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Tuesday, March 18, 2014

mobile Features

Nokia just announced Android powered smartphones ,Nokia X, X+ and XL. The phone is loaded with 4" Display and also with some official apps from Nokia and Microsoft. Now all rumors  became true. The Mobile phone Giant has just entered to the field of real smart phone. We can go through the features of the Nokia X ,X+ and XL
The Nokia X, X+ and XL are powered with a 1GHz dual-core Qualcomm Snapdragon processor and 512MB of RAM and 4GB of internal memory. The memory can be expanded via Micro SD card slot supported up to 32GB. The Nokia X and X+  powered with  4" 800x480 capacitive touch screen


The phones are in Windows 8 UI. You can see it in images provided by Nokia. The product is not yet completely available in market. We can wait and see what is going to happen in near future of Smartphones.
While the Nokia X is already on sale in some markets around the world, the two other Android-based handsets that Nokia announced last month - Nokia X+ and Nokia XL - will be released a bit later. The good news is that, unlike the Nokia X, the XL and X+ will have 4GB MicroSD cards pre-installed, so users don’t have to worry about the rather low internal memory that the phones are offering (4GB). Nokia confirmed this today on its Conversations blog. 

Both the Nokia X+ and Nokia XL should be launched in the coming weeks, or maybe months. The X+ is similar to the Nokia X, but has more RAM (768MB vs. 512MB). The XL - seen in the gallery below - has 768MB of RAM, too, and is larger, sporting a 5-inch WVGA IPS display, a 5MP rear camera, and a 2,000 mAh battery. 

Nokia also confirmed other things about its X line of handsets. According to the company, there “aren’t plans” to bring its PureView technology to the Nokia X phones - but this was expected, since we’re talking about entry-level, cheap devices here, and PureView is reserved for high-end Windows Phone Lumias. As for why the X line isn’t based on a newer version of Android (it’s using 4.1.2 Jelly Bean), Nokia simply says that it chose “the version with the broadest mainstream reach.”