Nokia Lumia 620

Nokia Lumia 620

Nokia Lumia 620
Manufacturer Nokia
Series Lumia
Compatible networks GSM/GPRS/EDGE 850/900/1800/1900
HSPA 850/900/1900/2100
Wi-Fi, NFC
Predecessor Nokia Lumia 610
Type Smartphone
Form factor Slate
Dimensions 115.4 mm (4.54 in) H
61.1 mm (2.41 in) W
11.0 mm (0.43 in) D
Weight 127 g (4.5 oz)
Operating system Windows Phone 8
SoC Qualcomm Snapdragon S4
CPU 1.0 GHz dual-core Qualcomm
Memory 8 GB internal flash
512 MB RAM
Removable storage MicroSD (up to 64GB)
Battery Rechargeable BL-4J 1300mAh
Data inputs Multi-touch capacitive touchscreen, proximity sensor, ambient light sensor,
Display 3.8" LCD ClearBlack capacitive touchscreen
800x480 px 16.7m-color
Rear camera 5.0 Megapixel, 2592 x 1936 pixels, LED flash, autofocus 720p video
Front camera VGA, 640x480 pixels
Connectivity

3.5mm headset jack, USB 2.0, Bluetooth 3.0, 802.11a/b/g/n, NFC

A-GPS, GLONASS
Other Talk time: Up to 14 hours (3G), 9.9 hours (WCDMA)
Standby time: Up to 330 hours (approx. 13.8 days)
Music playback time: Up to 61 hours
Website www.nokia.com/global/products/phone/lumia620/

The Nokia Lumia 620 is a smartphone designed, developed and marketed by Nokia. It is the successor to the Lumia 610, and is one of the first Nokia phones to implement Windows Phone 8 alongside the Nokia Lumia 920 and Nokia Lumia 820. Although sharing a similar name with the Lumia 610, the Lumia 620 is a major overhaul over its predecessor, employing a 1.0 GHz dual-core processor. It was announced in December 2012 and is expected to sell in January 2013 in Asia, followed by Europe and the Middle East at an estimated street price of USD 249.[1]

Like other Lumia devices with Windows Phone 8, Nokia adds these applications: Nokia Drive, Nokia Maps, Nokia City Lens, Nokia Music (select markets), Smartshoot, Cinemagraph.[2]

Because of the limited memory available on this phone, certain applications and features will not be able to run.[3][4]

Reception

Engadget reviewed the phone very positively. It praised its battery life, performance, and value for money. It noted that the camera was not very good, but okay considering that the 620 is a budget phone.[5]

James Rogerson of TechRadar in his review wrote: "There's not a whole lot that the Nokia Lumia 620 does wrong. As an all-round, jack of all trades budget handset it does a great job. We'd love it if the screen was slightly bigger or it had a little bit more RAM, but for the price we can't really complain. The only real issue is the battery, and that's an issue to some extent with every Windows Phone 8 right now."[6]

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Last modified on 3 May 2013, at 05:19