Nokia presented a new entry-level model, which is reminiscent of the past in terms of its design and capabilities, but at least it is relatively small, there is nothing hanging in the display, the battery is replaceable and there is a 3.5 mm jack. This pretty much exhausts the list of positives, compared to the microUSB connector, the unknown quad-core, maximum 1.4 GHz chipset and the 2/32 GB memory package with eMMC 5.1 internal storage.
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The polycarbonate device equipped with a 5.45-inch panel with a resolution of 720 x 1440 pixels somehow weighed 191 grams, presumably because of the IP52 protection, which at least provides resistance to drops and dust. The 3000 mAh battery can be replaced, but it can only be charged with a power of 5 watts. There is no fingerprint reader, 2D facial recognition is performed by the 2 megapixel front camera, and you can take photos with the 5 megapixel rear camera.
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The device only supports the 802.b/g/n WiFi standard, Bluetooth 4.2, GPS is just GPS, and only one accelerometer among the sensors is included in the device and only two years of quarterly security product support is included. We don’t know the price and availability yet, but I’d be very interested in what they plan to charge for this configuration in 2023. It will certainly be cheaper than the Nokia C12.