Features
Like its N-series siblings, the N80 and the N93,
the Nokia N73's imaging capabilities is what makes it a multimedia computer (as
Nokia calls it), but we don't forget that it is first and foremost a phone. As
such, we'll start with those capabilities. The address book is limited only by
the available memory (42MB) and the SIM card holds an additional 250 contacts.
There's room in each entry for multiple phone numbers, work and home addresses,
email addresses, birthday, and more vitals. For caller ID, you can assign each
contact to a photo, one of 30 ringtones, or a group ID. The N73 also has speed
dial, voice command support, a vibrate mode (called Pager profile on this
phone), a speakerphone, and text and multimedia messaging.
The N73 is equipped with Bluetooth 2.0 for wireless headsets and car kits. You can also use the device as a modem to send or receive email, or to connect to the Web with a compatible PC. Unfortunately, unlike the N80, the N73 does not have Wi-Fi. While this is disappointing, we were still able surf the Net using a GPRS or EDGE connection, so you're not completely left in the cold.
The N73 runs Symbian OS 9.1 so you get the basic PIM capabilities and more. There's a calendar, a to-do list, notes, a calculator, a voice recorder, a currency converter, and an HTML/XHTML Web browser. An app called Quickoffice lets you view (but not edit) Microsoft Word, Excel, and PowerPoint files; plus, Adobe Reader is there for PDFs. The N73 is also equipped to handle e-mail capabilities. The phone supports SMTP, IMAP4, and POP3 accounts with full attachment viewing and mobile VPN support for corporate users. Finally, the Nokia PC Suite helps you synchronize your N73 with your PC (using the included USB cable) to manage appointments, music, device memory, and more.

Once you're done with your photos and videos, you can touch them up with the preloaded editors. For photos, you can add clip art or text, resize the image, reduce red eye, and more. For videos, your editing options include changing sound, trimming clips for multimedia messages, and more. You have several methods of sharing your masterpieces with others. In addition to being able to e-mail or save your images, you can use some of Nokia's Xpress Solutions to print photos, upload them to the Web, or transfer them to other devices. There's also a slideshow gallery and we really like that you can add music to play in the background. Overall, we thought the N73 took excellent snapshots for a camera phone. Colors popped from the images and lines were clearly defined. Video quality could use a bit of improvement, though, as clips were a bit washed out and grainy.

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