. Continuing the theme, here's our slightly belated review
of the Nokia Lumia 920.
Design
The first thing you notice about the Nokia Lumia 920, no doubt, is the bulk. The device may not be as large as the Galaxy Note II, but somehow Nokia has managed to make it heavier than Samsung's phablet. Once you get past the weight, however, there's plenty to like.
The Nokia Lumia 920 is solidly built out of a polycarbonate unibody shell that goes all around the device and offers a welcome change if you've been living in the Samsung world of plastic for too long. The left side of the phone is completely bare, giving way to the Micro-SIM slot on the top left. The 3.5mm headphone/mic jack is at the centre of the top edge, adjacent to a noise-cancelling microphone. The right edge has the volume rocker, power-button and the camera button, in a typical Windows Phone button arrangement.
The bottom edge comes with the micro-USB port flanked on either side by a rather cute looking speaker grill. Nokia Lumia 920 is one of the few phones that manages to have two visible screws without flipping the ugly switch over. The back has Nokia/ Carl Zeiss branding alongside the dual-LED flash. The front has an earpiece grill and a front camera next to Nokia branding at the top, with three capacitive touch buttons rounding off a typical Windows Phone device look.
Design
The first thing you notice about the Nokia Lumia 920, no doubt, is the bulk. The device may not be as large as the Galaxy Note II, but somehow Nokia has managed to make it heavier than Samsung's phablet. Once you get past the weight, however, there's plenty to like.
The Nokia Lumia 920 is solidly built out of a polycarbonate unibody shell that goes all around the device and offers a welcome change if you've been living in the Samsung world of plastic for too long. The left side of the phone is completely bare, giving way to the Micro-SIM slot on the top left. The 3.5mm headphone/mic jack is at the centre of the top edge, adjacent to a noise-cancelling microphone. The right edge has the volume rocker, power-button and the camera button, in a typical Windows Phone button arrangement.
The bottom edge comes with the micro-USB port flanked on either side by a rather cute looking speaker grill. Nokia Lumia 920 is one of the few phones that manages to have two visible screws without flipping the ugly switch over. The back has Nokia/ Carl Zeiss branding alongside the dual-LED flash. The front has an earpiece grill and a front camera next to Nokia branding at the top, with three capacitive touch buttons rounding off a typical Windows Phone device look.
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