Featured Resources:

line

Newsletter

Email Address:


line

Ask the Expert

Have a question for our resident expert? Email your questions to Ken.

« News Release: CounterPath Announces New Multimedia Communicator Bria 2.0 | Main | News Release: IBM Internet Security Systems Accelerates Network Performance with New Intrusion Prevention Appliance »

Nokia N95 back in testing

I got my Nokia N95 back yesterday, fresh from reflashing and ready to roll. Last night I set it all up, paired with the N800 and got it back in a configuration that's useful for me. So now it's back to being my primary phone and we'll see how it does.

One early observation - battery life is doing very well. Standard morning use left a full set of bars on the power meter at noon time. That's a good sign for starters. It's been cranking SMS, 3-4 phone calls, a few pictures.

One problem noted. I did install the Jaiku client and the phone started randomly rebooting itself. Removed Jaiku and problem cleared. That means Jaiku won't be on the phone until things clear up, which means I probably won't use Jaiku much for a while. With web only access. it's not terribly useful to me.

So far so good with the N95. It will get a workout this weekend on a getaway in the 5th wheel too.


Technorati Tags: ,

Comments

Interesting that you say Jaiku sent your phone a bit wacky. When I installed it on my old N70, I got random reboots and a random freeze where I had to take the battery out completely!

I've acquired an N95 since Friday and I won't be in a rush to run Jaiku on there for a while, to be honest.

I've used that version of Jaiku on the N95 many times. The N95 itself is not without some issues. At the moment I'm involved in the new closed beta for the next version of Jaiku. It's been trouble free and very impressive so far.

Post a comment

(All comments are approved by site leader before appearing here. Thanks for commenting!)

line

Ken Camp's Bio:

Ken Camp has more than 25 years of experience in information technology. Ken spent 17 years with AT&T and Lucent Technologies successfully designing and implementing voice and data networks. He later worked in the security marketplace and played a key role in early IPSec VPN deployments. As an independent consultant, Ken's primary focal areas include network performance improvement, security practices and the design and deployment of integrated voice and data solutions. He may be contacted at: ken_camp@realtimepublishers.net

line

Blog Roll