Manufacturer | Nokia |
---|---|
Type | Internet appliance |
Release date | November 2007 |
Media | One miniSD slot, compatible with miniSD or microSD (with adapter) cards up to 8 GB[1] |
Operating system | Maemo 4.1 (codename Diablo) |
CPU | 400 MHz TI OMAP 2420 |
Memory | 128 MB Random access memory |
Storage | 256 MB + 2 GB Flash |
Display | 800 × 480 resolution, 105 mm (4.13 in) diagonal, 88 pixels/cm, 225 ppi, 65536 colors (16-bit) |
Input | Keyboard/Resistive Touchscreen |
Camera | 640 × 480 VGA Camera (currently supports photos and video) |
Connectivity | IEEE 802.11b, IEEE 802.11g, Bluetooth 2.0, USB 2.0 |
Power | 1500 mAh BP-4L Battery |
Dimensions | 72 * 128 * 14 mm |
Mass | 226 g |
Predecessor | Nokia N800 |
Successor | Nokia N900 |
The Nokia N810 Internet tablet is an Internet appliance from Nokia,[1] announced on 17 October 2007 at the Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco. Despite Nokia's strong association with cellular products, the N810, like preceding tablets produced by Nokia, was not a phone, but instead allowed the user to browse the Internet and communicate using Wi-Fi networks or with a mobile phone via Bluetooth. It built on the hardware and software of the Nokia N800 with some features added and some removed.
The Nokia N810 featured the Maemo Linux distribution[2] operating system based on Maemo 4.0, which featured MicroB (a Mozilla-based mobile browser), a GPS navigation application, new media player, and a refreshed interface.