Nokia has launched a new N-series multimedia device — Nokia N92 — the world's first DVB-H enabled device that will support live broadcast mobile TV from DVB-H service providers.
It should a great news for Modeo and India's public broadcaster Doordarshan which has recently launched DVB-H mobile TV services in Delhi.
It should a great news for Modeo and India's public broadcaster Doordarshan which has recently launched DVB-H mobile TV services in Delhi.
The TV picture is displayed full screen and the quality of the picture is excellent, and channel changing is near instantaneous. It is difficult to get across how good it looks without seeing it for yourself, but between the high resolution screen and the DVB-H technology, the N92 offers an unsurpassed mobile television experience.
The N92 is a chunky handset and given what is packed inside it is not surprising that it tips the scale at a relatively heavy 191g, but size-wise at 107 x 58 x 25 mm it is not a total pocket buster. With the XpressMusic brand attached, the N92 is also a capable music phone. Music can be copied directly to the phone thanks to the USB Mass Storage Device, but it will also be possible to synchronise from Windows Media Player. This is thanks to the licensing agreement Nokia made with Microsoft which also enables the playback of Janus DRM protected files in addition to MP3, AAC, eAAC+ and RA. This means the N92 will be able to use subscription-based music services such as Napster or Yahoo Music. The N92 will ship with an adaptor to convert the POP-Port to a standard 3.5mm audio socket so you can use your preferred headphones.Like its sibling the N80, the N92 supports UPnP, which allows you to play music on your phone over your home UPnP-enabled HiFi system, download music and content from your PC, and display images and video from your phone on your UPnP TV. This is done over a Wi-Fi connection, using the industry standard UPnP protocols. UPnP compatibility can usually be added by means of an add on box
Dual mode WCDMA/GSM and triband GSM coverage on up to five continents (GSM 900/1800/1900 and WCDMA 2100 networks) and EDGE Automatic switching between bands and modes ( DVB-H 470-702 MHz ).
The N92 is a chunky handset and given what is packed inside it is not surprising that it tips the scale at a relatively heavy 191g, but size-wise at 107 x 58 x 25 mm it is not a total pocket buster. With the XpressMusic brand attached, the N92 is also a capable music phone. Music can be copied directly to the phone thanks to the USB Mass Storage Device, but it will also be possible to synchronise from Windows Media Player. This is thanks to the licensing agreement Nokia made with Microsoft which also enables the playback of Janus DRM protected files in addition to MP3, AAC, eAAC+ and RA. This means the N92 will be able to use subscription-based music services such as Napster or Yahoo Music. The N92 will ship with an adaptor to convert the POP-Port to a standard 3.5mm audio socket so you can use your preferred headphones.Like its sibling the N80, the N92 supports UPnP, which allows you to play music on your phone over your home UPnP-enabled HiFi system, download music and content from your PC, and display images and video from your phone on your UPnP TV. This is done over a Wi-Fi connection, using the industry standard UPnP protocols. UPnP compatibility can usually be added by means of an add on box
Dual mode WCDMA/GSM and triband GSM coverage on up to five continents (GSM 900/1800/1900 and WCDMA 2100 networks) and EDGE Automatic switching between bands and modes ( DVB-H 470-702 MHz ).
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