4h,
140 g,
410h,
Bluetooth 2.x,
compatible MP3,
avec lecteur de carte mémoire, avec port USB, avec radio FM,
smartphone,
MicroSD,
3G / UMTS, Edge, GPRS,
coulissant (Sliding),
SymbianOS,
avec WiFi,
2,4 pouces
The N81 will still be seen as the Nokia N95's cheaper brother and with that in mind will always be fighting to prove its worth, especially when you see both in the store for free come its launch at Christmas - if you sign a big enough contract.
As a music phone against the equivalent offering from Sony Ericsson, Samsung and Apple, the Nokia beats the Samsung offerings but neither the Sony Ericsson W910 or the Apple iPhone.
Sony Ericsson's implementation of software for us is better executed with its array of apps like SensMe, TrackID and ShakeIt, however where the Nokia N81 wins out is the addition of the Nokia Music Store.
That said, the Nokia Music Store's implementation against the iTunes Wi-Fi store from Apple on its iPhone just doesn't compete.
As a phone, the N81 does pack the 3G connectivity and better phone functionality, but if it's purely the music you are after, the iPhone is still the one to go for.
(Les notes de la presse sont données à titre indicatif et représentent une interprétation du test par Numerama)