£174 just for the first year?! I'd rather buy the phone outright, use it for as long as possible, then consider what the market was offering at that time having saved £144 per year, rather than being locked into an open-ended commitment to Nokia.
You get points, which probably can be used to change battery and other parts. + full insurance, so if you are the kind of guy that often loses its phone at the bar, or live somewhere where phone thefts are common, this is actually a good deal. But if you live in a safe area, not much going on in life, never really lost a phone, buying the phone straight away is the better option. It really just depends what you are up to
The subscription plan is just too expensive, what are they setting up that costs £30? In 18 months you will have paid for the phone. I have just bought one but paid in full, my house insurance will cover it for accidental damage or theft. If you do decide to buy one, buy it direct from Nokia and you will get a free case. Only time will tel how long it lasts.
It's IPS LCD so it doesn't. If you are PWM sensitive which a percentage of people are, then I'm sure you prefer the IPS LCD screens, mostly it's Motorola who still release a few IPS screen phones and pretty much all Nokia's are IPS too, which I think is great. I think this is a solid phone for the price overall, but the Motorola G200 5G is the most high spec phone I've seen in the last 12 months with an IPS screen, which also a nice 144htz HDR screen too, as it has a 888+ 5G chipset. If that is still available where you are then it's a really good buy, I own it and picked it up for £320, it's RRP was £399.
Android One is more or less dead anyways. We can still go by their own assurances wrt software updates. Because Google didn't do anything about Android One devices that were not updated.
£174 just for the first year?! I'd rather buy the phone outright, use it for as long as possible, then consider what the market was offering at that time having saved £144 per year, rather than being locked into an open-ended commitment to Nokia.
Honestly, you pay $12 a month in exchange for points...
You get points, which probably can be used to change battery and other parts. + full insurance, so if you are the kind of guy that often loses its phone at the bar, or live somewhere where phone thefts are common, this is actually a good deal. But if you live in a safe area, not much going on in life, never really lost a phone, buying the phone straight away is the better option. It really just depends what you are up to
I want to buy phone but i have 2 options galaxy s9+ and g60 which one should I go for?
£450 over 3 years ? Can't see them getting many takers
agreed in a way, but the insurance costs many upto £6 per month so, if you choose to insure phones it does factor better?
@@MsDmcclymont Might do. How many people would insure a £250 phone though. Suppose it's ok if you 'loose' the phone after 2 years and 12 months
I'd rather get the X30 if I still gave a damn about Nokia
I bought that device but it died after two weeks. It just stopped switching on
When arrived to México???
Very Nice 👌👌
Can you tell about Nokia X30, X300, Samsung A52s?
I'm Interested to have one..
The subscription plan is just too expensive, what are they setting up that costs £30?
In 18 months you will have paid for the phone.
I have just bought one but paid in full, my house insurance will cover it for accidental damage
or theft.
If you do decide to buy one, buy it direct from Nokia and you will get a free case.
Only time will tel how long it lasts.
what was the audio like?
Please subtitles
Excellent review.
I am planning to buy it for my dad when it launches here. Thank you for the insight, love your videos😍😍.
I have the Nokia g50 5g it's awesome 😎👍
More like a review of the.. circular programme.. than the actual phone 😏
Any word on a US release date
Does the display use PWM?(pulse width modulation)
It's IPS LCD so it doesn't. If you are PWM sensitive which a percentage of people are, then I'm sure you prefer the IPS LCD screens, mostly it's Motorola who still release a few IPS screen phones and pretty much all Nokia's are IPS too, which I think is great. I think this is a solid phone for the price overall, but the Motorola G200 5G is the most high spec phone I've seen in the last 12 months with an IPS screen, which also a nice 144htz HDR screen too, as it has a 888+ 5G chipset. If that is still available where you are then it's a really good buy, I own it and picked it up for £320, it's RRP was £399.
3 years of updates lol.... how about 5 years with samsung
Well, it doesn't have Samsung pricing. Not comparable at all.
Well I paid about 300€ for my Galaxy A53.
However, it's a genuine promise during those 3 years, rather than just a promise with Samsung
@@yom_oleg "genuine" promise against "just a" promise? you just made that up. thats not a thing.
@@scipioafricanus7697 you cry like baby
When come in india
Looking wow Nokia new smartphone 2022 😊👈
In pretty sure this phone is not part of android one and nokia phones in general aren't anymore
Why not? :) it literally says android one when you start this device, or any other HMD made Nokia Android phone.
Android One is more or less dead anyways. We can still go by their own assurances wrt software updates. Because Google didn't do anything about Android One devices that were not updated.
At that price you could get an Amazon renewed Pixel 3a XL or last year's Moto Edge if stock Android is all you need.
❤❤❤❤
I think Nokia is Nokia no any other brand offers like this real features.
No slot for a sim card.
Cool