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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:

Rating: 
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Diappointment
I purchased the N810 after reading glowing revues in computer magazines. I am far from a novice computer user, but this little item defeated me. I was unable to get it connected to my computer to download some programs - the very ones for which I had purchased the tablet. E-mails to Customer Support went from amusing to exasperating; a phone call soon became apparent that English was not the first language of the technician, so rather than have profanity become MY first language, I terminated the call. As is obvious, my problem was never solved. I devoutly wish I had saved my money.
Rating: 
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Good for lite web / email / gps / chat
I like my Nokia N810, it's great for browsing the web on Wifi or Bluetooth, using GPS maps, or chatting / emailing with friends. It's not especially good at any one thing, It's at best, mediocre at everything, but it works and it's portable. That's why I bought it, and that's why it deserves a 4 star review. It has so much potential as a web cam chat product, but it fails at that. The built in web cam only works with proprietary Nokia applications, or beta software that nobody uses (Gizmo). It does not work with Skype or any other chat program. If you use the web cam with flash sites, it works, but is super slow, and makes the flash sites nearly unusable. However, there is hope. This is a software problem, not a hardware one. I just hope I see a software update before the end of the year.
Rating: 
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Broken!
It arrived broken! LCD screen didn't work and now I have a ton of issues returning it. I can't return it back to AMAZON or ANTonline (Amazon's vendor) because nobody will take responsibility for it. WHAT A MESS!
Warning! NEVER BUY A PRODUCT FROM AMAZON THAT YOU ARE NOT ABLE TO RETURN TO AMAZON! I really wonder why Amazon sells products from other companies that it is unwilling to take responsibility for????????
Rating: 
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This device is a beauty
This is an absolutely wonderful device. I also own a iphone and a pocket pc so I'll present a comparison.
IPAQ:
I bought a pocket pc (HP Ipaq 110) a few months back thinking that it would serve as a handheld computing device for me. Let me assure you - it didn't. Windows pocket pcs just dont have it in them. In the Ipaq 110, there were no zoom buttons for quick full screen access. Nokia n810 puts the resolution on ipaq 110 to a shame. The screen resolution on ipaq 110 was so poor that if you wanted to see a webpage, you could only see maybe 1/16th of the width at one time. Text was not clear unless it was really huge (by Nokia N810 standards). Microsoft just hasn't designed an innovative enough product. Who ever came up with the idea of trying to fit a webpage somehow on a low resolution screen, by totally scrapping all structure, has obviously never tried to use it themselves.
Iphone:
While the resolution on iphone was good, who really wants to keep rubbing their fingers on the screen all the time? The browsing was very barebone. It was only marginally better than the pocketpc. Half the websites wouldn't open or would be completely unbrowsable. And what's the point of browsing if you can't save a thing to your computer. You can't save any pdf's - nothing. Everything was restricted. There were no hardware buttons - all you did was rub your fingers across the screen.
Nokia N810:
The browsing on this device is beyond description. After my experiences with iphone and ipaq, I was beginning to thing that there is no such thing as proper browsing on a handheld device. Nokia N810 proved me wrong. The resolution of the screen is so high (and beautifully fine) that you can actually browse very comfortably. You see entire websites on one screen and it doesn't feel that you are compromising anything.
The Mozilla based browser works wonderfully. On N810, there is no difference how a webpage would behave on a laptop vs on this device. You actually see what you see on a laptop. This is not a scrapped down browser like the other two devices I mentioned - You can actually do important tasks without taking an hour trying to some how get around form or functional barriers.
128 megs of ram is great. For comparison, IPAQ 110 had 64 megs of ram. In Nokia N810, there is also an option to use a swap file on the internal disk.
The filesystem and file manager feel very robust. There is the device file system, and the internal card (2 GB), and your own micro SD card (if you inserted one).
Installing Applications:
Installing applications is very easy - just go to [...] (on your device itself) and click install buttons for what ever you want to install. There are some nice games out there. You have to try numpty physics.
Skype:
Skype works great. You just download and install it and you have a fully functional WiFi phone right away.
PDF and Document Reading:
This device excells in all forms of text reading. The screen is so great, it actually makes text look so beautiful. There is a fully functional PDF reader that comes pre-installed. Also, make sure you install 'evince'. I cannot praise evince enough. It is one of the many free applications you can download and install from [...]. It lets you view pdfs, and also Djvu (and others besides that). There is a ebook reader too (FBReader). I tried opening a Djvu file on my pocketpc, and while it would open, it was totally useless - first because of the low resolution, and secondly because the software was so crappy. However, with evince on Nokia N810, I can so easily (and fully functional, no compromises) read some of the Djvu books that I have (some of them many megs large with hundreds of pages).
The hardware buttons on this device work perfect. The quick zoom lets you maximise applications to full screen and then there are zoom in/out buttons, lock button, power button etc. (Microsoft should learn something from this instead of producing crappy OS for portable devices after 6+ years of development).
Updates: Updates to the OS and software are frequent. There is a good community developing software for this device. Everything is built for open standards and more connectivity and capabilities (instead of designing applications to make them more restrictive).
Connection to PC: There are multiple connectivity options to a PC. You don't need any drivers or anything. Just hook it to a pc and it becomes an external harddrive. You see, both the internal card and the external card as removable drives. You can of course, copy stuff directly to the microSD card using SD adapters and readers etc. (many microSD cards come with adapters, and many new laptops have SD readers inbuilt).
This linux device actually feels like a computer in hand, instead of feeling like a gimmic. The browsing is so functional, you can use it full time as an ultra portable computer. Performance is very decent.
For enthusiasts out there, there are things like xterm (comes pre-installed), rdesktop (you can login onto and remotely use your windows desktops), openSSH and a bunch of nice utilities available.
Summary:
I was beginning to think that handheld devices are mostly toys - they cannot be used for any serious browsing, reading etc. Nokia N810 proved me wrong. The screen is so beautiful and high-resolution, you see entire webpages on it. And the browser is not a nerfed version - it is a fully functional mozilla browser - just like on a laptop.
Document viewing ability is excellent. Google maps, google documents, gmail etc. - all work great. You can actually login to your secure websites (credit card payments, shopping) and not feel that suddenly a website might not work on your handheld.
I highly recommend this product.
Rating: 
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Nokia 810
It is everything it claims to be: lightweight, easily accessible with wireless and/or BlueTooth. It is also easy to use.