fbpx
Wikipedia

Nokia N9

The Nokia N9 (codename Lankku) is a flagship smartphone developed by Nokia, running on the Linux-based MeeGo mobile operating system. Announced in June 2011 and released in September, it was the first and only device from Nokia with MeeGo, partly because of the company's partnership with Microsoft announced that year.[4] It was initially released in three colors: black, cyan and magenta, before a white version was announced at Nokia World 2011.

Nokia N9
Nokia N9 phone running Meego 1.2 Harmattan software
ManufacturerNokia manufactured in Finland
SeriesNseries
Compatible networks
PredecessorNokia N900
Nokia N8
SuccessorNokia Lumia 900
RelatedNokia Lumia 800
Dimensions
  • Width: 61.2 mm
  • Height: 116.45 mm
  • Thickness: 7.6 to 12.1 mm
Mass135 g
Operating systemMeeGo 1.2 "Harmattan"
CPU
MemoryGB Mobile DDR
Storage16 or 64 GB
Removable storagenone
Battery
  • BV-5JW 1450 mAh Li-Ion battery (removable by service)
  • micro USB charging
Display"Clear Black" AMOLED 854 × 480 px (FWVGA), 3.9" (99.1 mm), 16.7 million colors (24 bits)[1]
Rear camera8.7 MP (CMOS sensor of 1/3.0" size) with Carl Zeiss optics (F2.2, Focal length: 3.77mm / 28mm), 720p at 30 FPS, Digital zoom 4X for camera and video[1]
Front cameraVGA[2]
Connectivity
  • WLAN IEEE 802.11 a/b/g/n (2.4 and 5GHz)
  • bluetooth 2.1 +EDR (Hardware Supports 4.0[3]
  • micro USB 2.0
  • GPS and A-GPS
  • 3.5 mm AV connector (audio in/out, video in/out, tv-set out))
  • Near Field Communication (NFC)
  • Digital Living Network Alliance (DLNA)
  • micro SIM card
  • FM receiver
Data inputs
  • Capacitive multi-touch display
  • External functional hardware keys
  • Accelerometer (3-axis)
  • Magnetometer (3-axis)
  • Proximity sensor
  • Ambient light detector
  • Stereo microphone + 2nd microphone for active noise cancellation
Otherpolycarbonate unibody (unpainted)
Development statusDiscontinued

Despite a limited release,[5] the N9 received widespread critical acclaim, with some describing it as Nokia's finest device to date. It was praised for both its software and hardware, including the MeeGo operating system, buttonless 'swipe' user interface, and its high-end features.[6] The case would be reused for the Windows Phone-powered Nokia Lumia 800 which was released later that year.

Background

The successor of Nokia N900, internally known as N9-00, was scheduled to be released in late 2010, approximately one year after N900 launched. Pictures of the prototype leaked in August 2010 showed an industrial design and a 4-row keyboard. A software engineer working for Nokia's device division cited the N9-00 (the product number) in the public bug tracker for Qt, an open source application development framework used in MeeGo.[7] This would later be known as the N950. This design was dropped; then Nokia started working on the N9-01, codenamed Lankku, a new variant without a keyboard.[8]

Nokia planned in 2010 to make MeeGo their flagship smartphone platform, replacing Symbian, whose N8 flagship launched that year. Thus effectively N9 was originally meant to be the flagship device from the company.[9] On 11 February 2011 Nokia partnered with Microsoft to use Windows Phone 7 as the flagship operating system to replace Symbian, with MeeGo also sidelined. Nokia CEO Stephen Elop promised to still ship one MeeGo device that year, which would end up as the N9.[10]

Nokia N9 was announced on 21 June 2011 at the Nokia Connection event in Singapore.[11] At the time, the phone was presumed to become available to the public in September 2011.[12] Users can get notified via e-mail of the availability of N9 in their country at the webpage of the Nokia Online Store.[13] Since Nokia closed its Nokia Online Shop in many countries, including Poland, Germany, Netherlands, France, Italy, Spain, United Kingdom, and the United States on 30 June 2011,[14] availability in those countries will be in the hands of retailers and operators.[15][16]

Elop restated that the company will not be continuing development of MeeGo even if the N9 would be a success, focusing solely on the future Lumia series,[17][18] something that MeeGo supporters already felt before the N9 announcement due to the Microsoft deal. They responded by creating a petition "We want Nokia to keep MeeGo".[19] That was even more severe as MeeGo Linux was also a form of continuation of Maemo Linux, which was established with combining Nokia's Maemo with Intel's Moblin, in frames of Nokia and Intel alliance created for purposes of such cooperation. Despite the success of the alliance, it was broken and MeeGo canceled by Stephen Elop's decision. Intel officially expressed regrets because of this situation. After the N9's positive reception and generally weak sales of its Lumia range, Elop was criticised for this move, which has been said by some to have contributed to the company's demise in the smartphone market.[20][21][better source needed] According to Elop following the Microsoft alliance, MeeGo became an experimental "project",[22] with some of Harmattan's interface elements being used in the cancelled "Meltemi" project and later the Nokia Asha platform.[23]

Availability

In August 2011, Nokia announced that Nokia N9 will not be released in the United States.[24] Other reports indicated that the device will not be available in other markets such as Japan, Canada and Germany.[13][15][16][25][26][27] Nokia posted on the official blog in the last week of September 2011 that N9 phones are heading to the stores. The initial retail price was announced to be around €480 (16GB) and €560 (64GB) before applicable taxes or subsidies.[28] In Germany, devices imported from Switzerland are available online from Amazon and German Cyberport GmbH. In January 2012, they were also made available in some major stores of the Saturn Media Markt chain.[29] In February 2012, Nokia N9 appeared on the Italian Nokia site, which is supposed to be a sign of N9 being in official Nokia distribution for the Italian market.[30]

Prices in January 2012 were, depending on the size of the internal memory, between €500 and €630.

Hardware

Processors and memory

The Nokia N9 is powered by a Texas Instruments OMAP 3630 which is a System-on-a-chip based on a 45 nanometer CMOS process. It includes three processor units: a 1 GHz ARM Cortex A8 CPU which runs the operating system and applications, an Imagination Technologies PowerVR SGX530 GPU supporting OpenGL ES 2.0 and capable of processing up to 14 million polygons per second; and a 430 MHz TI TMS320C64x,[citation needed] a digital signal processor, which does image processing for the camera, audio processing for telephony and data transmission. The system also has 1 GB of low power single channel RAM (Mobile DDR). Compcache uses part of this memory as compressed fast swap. It was, at the time, the most powerful device Nokia created.[31]

All user data is stored on the internal eMMC chip; in 16 and 64 GB variants. The N9 was the first smartphone to encompass 64 GB of storage.[citation needed]

Screen and input

Nokia N9 has a 3.9-inch (99 mm) capacitive touchscreen (up to 6 simultaneous points) with a resolution of 854 × 480 pixels (FWVGA, 251 ppi) in PenTile RGBG layout. According to Nokia, it is capable of displaying up to 16.7 million colors. The OLED screen is covered by a curved scratch-resistant Corning Gorilla glass. The gap between the glass and the display has been reduced and the screen is coated with an anti-glare polarizer to ease the usability in daylight. There is a proximity sensor which deactivates the display and touchscreen when the device is brought near the face during a call. It has also an ambient light sensor that adjusts the display brightness.

The device also makes use of its accelerometer to rotate the screen in portrait/landscape mode for some applications, such as the web browser.[32]

GPS

N9 has an autonomous GPS feature with optional A-GPS functionality, Wi-Fi network positioning, a magnetometer, and comes pre-loaded with Nokia Maps and Nokia Drive applications.[33]

Nokia Maps is similar to Ovi Maps found on recent Symbian devices from Nokia and is mostly about finding nearby places (restaurants, metro station, theater, etc...) around the user. Nokia Maps for MeeGo is also integrated with the Contacts and Calendar applications. Nokia Drive is a dedicated application for car navigation and provides free lifetime turn-by-turn voice guided car navigation. The Nokia N9 comes with preloaded maps of the continent where it was purchased, and as such, Nokia Drive does not require an active data connection and can work as a stand-alone GPS navigator.

Camera

The main (back) camera has an autofocus feature, dual LED flash, is optimized for 16:9 and 4:3 aspect ratios, and has a 4× digital zoom for both video and camera. The sensor size of the back camera is 8.7 megapixels (3552 × 2448 px); the effective resolution for the 16:9 aspect ratio is 3552 × 2000 px (7.1 megapixels), and 3248 × 2448 px (8 megapixels) for the 4:3 aspect ratio. Typically, a 16:9 picture format on a digital camera is achieved by cropping the top and bottom of a 4:3 image, since the sensor is 4:3. Nokia N9 genuinely provides more in the width of the picture by choosing the 16:9 aspect ratio option by using the full 3552-pixel width of the sensor, and more in the height of the picture by choosing the 4:3 aspect ratio option by using the full 2448-pixel height of the sensor.[34] The Carl Zeiss lens has quite unusual specifications for a mobile phone: 28mm wide-angle lens focal length, fast (for this class) f/2.2 aperture, and a 10 cm-to-infinity focus range. It is capable of recording up to 720p video at 30 fps with stereo sound.

Buttons

When holding the device facing the screen, on the right side, there is a power on/off (long press) and lock/unlock (short press) button and volume keys. The Nokia N9 has fewer hardware buttons than most smartphones and makes extensive use of the touchscreen to navigate the user interface. For example, to minimize a running application, the user has to swipe their finger from one side of the bezel surrounding the screen to the opposite side. There is also no dedicated shutter key for the camera; the touch screen is instead used to focus and take the picture.[35] The screen can be unlocked by double tapping on it.

Audio and output

The N9 has two microphones and a loudspeaker situated at the bottom of the phone. The main microphone enables conversation and recording. The second microphone is located on the back of the device near the flash LEDs and main camera, it is used by MeeGo system for noise cancellation which make phone conversations clearer in noisy environment. On the top, there is a 3.5 mm AV connector which simultaneously provides stereo audio output, with support for Dolby Headphone, and either microphone input or video output. Next to the 3.5 mm connector, there is a High-Speed USB 2.0 USB Micro-B connector provided for data synchronization, mass storage mode (client) and battery charging. The USB connector is protected by a small door.[32]

The built-in Bluetooth v2.1 +EDR (Enhanced Data Rate) supports stereo audio output with the A2DP profile. Built-in car hands-free kits are also supported with the HFP profile. File transfer is supported (FTP) along with the OPP profile for sending/receiving objects. It is possible to remote control the device with the AVRCP profile. The Bluetooth chip also functions as an FM Receiver/Transmitter, allowing one to listen to the FM radio by using headphones connected to the 3.5 jack as antenna. As with the Nokia N800, N810 and N900, it will ship without software support.[36] However an FM radio application is already available in OVI Store from independent developer.[37]

NFC is also supported for sharing photos, contacts, or music with other devices supporting NFC (e.g. Nokia C7, Nokia 701) and also pairing (connecting) stereo speakers (e.g. Nokia Play 360) and headset (e.g. Nokia BH-505). More than one device can be connected simultaneously with N9 via NFC.

Battery

The Nokia N9 has a BV-5JW 3.8V 1450mAh battery. According to Nokia, this provides from 7h to 11h of continuous talk time, from 16 to 19.5 days of standby, 4.5h of video playback and up to 50h of music playback.[1]

The phone supports USB charging only.

Accessories

A number of devices can be used with the N9 via several connectivity options: external keyboards via Bluetooth,[38] wireless headphones via NFC, wireless loudspeakers via NFC, and many others.

System software

 
Sleep screen on a red N9, showing the clock and notifications. Notice the Nokia Pure font, the N9 being the first usage of Nokia's new typeface.

MeeGo

Strictly speaking, the Nokia N9 does not run MeeGo 1.2 as its operating system. It instead runs what Nokia refers to as a "MeeGo instance". During the development of Harmattan (previously marketed as Maemo 6), Nokia and Intel merged their open source projects into one new common project called MeeGo. Not to postpone the development schedule, Nokia decided to keep the "core" of Harmattan, such as middleware components (GStreamer) and packaging managers (the Harmattan system uses Debian packages instead of RPM packages). Nonetheless, Harmattan is designed to be fully API compatible with MeeGo 1.2 via Qt. As far as end users and application developers are concerned, the distinction between Harmattan and MeeGo 1.2 is minimal.[8] Since all marketing effort would have been directed to "MeeGo", Nokia dropped the Maemo branding to adopt MeeGo as to not confuse customers.[39]

Swipe User Interface

The Nokia N9 user experience provides three panes, called Home, and a Lock Screen. Dragging or flicking horizontally navigates between the three panes of the home.[40] The Home consists of:

  • Events : It holds all the notification such as missed calls, upcoming meeting, unread messages/emails and feeds (web feeds, Facebook, Twitter, etc. if enabled from Notifications settings).
  • Applications : Menu with all the installed application shortcuts. It displays 4 columns that can be scrolled up and down as needed by the number of application.
  • Open Applications : A task manager that can be viewed either as a 2 columns or 3 columns (a pinch gesture will switch between each mode). If more application are open that can be displayed on the screen, the user can scroll the open applications list up and down.

When in an application a swipe gesture from one edge of the screen to the other one will return the user to one of the three views of Home. This will not close the application, it will either be suspended or keep running in the background, depending on the application. To close an application, the user must press and hold until a red "X" appears on the upper left corner of the application thumbnail in the Open Application view, which will close it. The user may also close apps by swiping from the top of the device and down while in the application (with fadeout effect). Tapping on the status bar on the top of the screen while using an application will display a menu allowing the user to adjust the volume, change the active profile (silent, beep & ringing), Internet connection (WiFi, GSM data), bluetooth control shortcut (if enabled in Bluetooth settings), media sharing (DLNA) shortcut (if enabled in media sharing settings which was introduced in PR 1.2) and availability. The Lock Screen display the status bar, a clock and some notifications. This screen also holds music controls (introduced in PR 1.1) when the music player is active. It is customizable by the end user.

The phone can be unlocked by double tapping on the screen. Sliding and holding the lock screen up reveals 4 shortcuts, called the Quick Launcher. The Quick Launcher can also be accessed while using an application.[41]

The swiping UI of the N9, including the visual style and double-tap feature, was resurrected in the Nokia Asha platform, which was introduced on the Nokia Asha 501 device in 2013.[42][43]

Reception

 
A blue N9

The Nokia N9 was announced at Nokia's Connections event in Singapore, June 2011. The reception for the device has been very positive, citing the MeeGo v1.2 Harmattan UI, pseudo-buttonless design, polycarbonate unibody construction and its NFC capabilities. Still, many reviewers did not recommend to buy the N9 only because of Nokia's earlier decision to drop MeeGo for Windows Phone for future smartphones – often questioning this decision at the same time. Engadget's editor Vlad Savov said in June 2011 that "it's a terrific phone that's got me legitimately excited to use it, but its future is clouded by a parent that's investing its time and money into building up a whole other OS."[44] In a later review, Engadget writes: "Love at first sight — this is possibly the most beautiful phone ever made," and "MeeGo 1.2 Harmattan is such a breath of fresh air it will leave you gasping — that is, until you remember that you're dealing with a dead man walking."[2] In a review for Ars Technica, Ryan Paul writes: "The N9 is an impressively engineered device that is matched with a sophisticated touch-oriented interface and a powerful software stack with open source underpinnings."[45] The Verge (website) writes: "The Nokia N9 is, without doubt, one of the most fascinating phones of the last few years."[46]

The German Der Spiegel titles "this could have been Nokia's winner",[47] and the German magazine Stern describes it as one of the best devices ever made by Nokia.[48] Delimiter called the N9 Nokia's "most significant" handset since the Nokia N95.[49]

Sales

The Nokia N9 has not been released in most of the largest smartphone markets such as the U.S., Canada, UK, the Netherlands, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, and others. Nokia did not disclose the number of sales for the N9.[50]

Awards

In November 2011, the Nokia N9 won 3 out of 4 applicable titles (including design, camera and cellphone of the year) at a gala held by Swedish magazine and webzine Mobil.se.[51]

In January 2012, the Nokia N9 Swipe UI was nominated for an IxDA Interaction Award.[52]

In February 2012, the N9 reached number 1 in ranking "by rate" with a rate of 8.432 (out of 10) and votes of 74,940, and also number 5 by daily interest hits in GSMArena's ranking.[53]

In April 2012, the N9 was awarded a Design and Art Direction "Yellow Pencil", in the interactive product design category, beating among others the iPad 2 and the Nokia Lumia 800.[54]

Open/closed source packages and community contributions

The approach applied by Nokia is one of an open platform, with exception, and a closed user experience. As with Maemo 5 on the Nokia N900, the community can request a closed source component owned by Nokia to be released as open source.[citation needed]

Hundreds of 3rd party applications, mostly free and open source, have already been created or ported to the Linux MeeGo Harmattan platform.[55]

Released updates

Version Release date Notable changes
PR 1.0
10.2011.34-1
September 2011 Initial release
PR 1.1
20.2011.40-4
November 2011 Music controls on the lock screen, additional filters to the camera application, NFC tag reading, Twitter image sharing, Swype keyboard, Chinese language support, noise cancellation using second microphone[56]
PR 1.2
30.2012.07-1
March 2012 Folders in the Applications view, Continuous shutter mode in Camera, Google Talk video calls, improvements to the Nokia Drive application such as Speed limit settings, defining home location, etc., DLNA media sharing, software update notifications for 3rd party applications (downloaded from Nokia Store), playlist support in music player, enhancements to the Mail for Exchange address book (ability to access corporate mail address directory), Universal Copy and paste support and in the stock browser; Thai, Hebrew, Persian, Vietnamese and Kazakh language support[57]
PR 1.3
40.2012.21-3
July 2012 Over 1000 quality improvements including Mail, Facebook, Twitter, minor network & connectivity improvements[58]

Ports for the N9

Android 2.3 port leak

Images of an N9 prototype running Android 2.3 were leaked to Sina Weibo by a user who had previously uploaded prototype images of Nokia's Sea Ray (later Lumia 800) Windows Phone. They were believed to be likely genuine, as Steven Elop had mentioned Nokia had considered Android in the past.[59]

Android 4.1.1 Jelly Bean

An unofficial Android 4.1.1 port by the NITDroid community was made. The port features general functionality but misses some features such as voice calling and use of the camera.[60]

Sailfish OS

On 21 November 2012, Jolla announced and demonstrated Sailfish OS, which is direct continuation and based on MeeGo. Above 80% of the first Linux Sailfish OS is the open source part of the Linux MeeGo. The original MeeGo open source code was developed further in frames of Mer (software distribution) which comes from MEego Reinstated and has established current standard of the middleware stack core, so software above a kernel and below a UI of OS, what's more it is open source and free for vendors. The Harmattan UI and several software applications used in the N9 was closed and proprietary of Nokia, hence could not be used neither in MER project nor Sailfish OS. So Jolla introduced its own swipe UI, used MER core standard and created Sailfish OS. Videos of the Sailfish OS running on a Nokia N950 appeared on the Internet the same day as the announcement. As the N950 has similar technical specifications as the N9, with slight differences including a physical QWERTY keyboard, this led many owners of the N9 to believe that Sailfish OS can be ported to the N9.[61] Jolla confirmed this, but also stated that it has no "official possibilities" for such kind of support for the N9, and instead the community will provide the unofficial port for Sailfish OS. However, Jolla maintained that the experience will not be the same as the Sailfish on official Jolla phones (Jolla released the first Jolla mobile phone on 27 November 2013).[62] Sailfish OS is the first full Linux MeeGo OS, as the MeeGo Harmattan was only a "MeeGo instance" because of not fully finished combining of Maemo and Moblin. Sailfish OS is actively developed and commonly assumed[by whom?] to be next and better incarnation of MeeGo, also Jolla device is assumed unofficial successor of the N9 and its legacy by all means.

KaiOS

In early 2019 KaiOS Technologies Inc. demonstrate the devices running KaiOS. There are Nokia 8110 (2018), Jio Phone, and one full touch device suspected to be Nokia N9.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Nokia N9 (specifications), Europe: Nokia, retrieved 21 June 2011
  2. ^ a b Joire, Myriam (22 October 2011). "Nokia N9 review". Engadget. AOL. Retrieved 28 October 2011.
  3. ^ Core PICS Values. Bluetooth.org. Retrieved on 14 July 2013.
  4. ^ "Nokia and Microsoft form partnership". BBC News. 11 February 2011.
  5. ^ Halliday, Josh; Arthur, Charles (28 September 2011). "Nokia N9: last of the line". the Guardian. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  6. ^ "Nokia N9 officially announced: unibody design, buttonless 'swipe' UI, and the lost promise of Meego". theverge.com. 20 June 2011. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  7. ^ "Leak allegedly shows Nokia N9, could be first MeeGo phone". Ars Technica. Condé Nast Digital. 23 August 2010. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  8. ^ a b "Nokia's new MeeGo-based N9 is set up for failure". Ars Technica. Condé Nast Digital. 24 June 2011. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  9. ^ Paul, Ryan (25 June 2010). "Nokia picks MeeGo Linux, not Symbian, for flagship phones". Ars Technica.
  10. ^ Olson, Parmy. "Nokia And Microsoft Announce Strategic Partnership". Forbes.
  11. ^ . Conversations. Nokia. Archived from the original on 24 June 2011. Retrieved 22 June 2011.
  12. ^ Buckley, Sean (22 June 2011). "Nokia N9 to ship in Sweden on September 23rd, saith awkwardly translated release". Engadget. AOL. Retrieved 23 January 2012.
  13. ^ a b "Check Availability". N9. Europe: Nokia. Retrieved 3 July 2011.
  14. ^ "Nokia's online stores go offline in France and Spain (update: Netherlands too)". Engadget. AOL. Retrieved 8 July 2011.
  15. ^ a b Westaway, Luke (8 October 2011). . CNET. CBS Interactive. Archived from the original on 6 October 2011. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  16. ^ a b "Nokia: MeeGo-Smartphone N9 kommt nicht nach Deutschland" [Nokia: MeeGo Smartphone N9 does not come to Germany] (in German). Germany: heise online. 11 August 2011. Retrieved 10 April 2012.
  17. ^ "Nokia will not return to MeeGo even if N9 turns out to be a hit, says Stephen Elop". blog.gsmarena.com. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  18. ^ "Nokia N9 the last MeeGo device?". My Nokia Blog. 23 June 2011.
  19. ^ Sharma, Vaibhav (22 June 2011). "Thoughts: The 'We Want Nokia To Keep MeeGo' Petition".
  20. ^ Gilbert, David (22 June 2016). "MeeGo Engineer Calls Out Nokia CEO". trustedreviews.com. Time Inc. UK. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  21. ^ "Nokia N9 Second Coming". wordpress.com. 12 May 2012. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  22. ^ Clarke, Gavin. "Microsoft, Nokia, and MeeGo: Are they all doomed?". www.theregister.com.
  23. ^ "Nokia's bold new Meltemi OS will make feature phones smarter". 29 September 2011.
  24. ^ Murph, Darren (9 August 2011). "Nokia: the N9 isn't coming to America". Engadget. AOL. Retrieved 6 August 2012.
  25. ^ Molen, Brad (11 August 2011). "Nokia N9 gets axed in Germany, global tour looks even more meager". Engadget. AOL. Retrieved 6 August 2012.
  26. ^ . The Nokia Blog. 9 August 2011. Archived from the original on 20 January 2012. Retrieved 13 August 2011.
  27. ^ . The Nokia Blog. 10 August 2011. Archived from the original on 22 December 2011. Retrieved 13 August 2011.
  28. ^ "N9 is heading to the shops", , Nokia, archived from the original on 29 September 2011, retrieved 27 September 2011
  29. ^ "Nokia N9: Saturn verkauft MeeGo-Handy" [Nokia N9: Saturn selling the MeeGo Mobile] (in German). Netzwelt.de. 5 February 2012.
  30. ^ "Nokia N9 will be sold in Italy but was not expected". cloudsmagazine.com. 2011. Retrieved 10 April 2012.
  31. ^ Beavis, Gareth (21 June 2011). "Nokia N9 unveiled - crazy home screens and specs galore". TechRadar. Retrieved 31 December 2016.
  32. ^ a b "Nokia N9 hands-on: First look". GSM Arena. Retrieved 29 June 2011.
  33. ^ . Ovi Blog. Nokia Corporation. Archived from the original on 25 June 2011. Retrieved 25 June 2011.
  34. ^ . Nokia Conversations. Nokia Corporation. Archived from the original on 30 June 2011. Retrieved 5 July 2011.
  35. ^ Dinning, Damian (27 June 2011), "Nokia N9 Imaging", , Nokia, archived from the original on 30 June 2011, retrieved 28 June 2011
  36. ^ Sharma, Vaibhav (23 June 2011), "The N9 includes an FM transmitter & receiver although software is not ready yet", The Handheld (blog), retrieved 9 July 2011
  37. ^ Kozhanov, Andrey. . FM-Radio.mobi. Archived from the original on 19 March 2012. Retrieved 12 March 2012.
  38. ^ Ovi, Nokia
  39. ^ "maemo.org - Talk - View Single Post - Renaming "Maemo 6" to MeeGo / Harmattan". Maemo. Retrieved 22 June 2011.
  40. ^ "Overall UI model", Swipe, Nokia
  41. ^ "Nokia N9 hands-on: First look". GSM Arena. Retrieved 11 July 2011.
  42. ^ Blog, Microsoft Devices (10 May 2013). "10 reasons to get excited about the Nokia Asha 501". Microsoft Devices Blog.
  43. ^ Savov, Vlad (9 May 2013). "Nokia hedges its commitment to Windows Phone with new Asha platform and $99 phone". The Verge.
  44. ^ Savov, Vlad (22 June 2011). "Editorial: Dear Nokia, you cannot be serious!". Engadget. AOL. Retrieved 7 July 2011.
  45. ^ Ryan Paul (24 June 2011). "Nokia's new MeeGo-based N9 is set up for failure". Ars Technica. Retrieved 31 May 2012.
  46. ^ Savov, Vlad (20 October 2011). "Nokia N9 review". The Verge. Vox Media. Retrieved 31 May 2012.
  47. ^ Kremp, Matthias (21 June 2011). "Das hätte Nokias Gewinner sein können" (in German). DE: Der Spiegel. Retrieved 31 May 2012.
  48. ^ Maatz, Björn (8 January 2012). "Exotisches One-Hit-Wonder" (in German). DE: Der Stern. Retrieved 31 May 2012.
  49. ^ Orantia, Jenneth (13 October 2011). "Nokia N9: Review".
  50. ^ www.h-online.com. 11 August 2011. Archived from the original on 27 July 2013. Retrieved 31 August 2012.
  51. ^ "Guldmobilerna har delats ut" (in Swedish). SE: Mobil. Retrieved 10 November 2011.
  52. ^ "Vote for Nokia N9 Swipe UI at IXDA interaction awards". My Nokia Blog. 2 February 2012. Retrieved 28 April 2012.
  53. ^ "GSM Arena". Retrieved 22 February 2012.
  54. ^ "Product Awards", D&AD, 2012, retrieved 28 April 2012
  55. ^ . My MeeGo. 25 August 2011. Archived from the original on 6 July 2012. Retrieved 25 August 2011.
  56. ^ . Nokia. Archived from the original on 14 July 2012. Retrieved 14 March 2012.
  57. ^ . Conversations. Nokia. 6 March 2012. Archived from the original on 26 June 2012. Retrieved 14 March 2012.
  58. ^ . Firmware change logs. Nokia. Archived from the original on 14 July 2012.
  59. ^ Savov, Vlad. (24 June 2011) Nokia's Android flirtations revealed. Engadget.com. Retrieved on 14 July 2013.
  60. ^ Video: Nitdroid sees N9 running Jelly Bean before most Androids. My Nokia Blog (20 August 2012). Retrieved on 14 July 2013.
  61. ^ "How to Install Jolla Sailfish OS on Nokia N9". Nokiaviews. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
  62. ^ Rigg, Jamie (20 May 2013). "A closer look at the Jolla phone: good intentions, bad delivery (video)". Engadget.com. Retrieved 24 June 2014.

External links

  • , Nokia, archived from the original on 23 June 2011.
  • N9 (product specifications), Europe: Nokia.[Forwards to Microsoft Mobile]

nokia, confused, with, nokia, pureview, codename, lankku, flagship, smartphone, developed, nokia, running, linux, based, meego, mobile, operating, system, announced, june, 2011, released, september, first, only, device, from, nokia, with, meego, partly, becaus. Not to be confused with Nokia 9 PureView The Nokia N9 codename Lankku is a flagship smartphone developed by Nokia running on the Linux based MeeGo mobile operating system Announced in June 2011 and released in September it was the first and only device from Nokia with MeeGo partly because of the company s partnership with Microsoft announced that year 4 It was initially released in three colors black cyan and magenta before a white version was announced at Nokia World 2011 Nokia N9Nokia N9 phone running Meego 1 2 Harmattan softwareManufacturerNokia manufactured in FinlandSeriesNseriesCompatible networksGSM 850 900 1800 1900 GPRS EDGE class B multislot class 33 HSDPA Pentaband HSDPA UMTS 850 900 1700 1900 2100 HSDPA Cat10 up to 14 4 Mbps HSUPA Cat6 up to 5 7 MbpsPredecessorNokia N900Nokia N8SuccessorNokia Lumia 900RelatedNokia Lumia 800DimensionsWidth 61 2 mm Height 116 45 mm Thickness 7 6 to 12 1 mmMass135 gOperating systemMeeGo 1 2 Harmattan CPU1 GHz ARM Cortex A8 SoC processor TI OMAP3630 citation needed 3D Graphics PowerVR SGX530 GPU citation needed 430 MHz TI TMS320C64x Digital signal processor citation needed Memory1 GB Mobile DDRStorage16 or 64 GBRemovable storagenoneBatteryBV 5JW 1450 mAh Li Ion battery removable by service micro USB chargingDisplay Clear Black AMOLED 854 480 px FWVGA 3 9 99 1 mm 16 7 million colors 24 bits 1 Rear camera8 7 MP CMOS sensor of 1 3 0 size with Carl Zeiss optics F2 2 Focal length 3 77mm 28mm 720p at 30 FPS Digital zoom 4X for camera and video 1 Front cameraVGA 2 ConnectivityWLAN IEEE 802 11 a b g n 2 4 and 5GHz bluetooth 2 1 EDR Hardware Supports 4 0 3 micro USB 2 0 GPS and A GPS 3 5 mm AV connector audio in out video in out tv set out Near Field Communication NFC Digital Living Network Alliance DLNA micro SIM card FM receiverData inputsCapacitive multi touch display External functional hardware keys Accelerometer 3 axis Magnetometer 3 axis Proximity sensor Ambient light detector Stereo microphone 2nd microphone for active noise cancellationOtherpolycarbonate unibody unpainted Development statusDiscontinuedDespite a limited release 5 the N9 received widespread critical acclaim with some describing it as Nokia s finest device to date It was praised for both its software and hardware including the MeeGo operating system buttonless swipe user interface and its high end features 6 The case would be reused for the Windows Phone powered Nokia Lumia 800 which was released later that year Contents 1 Background 1 1 Availability 2 Hardware 2 1 Processors and memory 2 2 Screen and input 2 3 GPS 2 4 Camera 2 5 Buttons 2 6 Audio and output 2 7 Battery 3 Accessories 4 System software 4 1 MeeGo 4 2 Swipe User Interface 5 Reception 5 1 Sales 5 2 Awards 5 3 Open closed source packages and community contributions 5 4 Released updates 6 Ports for the N9 6 1 Android 2 3 port leak 6 2 Android 4 1 1 Jelly Bean 6 3 Sailfish OS 6 4 KaiOS 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksBackground EditThe successor of Nokia N900 internally known as N9 00 was scheduled to be released in late 2010 approximately one year after N900 launched Pictures of the prototype leaked in August 2010 showed an industrial design and a 4 row keyboard A software engineer working for Nokia s device division cited the N9 00 the product number in the public bug tracker for Qt an open source application development framework used in MeeGo 7 This would later be known as the N950 This design was dropped then Nokia started working on the N9 01 codenamed Lankku a new variant without a keyboard 8 Nokia planned in 2010 to make MeeGo their flagship smartphone platform replacing Symbian whose N8 flagship launched that year Thus effectively N9 was originally meant to be the flagship device from the company 9 On 11 February 2011 Nokia partnered with Microsoft to use Windows Phone 7 as the flagship operating system to replace Symbian with MeeGo also sidelined Nokia CEO Stephen Elop promised to still ship one MeeGo device that year which would end up as the N9 10 Nokia N9 was announced on 21 June 2011 at the Nokia Connection event in Singapore 11 At the time the phone was presumed to become available to the public in September 2011 12 Users can get notified via e mail of the availability of N9 in their country at the webpage of the Nokia Online Store 13 Since Nokia closed its Nokia Online Shop in many countries including Poland Germany Netherlands France Italy Spain United Kingdom and the United States on 30 June 2011 14 availability in those countries will be in the hands of retailers and operators 15 16 Elop restated that the company will not be continuing development of MeeGo even if the N9 would be a success focusing solely on the future Lumia series 17 18 something that MeeGo supporters already felt before the N9 announcement due to the Microsoft deal They responded by creating a petition We want Nokia to keep MeeGo 19 That was even more severe as MeeGo Linux was also a form of continuation of Maemo Linux which was established with combining Nokia s Maemo with Intel s Moblin in frames of Nokia and Intel alliance created for purposes of such cooperation Despite the success of the alliance it was broken and MeeGo canceled by Stephen Elop s decision Intel officially expressed regrets because of this situation After the N9 s positive reception and generally weak sales of its Lumia range Elop was criticised for this move which has been said by some to have contributed to the company s demise in the smartphone market 20 21 better source needed According to Elop following the Microsoft alliance MeeGo became an experimental project 22 with some of Harmattan s interface elements being used in the cancelled Meltemi project and later the Nokia Asha platform 23 Availability Edit In August 2011 Nokia announced that Nokia N9 will not be released in the United States 24 Other reports indicated that the device will not be available in other markets such as Japan Canada and Germany 13 15 16 25 26 27 Nokia posted on the official blog in the last week of September 2011 that N9 phones are heading to the stores The initial retail price was announced to be around 480 16GB and 560 64GB before applicable taxes or subsidies 28 In Germany devices imported from Switzerland are available online from Amazon and German Cyberport GmbH In January 2012 they were also made available in some major stores of the Saturn Media Markt chain 29 In February 2012 Nokia N9 appeared on the Italian Nokia site which is supposed to be a sign of N9 being in official Nokia distribution for the Italian market 30 Prices in January 2012 were depending on the size of the internal memory between 500 and 630 Hardware EditProcessors and memory Edit The Nokia N9 is powered by a Texas Instruments OMAP 3630 which is a System on a chip based on a 45 nanometer CMOS process It includes three processor units a 1 GHz ARM Cortex A8 CPU which runs the operating system and applications an Imagination Technologies PowerVR SGX530 GPU supporting OpenGL ES 2 0 and capable of processing up to 14 million polygons per second and a 430 MHz TI TMS320C64x citation needed a digital signal processor which does image processing for the camera audio processing for telephony and data transmission The system also has 1 GB of low power single channel RAM Mobile DDR Compcache uses part of this memory as compressed fast swap It was at the time the most powerful device Nokia created 31 All user data is stored on the internal eMMC chip in 16 and 64 GB variants The N9 was the first smartphone to encompass 64 GB of storage citation needed Screen and input Edit Nokia N9 has a 3 9 inch 99 mm capacitive touchscreen up to 6 simultaneous points with a resolution of 854 480 pixels FWVGA 251 ppi in PenTile RGBG layout According to Nokia it is capable of displaying up to 16 7 million colors The OLED screen is covered by a curved scratch resistant Corning Gorilla glass The gap between the glass and the display has been reduced and the screen is coated with an anti glare polarizer to ease the usability in daylight There is a proximity sensor which deactivates the display and touchscreen when the device is brought near the face during a call It has also an ambient light sensor that adjusts the display brightness The device also makes use of its accelerometer to rotate the screen in portrait landscape mode for some applications such as the web browser 32 GPS Edit N9 has an autonomous GPS feature with optional A GPS functionality Wi Fi network positioning a magnetometer and comes pre loaded with Nokia Maps and Nokia Drive applications 33 Nokia Maps is similar to Ovi Maps found on recent Symbian devices from Nokia and is mostly about finding nearby places restaurants metro station theater etc around the user Nokia Maps for MeeGo is also integrated with the Contacts and Calendar applications Nokia Drive is a dedicated application for car navigation and provides free lifetime turn by turn voice guided car navigation The Nokia N9 comes with preloaded maps of the continent where it was purchased and as such Nokia Drive does not require an active data connection and can work as a stand alone GPS navigator Camera Edit The main back camera has an autofocus feature dual LED flash is optimized for 16 9 and 4 3 aspect ratios and has a 4 digital zoom for both video and camera The sensor size of the back camera is 8 7 megapixels 3552 2448 px the effective resolution for the 16 9 aspect ratio is 3552 2000 px 7 1 megapixels and 3248 2448 px 8 megapixels for the 4 3 aspect ratio Typically a 16 9 picture format on a digital camera is achieved by cropping the top and bottom of a 4 3 image since the sensor is 4 3 Nokia N9 genuinely provides more in the width of the picture by choosing the 16 9 aspect ratio option by using the full 3552 pixel width of the sensor and more in the height of the picture by choosing the 4 3 aspect ratio option by using the full 2448 pixel height of the sensor 34 The Carl Zeiss lens has quite unusual specifications for a mobile phone 28mm wide angle lens focal length fast for this class f 2 2 aperture and a 10 cm to infinity focus range It is capable of recording up to 720p video at 30 fps with stereo sound Buttons Edit When holding the device facing the screen on the right side there is a power on off long press and lock unlock short press button and volume keys The Nokia N9 has fewer hardware buttons than most smartphones and makes extensive use of the touchscreen to navigate the user interface For example to minimize a running application the user has to swipe their finger from one side of the bezel surrounding the screen to the opposite side There is also no dedicated shutter key for the camera the touch screen is instead used to focus and take the picture 35 The screen can be unlocked by double tapping on it Audio and output Edit The N9 has two microphones and a loudspeaker situated at the bottom of the phone The main microphone enables conversation and recording The second microphone is located on the back of the device near the flash LEDs and main camera it is used by MeeGo system for noise cancellation which make phone conversations clearer in noisy environment On the top there is a 3 5 mm AV connector which simultaneously provides stereo audio output with support for Dolby Headphone and either microphone input or video output Next to the 3 5 mm connector there is a High Speed USB 2 0 USB Micro B connector provided for data synchronization mass storage mode client and battery charging The USB connector is protected by a small door 32 The built in Bluetooth v2 1 EDR Enhanced Data Rate supports stereo audio output with the A2DP profile Built in car hands free kits are also supported with the HFP profile File transfer is supported FTP along with the OPP profile for sending receiving objects It is possible to remote control the device with the AVRCP profile The Bluetooth chip also functions as an FM Receiver Transmitter allowing one to listen to the FM radio by using headphones connected to the 3 5 jack as antenna As with the Nokia N800 N810 and N900 it will ship without software support 36 However an FM radio application is already available in OVI Store from independent developer 37 NFC is also supported for sharing photos contacts or music with other devices supporting NFC e g Nokia C7 Nokia 701 and also pairing connecting stereo speakers e g Nokia Play 360 and headset e g Nokia BH 505 More than one device can be connected simultaneously with N9 via NFC Battery Edit The Nokia N9 has a BV 5JW 3 8V 1450mAh battery According to Nokia this provides from 7h to 11h of continuous talk time from 16 to 19 5 days of standby 4 5h of video playback and up to 50h of music playback 1 The phone supports USB charging only Accessories EditA number of devices can be used with the N9 via several connectivity options external keyboards via Bluetooth 38 wireless headphones via NFC wireless loudspeakers via NFC and many others System software Edit Sleep screen on a red N9 showing the clock and notifications Notice the Nokia Pure font the N9 being the first usage of Nokia s new typeface MeeGo Edit Main article MeeGo Strictly speaking the Nokia N9 does not run MeeGo 1 2 as its operating system It instead runs what Nokia refers to as a MeeGo instance During the development of Harmattan previously marketed as Maemo 6 Nokia and Intel merged their open source projects into one new common project called MeeGo Not to postpone the development schedule Nokia decided to keep the core of Harmattan such as middleware components GStreamer and packaging managers the Harmattan system uses Debian packages instead of RPM packages Nonetheless Harmattan is designed to be fully API compatible with MeeGo 1 2 via Qt As far as end users and application developers are concerned the distinction between Harmattan and MeeGo 1 2 is minimal 8 Since all marketing effort would have been directed to MeeGo Nokia dropped the Maemo branding to adopt MeeGo as to not confuse customers 39 Swipe User Interface Edit The Nokia N9 user experience provides three panes called Home and a Lock Screen Dragging or flicking horizontally navigates between the three panes of the home 40 The Home consists of Events It holds all the notification such as missed calls upcoming meeting unread messages emails and feeds web feeds Facebook Twitter etc if enabled from Notifications settings Applications Menu with all the installed application shortcuts It displays 4 columns that can be scrolled up and down as needed by the number of application Open Applications A task manager that can be viewed either as a 2 columns or 3 columns a pinch gesture will switch between each mode If more application are open that can be displayed on the screen the user can scroll the open applications list up and down When in an application a swipe gesture from one edge of the screen to the other one will return the user to one of the three views of Home This will not close the application it will either be suspended or keep running in the background depending on the application To close an application the user must press and hold until a red X appears on the upper left corner of the application thumbnail in the Open Application view which will close it The user may also close apps by swiping from the top of the device and down while in the application with fadeout effect Tapping on the status bar on the top of the screen while using an application will display a menu allowing the user to adjust the volume change the active profile silent beep amp ringing Internet connection WiFi GSM data bluetooth control shortcut if enabled in Bluetooth settings media sharing DLNA shortcut if enabled in media sharing settings which was introduced in PR 1 2 and availability The Lock Screen display the status bar a clock and some notifications This screen also holds music controls introduced in PR 1 1 when the music player is active It is customizable by the end user The phone can be unlocked by double tapping on the screen Sliding and holding the lock screen up reveals 4 shortcuts called the Quick Launcher The Quick Launcher can also be accessed while using an application 41 The swiping UI of the N9 including the visual style and double tap feature was resurrected in the Nokia Asha platform which was introduced on the Nokia Asha 501 device in 2013 42 43 Reception Edit A blue N9 The Nokia N9 was announced at Nokia s Connections event in Singapore June 2011 The reception for the device has been very positive citing the MeeGo v1 2 Harmattan UI pseudo buttonless design polycarbonate unibody construction and its NFC capabilities Still many reviewers did not recommend to buy the N9 only because of Nokia s earlier decision to drop MeeGo for Windows Phone for future smartphones often questioning this decision at the same time Engadget s editor Vlad Savov said in June 2011 that it s a terrific phone that s got me legitimately excited to use it but its future is clouded by a parent that s investing its time and money into building up a whole other OS 44 In a later review Engadget writes Love at first sight this is possibly the most beautiful phone ever made and MeeGo 1 2 Harmattan is such a breath of fresh air it will leave you gasping that is until you remember that you re dealing with a dead man walking 2 In a review for Ars Technica Ryan Paul writes The N9 is an impressively engineered device that is matched with a sophisticated touch oriented interface and a powerful software stack with open source underpinnings 45 The Verge website writes The Nokia N9 is without doubt one of the most fascinating phones of the last few years 46 The German Der Spiegel titles this could have been Nokia s winner 47 and the German magazine Stern describes it as one of the best devices ever made by Nokia 48 Delimiter called the N9 Nokia s most significant handset since the Nokia N95 49 Sales Edit The Nokia N9 has not been released in most of the largest smartphone markets such as the U S Canada UK the Netherlands Germany France Italy Spain and others Nokia did not disclose the number of sales for the N9 50 Awards Edit In November 2011 the Nokia N9 won 3 out of 4 applicable titles including design camera and cellphone of the year at a gala held by Swedish magazine and webzine Mobil se 51 In January 2012 the Nokia N9 Swipe UI was nominated for an IxDA Interaction Award 52 In February 2012 the N9 reached number 1 in ranking by rate with a rate of 8 432 out of 10 and votes of 74 940 and also number 5 by daily interest hits in GSMArena s ranking 53 In April 2012 the N9 was awarded a Design and Art Direction Yellow Pencil in the interactive product design category beating among others the iPad 2 and the Nokia Lumia 800 54 Open closed source packages and community contributions Edit The approach applied by Nokia is one of an open platform with exception and a closed user experience As with Maemo 5 on the Nokia N900 the community can request a closed source component owned by Nokia to be released as open source citation needed Hundreds of 3rd party applications mostly free and open source have already been created or ported to the Linux MeeGo Harmattan platform 55 Released updates Edit Version Release date Notable changesPR 1 0 10 2011 34 1 September 2011 Initial releasePR 1 1 20 2011 40 4 November 2011 Music controls on the lock screen additional filters to the camera application NFC tag reading Twitter image sharing Swype keyboard Chinese language support noise cancellation using second microphone 56 PR 1 2 30 2012 07 1 March 2012 Folders in the Applications view Continuous shutter mode in Camera Google Talk video calls improvements to the Nokia Drive application such as Speed limit settings defining home location etc DLNA media sharing software update notifications for 3rd party applications downloaded from Nokia Store playlist support in music player enhancements to the Mail for Exchange address book ability to access corporate mail address directory Universal Copy and paste support and in the stock browser Thai Hebrew Persian Vietnamese and Kazakh language support 57 PR 1 3 40 2012 21 3 July 2012 Over 1000 quality improvements including Mail Facebook Twitter minor network amp connectivity improvements 58 Ports for the N9 EditAndroid 2 3 port leak Edit Images of an N9 prototype running Android 2 3 were leaked to Sina Weibo by a user who had previously uploaded prototype images of Nokia s Sea Ray later Lumia 800 Windows Phone They were believed to be likely genuine as Steven Elop had mentioned Nokia had considered Android in the past 59 Android 4 1 1 Jelly Bean Edit An unofficial Android 4 1 1 port by the NITDroid community was made The port features general functionality but misses some features such as voice calling and use of the camera 60 Sailfish OS Edit On 21 November 2012 Jolla announced and demonstrated Sailfish OS which is direct continuation and based on MeeGo Above 80 of the first Linux Sailfish OS is the open source part of the Linux MeeGo The original MeeGo open source code was developed further in frames of Mer software distribution which comes from MEego Reinstated and has established current standard of the middleware stack core so software above a kernel and below a UI of OS what s more it is open source and free for vendors The Harmattan UI and several software applications used in the N9 was closed and proprietary of Nokia hence could not be used neither in MER project nor Sailfish OS So Jolla introduced its own swipe UI used MER core standard and created Sailfish OS Videos of the Sailfish OS running on a Nokia N950 appeared on the Internet the same day as the announcement As the N950 has similar technical specifications as the N9 with slight differences including a physical QWERTY keyboard this led many owners of the N9 to believe that Sailfish OS can be ported to the N9 61 Jolla confirmed this but also stated that it has no official possibilities for such kind of support for the N9 and instead the community will provide the unofficial port for Sailfish OS However Jolla maintained that the experience will not be the same as the Sailfish on official Jolla phones Jolla released the first Jolla mobile phone on 27 November 2013 62 Sailfish OS is the first full Linux MeeGo OS as the MeeGo Harmattan was only a MeeGo instance because of not fully finished combining of Maemo and Moblin Sailfish OS is actively developed and commonly assumed by whom to be next and better incarnation of MeeGo also Jolla device is assumed unofficial successor of the N9 and its legacy by all means KaiOS Edit In early 2019 KaiOS Technologies Inc demonstrate the devices running KaiOS There are Nokia 8110 2018 Jio Phone and one full touch device suspected to be Nokia N9 See also EditNokia N950 developer s mobile for N9 software development Jolla the Finnish company continuing MeeGo smartphones manufacturing which employed almost the whole engineering team which has designed the Nokia N9 and the original Linux MeeGo OS Sailfish OS informally the next incarnation and successor of MeeGo Linux by Jolla Jolla smartphone first mobile with the Sailfish OS 1 0 considered as N9 s successor Sailfish Alliance the alliance created with Jolla to promote MeeGo based Linux Sailfish and worldwide MeeGo ecosystem Comparison of smartphones List of open source mobile phones List of Nokia products Nokia X family Nokia 6 Nokia 8 SiroccoReferences Edit a b c Nokia N9 specifications Europe Nokia retrieved 21 June 2011 a b Joire Myriam 22 October 2011 Nokia N9 review Engadget AOL Retrieved 28 October 2011 Core PICS Values Bluetooth org Retrieved on 14 July 2013 Nokia and Microsoft form partnership BBC News 11 February 2011 Halliday Josh Arthur Charles 28 September 2011 Nokia N9 last of the line the Guardian Retrieved 3 April 2018 Nokia N9 officially announced unibody design buttonless swipe UI and the lost promise of Meego theverge com 20 June 2011 Retrieved 3 April 2018 Leak allegedly shows Nokia N9 could be first MeeGo phone Ars Technica Conde Nast Digital 23 August 2010 Retrieved 26 June 2011 a b Nokia s new MeeGo based N9 is set up for failure Ars Technica Conde Nast Digital 24 June 2011 Retrieved 26 June 2011 Paul Ryan 25 June 2010 Nokia picks MeeGo Linux not Symbian for flagship phones Ars Technica Olson Parmy Nokia And Microsoft Announce Strategic Partnership Forbes Introducing the Nokia N9 all it takes is a swipe Conversations Nokia Archived from the original on 24 June 2011 Retrieved 22 June 2011 Buckley Sean 22 June 2011 Nokia N9 to ship in Sweden on September 23rd saith awkwardly translated release Engadget AOL Retrieved 23 January 2012 a b Check Availability N9 Europe Nokia Retrieved 3 July 2011 Nokia s online stores go offline in France and Spain update Netherlands too Engadget AOL Retrieved 8 July 2011 a b Westaway Luke 8 October 2011 Nokia N9 won t be coming to the UK Nokia confirms CNET CBS Interactive Archived from the original on 6 October 2011 Retrieved 10 August 2011 a b Nokia MeeGo Smartphone N9 kommt nicht nach Deutschland Nokia MeeGo Smartphone N9 does not come to Germany in German Germany heise online 11 August 2011 Retrieved 10 April 2012 Nokia will not return to MeeGo even if N9 turns out to be a hit says Stephen Elop blog gsmarena com Retrieved 3 April 2018 Nokia N9 the last MeeGo device My Nokia Blog 23 June 2011 Sharma Vaibhav 22 June 2011 Thoughts The We Want Nokia To Keep MeeGo Petition Gilbert David 22 June 2016 MeeGo Engineer Calls Out Nokia CEO trustedreviews com Time Inc UK Retrieved 31 December 2016 Nokia N9 Second Coming wordpress com 12 May 2012 Retrieved 3 April 2018 Clarke Gavin Microsoft Nokia and MeeGo Are they all doomed www theregister com Nokia s bold new Meltemi OS will make feature phones smarter 29 September 2011 Murph Darren 9 August 2011 Nokia the N9 isn t coming to America Engadget AOL Retrieved 6 August 2012 Molen Brad 11 August 2011 Nokia N9 gets axed in Germany global tour looks even more meager Engadget AOL Retrieved 6 August 2012 Confirmed Nokia N9 Not Coming to America The Nokia Blog 9 August 2011 Archived from the original on 20 January 2012 Retrieved 13 August 2011 The UK Not Getting the Nokia N9 Either The Nokia Blog 10 August 2011 Archived from the original on 22 December 2011 Retrieved 13 August 2011 N9 is heading to the shops Conversations Nokia archived from the original on 29 September 2011 retrieved 27 September 2011 Nokia N9 Saturn verkauft MeeGo Handy Nokia N9 Saturn selling the MeeGo Mobile in German Netzwelt de 5 February 2012 Nokia N9 will be sold in Italy but was not expected cloudsmagazine com 2011 Retrieved 10 April 2012 Beavis Gareth 21 June 2011 Nokia N9 unveiled crazy home screens and specs galore TechRadar Retrieved 31 December 2016 a b Nokia N9 hands on First look GSM Arena Retrieved 29 June 2011 Be a local anywhere with the latest Nokia Maps and Drive Ovi Blog Nokia Corporation Archived from the original on 25 June 2011 Retrieved 25 June 2011 Damian Dinning on Nokia N9 imaging Nokia Conversations Nokia Corporation Archived from the original on 30 June 2011 Retrieved 5 July 2011 Dinning Damian 27 June 2011 Nokia N9 Imaging Conversations Nokia archived from the original on 30 June 2011 retrieved 28 June 2011 Sharma Vaibhav 23 June 2011 The N9 includes an FM transmitter amp receiver although software is not ready yet The Handheld blog retrieved 9 July 2011 Kozhanov Andrey FM Radio for Nokia N9 First FM Radio application is available in OVI Store FM Radio mobi Archived from the original on 19 March 2012 Retrieved 12 March 2012 Ovi Nokia maemo org Talk View Single Post Renaming Maemo 6 to MeeGo Harmattan Maemo Retrieved 22 June 2011 Overall UI model Swipe Nokia Nokia N9 hands on First look GSM Arena Retrieved 11 July 2011 Blog Microsoft Devices 10 May 2013 10 reasons to get excited about the Nokia Asha 501 Microsoft Devices Blog Savov Vlad 9 May 2013 Nokia hedges its commitment to Windows Phone with new Asha platform and 99 phone The Verge Savov Vlad 22 June 2011 Editorial Dear Nokia you cannot be serious Engadget AOL Retrieved 7 July 2011 Ryan Paul 24 June 2011 Nokia s new MeeGo based N9 is set up for failure Ars Technica Retrieved 31 May 2012 Savov Vlad 20 October 2011 Nokia N9 review The Verge Vox Media Retrieved 31 May 2012 Kremp Matthias 21 June 2011 Das hatte Nokias Gewinner sein konnen in German DE Der Spiegel Retrieved 31 May 2012 Maatz Bjorn 8 January 2012 Exotisches One Hit Wonder in German DE Der Stern Retrieved 31 May 2012 Orantia Jenneth 13 October 2011 Nokia N9 Review Nokia s MeeGo powered N9 not coming to the UK or the U S www h online com 11 August 2011 Archived from the original on 27 July 2013 Retrieved 31 August 2012 Guldmobilerna har delats ut in Swedish SE Mobil Retrieved 10 November 2011 Vote for Nokia N9 Swipe UI at IXDA interaction awards My Nokia Blog 2 February 2012 Retrieved 28 April 2012 GSM Arena Retrieved 22 February 2012 Product Awards D amp AD 2012 retrieved 28 April 2012 Complete MeeGo Harmattan Software Catalog My MeeGo 25 August 2011 Archived from the original on 6 July 2012 Retrieved 25 August 2011 Nokia N9 software update v1 1 rolls out Nokia Archived from the original on 14 July 2012 Retrieved 14 March 2012 The Nokia N9 software update you must have Conversations Nokia 6 March 2012 Archived from the original on 26 June 2012 Retrieved 14 March 2012 N9 Firmware change logs Nokia Archived from the original on 14 July 2012 Savov Vlad 24 June 2011 Nokia s Android flirtations revealed Engadget com Retrieved on 14 July 2013 Video Nitdroid sees N9 running Jelly Bean before most Androids My Nokia Blog 20 August 2012 Retrieved on 14 July 2013 How to Install Jolla Sailfish OS on Nokia N9 Nokiaviews Retrieved 12 December 2013 Rigg Jamie 20 May 2013 A closer look at the Jolla phone good intentions bad delivery video Engadget com Retrieved 24 June 2014 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nokia N9 Swipe Nokia archived from the original on 23 June 2011 N9 product specifications Europe Nokia Forwards to Microsoft Mobile Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nokia N9 amp oldid 1141615076, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.