Nokia just announced its third phone in five days, its new WP8 flagship called Nokia Lumia 925.
It's similar to the Lumia 920 and Verizon's Lumia 928
in that it packs an 8.7MP sensor with Optical Image Stabilization and
f/2.0 aperture. The flash is a regular LED flash, no xenon here.
The phone packs two IHF microphones that record distortion-free sound for the 1080p videos even in loud environments.
Nokia preloaded the Lumia 925 with the Smart Camera app - it features
several modes including burst mode (10 shots at 5MP), Best Shot (picks
the best of the burst), Action Shot (Sequence shot on the HTC One, Drama
shot on the Galaxy S4) and Motion focus (adds motion blur to static
objects, as if you're tracking the moving object with the camera). You
can also remove moving objects and pick the best face for each person.
The screen is 4.5" in diagonal and has WXGA resolution – that's 768 x
1280. More importantly it's an AMOLED with ClearBlack and Gorilla Glass
2, instead of an LCD. Unsurprisingly, the Qualcomm chipset of the Lumia
925 packs a dual-core Krait processor at 1.5GHz with 1GB of RAM, which
is the best that WP8 currently supports.
The phone has an aluminum frame around the side, while the back is
polycarbonate. The body is just 8.8mm thick and weighs 139g - much more
acceptable than the Lumia 920. Inside it is a 2,000mAh battery, same as
the Lumia 920 and Lumia 928. The battery is non-removable and there's no
wireless charging out of the box - you can enable that with a thin
charging cover.
The built-in storage is 16GB (a downgrade from the 920 and 928) and
there's no microSD card slot to expand it. Actually, the Vodafone
version of the phone will pack 32GB of storage, which is better.
The Nokia Lumia 925 will be available in Europe (Vodafone Germany,
Italy, Spain and UK, where it will also be carried by O2) and China
(China Mobile and China Unicom) this June for €470 ($610) and will come
to the US later on T-Mobile.
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