Nokia Unveils Three New Smartphones
Nokia launched three new smartphones Tuesday at a time when the beleaguered company is fighting to remain the top smartphone maker worldwide. Nokia's new devices include the business-focused Nokia E7, the consumer-oriented C7 and a revised version of the Nokia C6. All three devices feature Symbian^3 OS, the latest iteration of Nokia's smartphone OS first introduced this year on the Nokia N8.
Despite claiming 24 percent of worldwide smartphone sales between April and June, Nokia has not kept pace "with the overall growth of the smartphone market," according to market research firm IDC (IDC and PC World are both owned by International Data Group). Competitors such as Apple's iPhone, and devices from HTC and Samsung largely using Google's Android OS have steadily chipped away at Nokia's once dominant lead.
Add to that Nokia's recent management troubles -- including a departing CEO, the loss of its vice president and general manager for mobile solutions, and rumors that Nokia's board chairman may also step down -- and it's no wonder many are predicting dark days ahead for the company.
Can Nokia's new crop of smartphones keep the device maker on top and stave off its own smartphone doom? Let's take a look.
Nokia E7
![](http://images.pcworld.com/news/graphics/205410-nokia-e7_blue1_180.jpg)
Nokia C7
![](http://images.pcworld.com/news/graphics/205410-nokia-c7_frosty_metal_1_180.jpg)
Just like the E7, the C7 features an 8 megapixel camera with dual LED flash and 720p video capture; five to nine hours of talk time; and Bluetooth 3.0, GPS and 802.11b/g/n connectivity. Onboard storage for the C7 is 8GB with a microSD card slot that supports up to 32GB for a maximum 40GB total storage.
The C7 also features a 3.5mm A/V connector to display content on an external monitor or television, as well as a stereo FM radio and FM transmitter. The C7 comes in charcoal black, frosty metal and mahogany brown. No U.S. launch date has been announced, but the C7 will sell for about $430 in Europe.
Nokia C6
![](http://images.pcworld.com/news/graphics/205410-nokia-c6_4_180.jpg)
In addition to new phones, Nokia launched new third-party developer tools that the company hopes will lure more programmers to create apps for its Ovi Store.
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