Interesting gadgets and mobile phones are now changing the world of technology. Right into your mobile phones, you have the chance to browse and access the Internet. Seems like you are handling a mini computer or laptop on your pocket due to the best and upgraded features offered. Well, many options for mobile phones are giving you this advantage and of course, you can use it not only for personal terms but also for business use. If you want to have a phone for business and want to hand a desirable executive gadget, you will love to start taking Nokia E72 with you. It looks best for business use and this Symbian S60 smartphone packs an outstanding number of features that make it more than just a slick mobile messaging device.
If you are familiar with E71 which been introduced a couple of years ago, the design hasn’t changed much for Nokia E72. It is still makes liberal use of shiny stainless steel to make its slender case feel robust. Nokia has ditched the 2.5mm headset socket in favour of a more versatile 3.5mm jack though, and wisely left the microUSB port and microSD card slot alone.
To be familiar with Nokia E72 screen and features as well as its operating system, come and check this out;
The 2.36inch screen is an inevitable side-effect of cramming a physical keyboard into the case, but its 320×240 resolution is less excusable — even the similarly equipped BlackBerry Bold 9700 manages 480×360. Although it could stand to be a little wider, the Qwerty keyboard is a pleasure to use — the sharply rounded keys feel great under the thumb, and both numbers and common symbols are readily accessible.
The E72 wants for nothing when it comes to features and a front-mounted camera, quad-band GSM, HSDPA, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 2.0, GPS, digital compass, FM tuner, VoIP support and 5-megapixel camera with flash make it one of the best-equipped smartphones around. Battery life is impressive too, with a quoted talk time of 12.5 hours and a standby time of four weeks.
Nokia E72: The operating system
Symbian S60 3.2.3 looks rather dated on the E72 when compared to the slick interfaces of the iPhone and Android, and isn’t anywhere near as user-friendly — multiple ways of accessing the same features and deeply buried configuration options just add to the confusion. The PIM apps are rudimentary too, and the web browser’s assumption that you only want mobile versions of web pages is annoying — though these do work better on the very low resolution screen.
Email is the E72’s real weak spot — at least for us. The two devices we tried doggedly refused to synchronize with Google’s Exchange server (not an issue we’ve had from the fore mentioned Bold or Motorola Milestone) and the built-in option for setting up Gmail IMAP access created an account that wouldn’t work. The only way we got around this was by setting up Gmail IMAP manually, using a T-Mobile, or when we swapped to a Vodafone sim.  Similar problems are reported in several threads on Nokia’s own support forums, which suggest that Symbian S60 on the E72 has a few issues where email is concerned and at the time of writing, Nokia had yet to account for them.