In its first Asia-Pacific launch for 2007 in Singapore, Nokia unveiled five new products, among them two new N-series handsets, the N76 and N93i, together with three new Nokia Bluetooth headsets–the BH-301, BH-201 and BH-100.
Nokia N76
Holding up to 1500 tracks, the N76 works with industry standard 3.5 mm headphones and supports the popular Windows Media DRM for optimal use. Viewing the 2.4-inch (13.7mm), up to 16 million color screen in landscape mode brings a familiar feel to surfing the web on a mobile.
You can navigate web pages quickly and easily with the Nokia Web Browser with Mini Map and enjoy easy access to popular internet services like Flickr and Amazon for searching, shopping or sharing. The N76 integrates a 2.0-megapixel (1600 x 1200 px) camera to capture, zoom and review pictures.
Offering tools to edit either on the go or transfer them to a compatible PC, the N76 comes bundled with Adobe Photoshop Album Starter Edition. With up to 2 GB of expandable memory, you have ample of storage for high-quality multimedia. It will be the first Nokia device to be preloaded with five Adobe Flash Lite games developed by Japanese developer CELL.

Nokia N93i
Similar to the Nokia N93, the N93i will feature the same 3.2 megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss optics and 3x optical zoom. Its body design will be slightly different with mirror effect front cover, smaller phone body size and new RAZR keypad.
It also added a small LCD screen at the front, letting you know who is calling you without open the clamshell phone. Although there isn’t much information on the front LCD, even in the manual, we do hope it can display info like song id, caller id, battery status, time and contact list navigation. Reducing the phone body size will be a great improvement, fulfilling those who don’t like the size of Nokia N93.
The Nokia 93i will also comes with a mini USB connector instead of the traditional pop-port connector. Both version works on WLAN, 3G (WCDMA 2100 MHz), EDGE and GSM (900/1800/1900 MHz) networks.
via cnet





