This is the nokia x7 the original nokia x7 from 2011. now this was supposed to be the flagship express music device with a focus on multimedia consumption it sat alongside the e7
which was the business focused flagship with the current keyboard and the m8 which was more of a camera-centric flagship so let's talk about all these quirks and features and the relevant
issues it had for its time when it comes to design very few touchscreen slabs are this unique it looked super futuristic with its slanted edges super thin sides and curved back it looked
very cool almost like an alien spaceship it also felt very nice in hand thanks to its stainless steel back and edges the design was definitely one of the high points the second high
point was the display not that pixel dense but still a nice 4 inch amoled display with nokia clear black which meant that it provided a very rich viewing experience and got very bright
for its time under the display is a single menu key the phone also came with two front firing speakers that were really loud despite the design making you think there are four
speakers only the bottom two are functional nice implementation nonetheless on the sides you had the volume rocker keys a camera shutter key a sim tray and sd slot and all of them
were made out of stainless steel too the way you unlock the sim tray and sd slot is very unique you have to push on one side and the other side pops up on the back he had an 8 megapixel camera
with what nokia called edof for extended depth of field it basically had no autofocus which meant it took pictures pretty quickly but at a fixed focus range there is also a dual led
flash next to it inside there is a non-removable 1200 milliamps battery the top has a very unusual looking power button just look at that there is also a mini usb port for charging and a 3.5
millimeter headphone jack the bottom side is clean with only a tiny opening for a microphone such a cool design that also manages to perfectly hide the thickness of the device even though
it's 11.9 millimeters thick you really don't feel it at all here brands could learn a thing or two from this one now.