Nokia N810
The Nokia N810 Internet tablet is an Internet appliance from Nokia, announced on 17 October 2007 at the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco. Despite Nokia's strong association with cellular products, the N810, like preceding tablets produced by Nokia, was not a phone, but instead allowed the user to browse the Internet and communicate using Wi-Fi networks or with a mobile phone via Bluetooth. It built on the hardware and software of the Nokia N800 with some features added and some removed.
Manufacturer | Nokia |
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Type | Internet appliance |
Release date | November 2007 |
Media | One miniSD slot, compatible with miniSD or microSD (with adapter) cards up to 8 GB |
Operating system | Maemo 4.1 (codename Diablo) |
CPU | 400 MHz TI OMAP 2420 |
Memory | 128 MB Random access memory |
Storage | 256 MB + 2 GB Flash |
Display | 800 × 480 resolution, 105 mm (4.13 in) diagonal, 88 pixels/cm, 225 ppi, 65536 colors (16-bit) |
Input | Keyboard/Resistive Touchscreen |
Camera | 640 × 480 VGA Camera (currently supports photos and video) |
Connectivity | IEEE 802.11b, IEEE 802.11g, Bluetooth 2.0, USB 2.0 |
Power | 1500 mAh BP-4L Battery |
Dimensions | 72 * 128 * 14 mm |
Mass | 226 g |
Predecessor | Nokia N800 |
Successor | Nokia N900 |
The Nokia N810 featured the Maemo Linux distribution operating system based on Maemo 4.0, which featured MicroB (a Mozilla-based mobile browser), a GPS navigation application, new media player, and a refreshed interface.
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