Nokia’s first Windows Phone, the Nokia Lumia 800 gets announced [video]

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During Nokia World in London on Wednesday, Nokia took the wraps off of one of its first Windows Phone 7.5 devices, the Nokia Lumia 800. The Lumia 800, available in three different colors, is equipped with an 8-megapixel camera based on Carl Zeiss optics, 16GB of storage, a 3.7-inch AMOLED ClearBlack curved display, a 1.4GHz processor and 25GB of SkyDrive cloud storage for music and pictures. It also supports Nokia Drive, the company’s free turn-by-turn navigation software, as well as Nokia Music. Nokia said the Lumia 800 is available for pre-order for €420 unsubsidized in select countries and will land in France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain and the United Kingdom in November. It will then make its debut in Hong Kong, India, Russia, Singapore and Taiwan “before the end of the year” and in other markets in “early” 2012. Unfortunately, Nokia has confirmed the Lumia 800 will not launch in the United States this year. Read on for a video of the Lumia 800 and the full press release from Nokia.

UPDATE: our hands on is now live.

Signals new dawn with the launch of Nokia Lumia 800 and Nokia Lumia 710, the first Nokia smartphones powered by Windows Phone

Introduces a range of stylish, smart mobile phones, superior Nokia Maps, partnership for co-branded accessories with Monster, and more

London, UK – At Nokia World, the company’s annual event for customers, partners and developers, Nokia demonstrated clear progress on its strategy by unveiling a bold portfolio of innovative phones, services and accessories, including the first smartphones in its Windows Phone-based Nokia Lumia range. The stunningly social Nokia Lumia 800 brings content to life with head-turning design, Nokia’s best social and Internet experience, familiar Nokia elements, such as leading imaging capabilities and new signature experiences. The colorful and affordable Nokia Lumia 710 is a no-nonsense smartphone that brings the Lumia experience to more people around the world.

Nokia also launched four new mobile phones which feature stylish design, a rich social experience and location-aware technology. The Nokia Asha 300, Nokia Asha 303, Nokia Asha 200 and Nokia Asha 201 blur the line between smartphones and feature phones, offering QWERTY and touch screen experiences, combined with fast and easy access to the Internet, integrated social networking, messaging and world-class applications from the Nokia Store.

“Eight months ago, we shared our new strategy and today we are demonstrating clear progress of this strategy in action. We’re driving innovation throughout our entire portfolio, from new smartphone experiences to ever smarter mobile phones,” said Stephen Elop, Nokia President and CEO. “From the Nokia Lumia 800 to the Nokia Asha 201, we are bringing compelling new products to the market faster than ever before. I’m incredibly proud of these new devices – and the people of Nokia who have made this happen.”

“Since Nokia’s major strategic shift only eight months ago, the company has found a new energy. It has provided substantial improvements to Symbian, managed to differentiate on Windows Phone and it continues to build on its strong portfolio in mobile phones,” says Pete Cunningham, Principal Analyst, Canalys. “Nokia is delivering on its pledges, and is clearly demonstrating its path to future success.”

The first Nokia Lumia smartphones
First two smartphones based on Windows Phone introduce a range of new experiences designed to make everyday moments more amazing.

Nokia Lumia 800
The stunningly social Nokia Lumia 800 features head-turning design, vivid colors (cyan, magenta and black) and the best social and Internet performance, with one-touch social network access, easy grouping of contacts, integrated communication threads and Internet Explorer 9. It features a 3.7 inch AMOLED ClearBlack curved display blending seamlessly into the reduced body design, and a 1.4 GHz processor with hardware acceleration and a graphics processor. The Nokia Lumia 800 contains an instant-share camera experience based on leading Carl Zeiss optics, HD video playback, 16GB of internal user memory and 25GB of free SkyDrive storage for storing images and music. The estimated retail price for the Nokia Lumia 800 will be approximately 420 EUR, excluding taxes and subsidies.

Both smartphones include signature Nokia experiences optimized for Windows Phone, including Nokia Drive, which delivers a full-fledged personal navigation device (PND) with free, turn-by-turn navigation and dedicated in-car-user-interface; and Nokia Music introducing MixRadio, a free, global, mobile music-streaming application that delivers hundreds of channels of locally-relevant music. In an update delivered later this year, Nokia Lumia users will also gain the ability to create personalized channels from a global catalogue of millions of tracks. Also integrated in Nokia Music is Gigfinder, providing the ability to search for live local music for a complete end-to-end music experience, as well as the ability to share discoveries on social networks and buy concert tickets also coming in the Nokia Music software update delivered later this year.

Completing the ultimate mobile audio offering, Nokia also introduced the on-ear Nokia Purity HD Stereo Headset by Monster and the in-ear Nokia Purity Stereo Headset by Monster, co-designed and co-developed by Monster, a recognized leader in high performance audio. Both products provide a fresh listening experience and are the first output of the exclusive long-term partnership between Nokia and Monster, intended to introduce a range of premium audio accessories to reflect the outstanding quality and bold style of the Lumia range.

The new Nokia Lumia 800 is now available in select countries for pre-order on http://www.nokia.com and is scheduled to roll-out across France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain and the UK in November, with 31 leading operators and retailers providing unprecedented marketing support in those first six countries. It is scheduled to be available in Hong Kong, India, Russia, Singapore and Taiwan before the end of the year, and in further markets in early 2012.

Nokia also announced its plans to introduce a portfolio of products into the US in early 2012 and into mainland China in the first half of 2012. In addition to the existing products, which include coverage for WCDMA and HSPA, Nokia also plans LTE and CDMA products to address specific local market requirements.

45 Comments
  • http://twitter.com/PainProphet TeHJones

    Is there anyone that is as unimpressed as I am with these new Nokia devices?

    • Ashleigh

      Nokia builds some good quality phones; however, spec wise this one doesn’t seem too impressive.

      • http://twitter.com/GRZLA Grizzly Atoms

        Are you serious? What is impressive?

      • Ashleigh

        Impressive would be a 4″+ screen which is pretty much the industry standard now. Support for some real 4G data speed such as LTE would also be nice. Other than the nice build quality of Nokia phones this one seems rather ho-hum.

      • Amir

        Agree they missed the opportunity to build a good starting market. hardware wise its beautiful better than any android or any windows phones out there as I said in my previous comment but spec wise? o man they fucked up pretty bad. no dual core CPU, No front facing camera and 512mb ram. I have a LG lying around that its 5 years old and has a front facing camera ffs its almost 2012! if it only had a dual core and a front facing camera I would give it a chance but sadly they crippled the only phone they could build a good market on.   

      • Ashleigh

        Totally agree.

      • Vzwinsider

        Windows is more efficient than Android. A single core is more than sufficient whereas Android couldn’t even run smoothly with a dual core. 

        Why even build an LTE phone now when nobody can use it? and why is front facing camera a selling point now? You Americans complain too much. be glad you even have competitions. 

      • Anonymous

        WP doesn’t need “impressive” specs to have a smooth UI. It’s OS requires very low computing power and in the end, you get a product that just works. Now… TIME FOR YOUR BUKACKI

      • Ashleigh

        Specs that it is lacking such as no LTE and a small 3.7″ screen have nothing to do with how smooth the UI is but these are still major short comings. And NO to your last statement.

      • Booboolala2000

        its bukkake. and you are on the wrongbsite for that unless it is man on man.

      • Anonymous

        Yes, I agree that it is about the user experience and not about the processor and RAM specs.  Storage is also not a concern if it has expandable memory.  However, why didn’t they put in a camera at least as good as the N8 and why is there no front facing camera?  LTE could have given it a competitive advantage, but I guess HSPA+ is still ok for this year.

        In the end investors will measure them based on earnings.  We’ll have to wait and see how well this device sells.

    • Anonymous

      I’m still confused to why people thought Nokia would come in and save the day for WP7. While their devices have a certain flair and appeal, they aren’t anything special, especially compared to what is coming out of Apple/Samsung/HTC.

      If the iPhone is considered girly, tweenie, hipsterish, I don’t know what you would consider these colorful things.

    • Anonymous

      Not impressed either! Lets call this devices FAILPHONE 710 and 800 :-)

  • http://twitter.com/ggore Glenn Gore

    This phone is pretty if nothing else.   The size of the display is roughly equal to the iPhone’s, which is fine, although it is much lower resolution than that of the iPhone.   It has a single core processor rather than dual-core, and has only one size of storage, 16 Gb.    You do get 25 Gb of “Cloud” storage that you can stream from I guess, but how is that a plus in this age of data caps?     All in all, this is a very pretty phone with quite unremarkable specs, and an OS that no one has really taken a liking to as of yet.   Nice try.

    • http://twitter.com/GRZLA Grizzly Atoms

      This phone has .2″ on the iphone. If you held a 3.5″ device and a 3.7″ you could definitely feel and tell the difference. Why are these phones obnoxious colors?

      • http://twitter.com/ggore Glenn Gore

        Big deal, .2″    Bigger screen with lower resolution does not equal better.   AMOLED screens are pretty, though they skew a little towards green due to the nature of AMOLED.    Not that this new phone has a horrible screen.    

      • Tony

        I know your mom can definitely feel the difference when shes holding my 7.2″ device.

      • Poop Stick

        you sure seem to know a lot about holding 3.5″ and 3.7″  “devices”.  i had my suspicions about you, but thanks for confirming it.  not that there’s anything wrong with that.

  • http://twitter.com/Aleis Jayrock

    this was a pathetic attempt. Now…who is opening the facebook petition page for Nokia/Android????

    • http://www.droiddoes.com/ Norm

      The OS isn’t the problem. It’s the lame hardware. We dont need another company making crapDROID

      • http://twitter.com/alv_rey Alvaro Rey

        ohhh finally the troll shows his guts, how old are you? 

      • Anonymous

        Wrong, the WP7 IS the BIG problem. This unprogressive OS lacks functionallity, so Nokia is just not able to build NFC or LTE into the hardware !!! WP7+Nokia+Lumia= FAILPHONE

    • http://about.me/brandonmccall brandonmccall

      You sound silly.

    • PooPoo Platter

      yeah, b/c a facebook petition would do a lot of good.

      besides, nokia will never have android on their phone.  they can’t keep up with the android release schedule.  ie. a new flagship phone every 9 days

  • Anonymous

    It’s about time Windows Phone got attractive hardware.. but it’s obviously not for the US. It seems as though the absolute minimum here is LTE radio, front facing camera, dual core, 1 gb ram, and a 4″ screen. Until that happens, this phone will be DOA on our shores..

    • http://twitter.com/BuckWheaties Duhwayne D’Zyre Reed

      Dual core CPU’s aren’t even built into WP yet, no phone will be dual core until Tango is released.  iPhone isn’t LTE and that seems to be selling alright.  But I agree, if you’re android, those specs are what’s needed.  Android is a complete spec war, unnecessary, but it is what is. If this came to US I’d sport it.  WP handles just fine on single core hardware, its a very efficient OS.  

      • GZ

        ” iPhone isn’t LTE and that seems to be selling alright.”

        Dude….it’s an iPhone (that’s why)

  • Anonymous

    I guess Nokia is afraid of the US market.  I was going to give this phone a shot, but I am certainly not waiting for a mid-level spec’d phone released months after it’s initial launch.

  • Chris

    Is Nokia new or something? I can’t remember ever hearing anything about them. Oh wait, maybe they just weren’t news-worthy. Sorry.

  • Anonymous

    Bummer no US this year, Microsoft’s home market.  With the exception of the screen size, good specs all around.  WP7 is known to work very well on lesser processors and RAM, so that’s not much of a problem.  And Nokia is known for great camera optics and build quality, and the NavTeq powered mapping will be a nice solution.

    Let’s hope that by the launch next year a “bunch” more phones are revealed.

  • http://about.me/brandonmccall brandonmccall

    Why no love for the US?

    • http://twitter.com/GRZLA Grizzly Atoms

      No clue. They have a corporate headquarters about 20 miles from where I live, yet they sell virtually no phones in the US.

      • http://about.me/brandonmccall brandonmccall

        How discouraging. This device gives the 4S a run for it’s money. 

  • Anonymous

    The shapes and colors looks like the 5th Gen iPod nano

    • Vzinsider

      And is that a bad thing?

  • Anonymous

    Just ship the n9 in the US and call it a day

  • http://unfusedjournal.blogspot.com fahdriyami

    Absolutely beautiful phone. Those complaining about the lack of a dual-core processor would end up complaining about how similar the experience is compared to a single-core processor on Windows Phone… My HTC Mozart runs smoother than a dual-core Sensation XE.

  • Amir

    wow they fucked it up!! are these people idiots or what?  a year old processor? no Front facing camera?? WTF!! its almost 2012!!!! wake up NOKIA and Windows!!! I used to be a huge nokia fan years ago the had the best phones but windows and nokia won’t be coming back any time soon if they are coming up with over a year old specs products. 

    this phone hardware wise is the nicest phone ever to come out between all the androids and Windows phones out there however they fucked it before comes to the market because its lacking important features and a year old specs.
    If this phone had a dual core cpu, 1g ram, a good front facing camera or at least one which is pretty much standard in today’s mobile smart phones I would definitely get one but they lost their chance of me and many others going back to them. it makes you wonder who is making those dumb decisions for them? 

    this phone would be a hit if they just had standard specs like every other high end phone in the market :(

    • Christopher Lee

      *ahem* raw specs are only half the story. Software matters a lot, which is why apple can get super smooth response rates and high-end mobile games (infinity blade? rage hd?) with less ram and arguably less computing overall computing power than many android phones. From what I’ve seen of wp7, wp7 is also a fairly efficiently designed platform, so raw specs are not as important. for that matter, the nokia n8 used _really_ archaic processors, but because symbian was such a sparse platform, it still flew compared to say androids 1.0-1.6 on comparable phones.

      specs may be important for doing within-platform comparisons (one wp7 phone to another wp7 phone, one android phone to another android phone, one iPhone to another iPhone), but quickly becomes less meaningful when making cross-platform comparisons. you could give me the specs in the world and i can toss together an OS for it that’ll make it crawl.

      • Amir

        I know what you mean its not always the raw specs that translate to smoothness of an OS as we know android use much more processing power to do tasks but those spec are not acceptable regardless its almost 2012! even apple has a dual core even though it doesn’t take as much processing power as an android for example. lacking simple features like a front facing camera? I’m not sure but those specs and lacking simple features will turn many people away!

  • Booboolala2000

    android fan here wsiting on the nexus, but anyone else smell a big ol apple lawsuit coming for ripping off the ipod mini and nano? this makes the gtab look like an alien in comparison. Apple probably wont sue because it doesnt pose a threat. 

  • http://twitter.com/jonasyon Jona Sy

    This phone is beautiful. I’m loving the design and the specs are great for WP7 which should fly on this thing. 

  • http://twitter.com/GusGomez G4tro

    I love how i made a comment about how Apple gets so much publicity on this site when they come out with the same phone as last year and put and “S” at the end of the name but when Nokia’s WP7 device comes out it barely gets any attention from BGR….But of course they never put it up for whatever reason…..

  • http://www.flayme.com/troll/ bananabait

    it looks like an overgrown ipod mini

  • Anonymous

    ipod nano?

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