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Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Nokia's First Tablet Lumia 2520

Nokia's First Tablet Comes
Nokia Lumia 2520
It's been rumored for a long time, and now it's real: Nokia has revealed its first tablet, the Lumia 2520, a 10.1-inch Windows-based model that emphasizes "mobility" overhead all else.

To verify the issue, Nokia isn't offering a version of the tablet with just Wi-Fi connectivity — it will only be sold through wireless carriers with a plan to attach with 4G LTE networks.

"We're professionals in mobility and that's what
we're designing for," says Ifi Majid, Nokia's head of merchandise marketing for intelligent apparatus. "All of the tablets that we create will be LTE- and Wi-Fi-enabled."

The Lumia 2520 stands out among tablets for other causes: The chassis is a "unibody," meaning the backside and borders are made out of a single piece of polycarbonate.
The new Lumia tablet is furthermore one of the couple of tablets to run Windows RT 8.1 — not too surprising a alternative given Nokia's close connection with Microsoft, which is about to become permanent by an acquisition.
"There are a number of causes we went with RT," says Majid. "If we went with [Windows 8.1] Pro, there'd be a conceive tradeoff — it'd be thicker, you'd have to have a distinct processor, and you wouldn't be adept to get the slim, slim tadeptt that we were adept to achieve."
whereas it doesn't run full Windows, the processor inside is no slouch: a quad-core 2.2GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 800.

I got a short hands-on with the Lumia 2520, and it is indeed slim and very sleek. The unibody building leads makes it feel solid, and the full HD IPS (in-plane switching) LCD really pops. It's brilliant (Nokia rates it at 160 nits) and glossy, but it doesn't have too much glare.

Nokia is also offering an optional accessory for the 2520: a Power Keyboard. The $150 keyboard folds over the tablet and cleverly resembles a chic notebook. It's equitably lightweight as keyboard accessories proceed, but still packs an additional 5 hours of battery life. The nature of the bend places the trackpad an inch or so away from the keyboard, although, which I found a little jarring.

"We believe there's a genuine opening to convey differentiation to the attached apparatus space," says Ifi Majid, Nokia's head of merchandise marketing for intelligent apparatus. "One of the things we liked to do is convey this great balance between fun and productivity. It's actually difficult to type on an iPad, and if I take my laptop it's not actually exciting to watch videos, videos and music."

Nokia hopes the sleek conceive (just 1.26 pounds), all-day battery life (the 8,000 milliamp-hour battery is good for up to 10 hours) and LTE connectivity will apply to anyone who desires to get work done in train vehicles, coffee stores and park benches. After playing with it for a couple of minutes, I considered it was attractive joy, too; the Snapdragon 800 CPU holds the experience pleasant and fluid, and the colorful design is amicable — more so than the Microsoft Surface 2.

Some specification.

Operating System Used: Nokia Lumia 2520 Tablet operating system is Windows 8.1 RT.

Processor: 2.15 GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon processor is used.

RAM Used: 2 GB

Memory: internal 32 GB and expanded up to 64 GB with micro-SD card.

Camera Quality: 6.7 megapixels main rear Camera used and front camera is of 2 MP only. Camera quality is well refined with zeiss optical lenses.

Connectivity: Bluetooth, WiFi, GPS, EGPRS, 3G,  HSDPA, HSUPA and 3.5 mm Audio Jack support.

Media Support: MP3, High Definition gaming, Internet Radio and lots of more.

Price in India: Rs. 34,000 to Rs. 38,000 price range.

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