Nokia N75The Nokia N75 provides a complete multimedia experience in a thin and elegant clamshell, while utilizing Nokia’s renowned ease of use.

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Nokia N75 - Black AT&T good condition
US $65.00
End Date: Wednesday Feb-08-2012 16:56:57 PST
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NEW NOKIA 3G N75 UNLOCKED AT&T T-MOBILE CELL PHONE
US $142.00
End Date: Friday Feb-10-2012 2:21:26 PST
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New Nokia 3G N75 Unlocked Smart Phone
US $156.72
End Date: Saturday Feb-11-2012 23:35:31 PST
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NEW NOKIA 3G N75 UNLOCKED AT&T T-MOBILE CELL PHONE
US $139.00
End Date: Sunday Feb-12-2012 2:56:33 PST
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Nokia N75 Unlocked Flip Phone with 1.3 MP Camera with Bluetooth
US $59.99 (0 Bid)
End Date: Sunday Feb-12-2012 16:34:09 PST
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WHOLESALE LOT of 36 CAR CHARGER for NOKIA PHONES AUTO VEHICLE 6101 ADAPTER
US $57.99
End Date: Saturday Feb-18-2012 13:18:08 PST
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WHOLESALE LOT of 36 TRAVEL HOME CHARGER for NOKIA PHONES 6101 WALL ADAPTER
US $64.99
End Date: Saturday Feb-18-2012 13:45:31 PST
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NOKIA N75 UNLOCKED WIFI SmartPhone Bluetooth CELL PHONE Carl Zeiss
US $152.99
End Date: Sunday Feb-19-2012 2:57:59 PST
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LOT 25 NEW BATTERY FOR NOKIA BL4B N76,N75,8600,7500
US $70.00
End Date: Monday Feb-20-2012 5:19:27 PST
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Nokia N75 - Black (Unlocked). AT&T, T-Mobie. Made in Finland.
US $72.00
End Date: Tuesday Feb-21-2012 22:54:08 PST
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More information about the Nokia N75:

“By combining people’s entertainment and leisure needs into the Nokia N75, Nokia is affecting the lifestyles of mobile device users in a positive way. With all its features and beautiful design, the Nokia N75 keeps your life connected and it’s far easier and more enjoyable to just have one device to carry around, and still keep ahead of the game!” said Nigel Rundstrom, vice president of Multimedia Sales for Nokia in North America.

Soundtrack to your life

The Nokia N75 music experience excels even with the device closed. The digital music player has easy controls on the cover of the device, and the reflective 1.36″ color cover display guides you to your music, which is always just a button press away. Supporting a multitude of different formats, including MP3, M4A, AAC, eAAC+ and WMA, the advanced digital music player includes an equalizer, playlist, shuffle and repeat features for a direct connection to compatible online music services. When you connect the Nokia N75 to your compatible PC, a mere tap on the music key acts as an instant link to music stored. The PC-mobile synchronization redirects your favorite tunes straight to the Nokia N75, which can store up to 1,500* individual tracks on an optional 2GB microSD card. In addition to playing downloaded music and ripped cds, the Nokia N75 also includes a stereo FM radio, allowing you to listen to your favorite talk or music radio stations through your compatible headphones or through the integrated 3D stereo speakers.**

Show me what you got

A mere click of the dedicated camera key on the Nokia N75 results in a sharp, ready to print 2-megapixel (1600 x 1200 pixels) photos - select the best pictures by previewing them as a slideshow through the 2.4” screen with up to 16 million colors. With up to 16x digital zoom, an integrated flash LED, and the files in JPEG/EXIF format, you can expect excellent quality for the photos taken. This entertainment device doubles as a mini TV screen, for optimized viewing of streaming and downloaded video clips. Featuring MPEG-4 video capture and playback in landscape mode, the Nokia N75 delivers an instant video experience with audio recording. With internal memory of up to 40 MB, which can be further expanded with an optional microSD card of up to 2 GB, the N75 allows users to capture up to 500 minutes of high quality video or close to 2500 2-megapixel photos.

The world in your hand

The highly intuitive Nokia Web Browser with Mini Map delivers desired Web pages with their original design directly to the high-resolution color display (320 x 240 pixels, up to 16 million colors). Furthermore, the browser enables RSS feeds, so users can subscribe to their favorite Web sites and receive regular updates. Keeping in touch with friends is just as easy as from your home computer, but the Nokia N75 is always with you - just follow simple set up prompts to access an existing compatible email account or standard SMS and MMS features. Part of the Nokia Nseries multimedia computers, the Nokia N75 offers great functionality in one beautifully shaped connected device. Designed to work on 3G (WCDMA 850/1900 MHz), EDGE and GSM (850/900/1800/1900 MHz) networks, the Nokia N75 provides a fantastic Web browsing experience.

Nokia N75 Reviews

PCMag has a review of the Nokia N75, and is not very impressed, giving the camera a rating of 2.5 out of 5: “Sounds like you might want to do a lot with it, right? Well time isn’t on your side, my friend. The N75’s battery life is pathetic. The two hours, 21 minutes of talk time I got in my tests (and I did them twice, to make sure) might be the worst I’ve ever seen. Yes, you’ll probably get double that if you’re in an EDGE rather than a 3G area. Five hours for an EDGE phone is still really, really bad. I haven’t had time to test the N75 in a mixed-use scenario with music playback, Web surfing and phone calls combined, but it looks like this phone will not hold up under heavy use.” Link.

Infosync has a review of the Nokia N75 and gives it a 65% rating: “It has some good calling and messaging features, and the Symbian OS has a wide range of available apps, but the phone disappoints in areas where N-series phones usually shine, especially with its camera. The phone has some nice smartphone features built in, but at $200 on AT&T, we can’t see this phone as a competitor on AT&T’s 3G lineup.” Link.

Gizmodo has a review of the Nokia N75 and writes, “the N75 has 3G network speeds, and a somehow snappier feeling OS. And it’s subsidized at $200 after $50 rebate, with a two-year contract, so it’s about a quarter the price of the N95 flagship. … you’ll be happy to know this: Even though carriers have traditionally been pretty scared of the openness and power of the N-series Nokia phones, Cingular hasn’t neutered the N75’s smartphone-ness. … To purchase music, you have to sideload from a PC. This is strange considering you can access the store from the phone itself. But that’s so you can check out the store and mark them so that next time you’re on your PC, you can mark them and DL.” Link.

PCMag has a review of the Nokia N75, and they aren’t too happy with the smartphone, giving it a measly 2.5 out of 5 rating: “Sounds like you might want to do a lot with it, right? Well time isn’t on your side, my friend. The N75’s battery life is pathetic. The two hours, 21 minutes of talk time I got in my tests (and I did them twice, to make sure) might be the worst I’ve ever seen. Yes, you’ll probably get double that if you’re in an EDGE rather than a 3G area. Five hours for an EDGE phone is still really, really bad. I also only got 7 hours, 16 minutes of MP3 playback without making calls, which is unacceptably short. Sadly this phone will not hold up under heavy use. Ultimately, that dooms the N75 for me. I want to like this phone. But without sufficient battery life, and with the headphone and network speed restrictions, it’ll leave you unhappy at the end of the day.” Link.

MobileTechReview has a review of the Nokia N75 and writes, “While the N75 doesn’t earn our outright love, it still gets a positive nod. The good features outweigh the bad, and indeed there are many good features like the fantastic display, easy to use S60 interface and software, good music playback quality and features, Cingular Video support, excellent voice quality and good call volume, strong speakerphone and 2MP camera. It’s a smartphone that’s easy to use and sync and it has good multimedia skills. And it speaks to Americans’ love of the flip phone, though it doesn’t appeal to a high sense of fashion. But the rose has a few thorns: lack of the faster HSPDA standard which road warriors may crave, short battery life and that darned Pop Port headset connector with no headset or headset adapter in the box. I mean c’mon Cingular: folks can’t even use the FM radio without that headset.” Link.

LaptopMag has a review of the Nokia N75 and writes, “During our week of testing, voice quality was superb on AT&T’s network, with no echoes or muffling. Just be sure to take the charger with you on that a weekend; we had to juice our N75 every two days with medium voice and data use. The Nokia N75 is a decent phone and an average music player, but it’s too bulky given the feature set. If you prefer a flip phone, get the LG VX8700, which also sports a 2-MP camera but is much sleeker and costs $20 less. And if you want a true smart phone with multimedia chops, buy the Samsung BlackJack.” Link.

Crunchgear has a review of the Nokia N75 and writes, “Let’s not forget what the N75 is meant to do first and foremost: Make phone calls. The layout of the keypad is quite friendly and the oversized keys ensure you’ll hit those digits every time. Calls were clear on both ends, but call quality hasn’t been an issue for me with Nokia handsets. What I did find awkward and this usually happens with most clamshells is that I never know where to put my ear to get it right over the speaker. The N75 also felt like it would snap at the hinge if you applied any sort of pressure, which it will, so try not to do it.” Link.

PDAStreet reviews the Nokia N75 and writes, ” Call quality was reliably good in our testing in the New York City area, although we weren’t impressed by the 3G connection speed. It didn’t feel like a 3G connection most of the time…While the battery is rated for 4.2 hours of talk time and 200 hours of standby, we didn’t get that in our testing. Worse, the battery drains suddenly, so keep an eye on the level…Currently selling for $99 with two-year agreement and rebates, the Nokia N75 is a decent music phone for those who need something more solid than the latest ultra-thin model.” Link.