Five days with an S40 phone – Day five

Published by Adam Fraser on June 17, 2011

GLOBAL – It’s here. My fifth and final day with a Series 40 phone. So far I’ve looked at setting up my emails, keeping up-to-date with my social networks, checking into locations and taking photos. All the things I do on a fairly regular basis with my Nokia N8 – a smartphone. Today I’ll continue to use the Nokia C3 Touch and Type for the final time, concluding with how I think a “dumbphone” isn’t necessarily so.

07:06
It’s the morning again and I remove my phone from the charger, as I decided to plug it in before I hit the hay last night, the battery was getting quite low and didn’t want to risk it going flat half way through the day. It probably would’ve lasted most of the day, though. I find my Nokia N8 from my drawer and plug it in to charge so that it’s ready for me start using again.

12:11
Today seems like a good day to download some content from Ovi Store, so I find the shopping bag icon in the menu and click it. I fancy playing some games, my Nokia N8 is always good for that. It’s Devil’s Ride 3D that catches my eye first. Once downloaded and installed, I race my virtual me down a ski-slope, collecting rockets to boost my speed and collecting clocks to increase my time. Gems XXL is another game I love playing on the Nokia N8, it’s one of those game I spend ages on. I’ll get some good use from this game today.

23:10
After a day of making some phone calls, a few text messages, a small amount of Gems XXL playing and a meeting with my colleagues, it’s now time to give up this S40 phone. I wipe off all my data from it, power it down and remove my SIM card. Once again, my Nokia N8 houses my SIM card, ready for some smartphone use.

So, my week with an S40 phone is over. I’ve gone from smartphone-geek to dumbphone-chic. Did I miss my smartphone? If I’m honest, yes, a bit. I missed the huge selection of high-quality apps I usually use. That’s not to say there’s not any great apps for S40, because there are. I just like my apps integrated, glossy, HD and running a few at the same time. One thing is clear, though. That the divide between smartphone and non-smartphone is closing in and some of the features you’d expect to see on a high-end phone are creeping into the lower markets. I guess that’s inevitable, and it’s great.

One thing I didn’t miss – which surprised me – was the email notifications. I thought I’d find manually logging into the email client a real chore, but this wasn’t the case. I rarely even did it. I sit at a computer all day for work, which means I’ve got my email account open all day on there, anyway.

Although I didn’t have the need to use Ovi Maps this week, it’s a service I find so useful, that I’d definitely be lost without it should I need it when I’m out-and-about.

Overall, although S40 isn’t an actual smartphone OS, it does nearly everything anybody would want. It is a great OS, but it’s not the OS for me. After all – and when you look at the software more closely – it’s not built for the likes of me: someone who installs several apps a week and is looking to be constantly logged-on. It’s aimed at the cheaper devices and for people who don’t like all the glitz and glamour you’d expect to see from a full-on smartphone. And it’s excellent for people just starting out in the mobile world or for people in emerging markets, where even owning a phone can be a rarity.

S40 is a great OS that’s more than capable of connecting people with the rest of the online world via the likes of Twitter, Facebook or even just Web browsing. Not only that, but it also does a cracking job at the most basic of things you’d expect to see from a phone. Making calls and sending text messages.

Could you take up the challenge to ditch your smartphone for five days? Or are you too attached to your top-specc’d phones. Let me know, below. I’d love to see somebody else give it a try

Image credit: Magic Madzik

Comments

  • http://twitter.com/SachinSyam Sachin Syam

    Hmm….i am using a Nokia N95(what nokia said, it’s what computers’ve become) . From last month I’m using a Sony Ericsson Naite J105i(comparable with an S40 device). What I felt was unbelivable..The simple phone from SE has a typical proprietary OS like that of S40. But it could do multitasking. I had my email ac. configured in it and it was push mail capable which made me get the mails as soon as the arrived. The included facebook app done all the social networking stuff for me.It actually displayed the FB status updates and notifications in home screen.We could also send the photos in phone to facebook directly(a feature of the included fb app). Everything was same with twitter(there was a twitter app). And the phone automatically updated the subscribed podcasts and showed it in home screen.The phone didn’t had a GPS but still it showed my approximate location in the googlee maps and also gave me turn by turn navigations.Video calling worked fine unlike N95.I was also able to chat in my social networks using a third party app eventhough there was a default chat client. The phone was also fun to use without any hangs and it did all the stuff a typical smart phone could do with ease.

  • http://twitter.com/jkepler Joel Swanson

     So by that definition the Asha 303 is a smartphone, even though it runs S40 Asha edition.