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Well I got my N96 yesterday, did a firmware update first thing this morning, and it bricked. Fun.
As luck would have it I discovered the nearest Nokia care center is literally across the road so at least taking it in to reflash wasn't too much hassle. And yes I tried the *+3+green and other methods to attempt to resurrect it, no go. Even the care center's standard flash didn't work, they've had to send it to Nokia.
FROM thenokiablog.com:
5 Reasons why the N85 is better than the N96
#1 Power
The Nokia N85 comes with bigger battery with 1200 mAh vs 950 mAh on the Nokia N96. Take a look at these comparisons:
Talk time
* Nokia N85: 6.9 hours on GSM, 4.5 hours on WCDMA, 9 hours VoIP
* Nokia N96: 3.8 hours on GSM, 2.7 hours on WCDMA, (no VoIP on N96)
Standby
* Nokia N85: GSM 363 hours, WCDMA 363 hours
* Nokia N96: GSM 230 hrs, WCDMA 200 hours
#2 MicroUSB Charging
Reduce clutter with one less cable. The Nokia N85 can now be charged though the microUSB port simultaneously while doing data transfer. This is the first for Nseries phones, and a missing feature in the Nokia N96.
#3 FM Transmitter
The Nokia N85 has a built-in FM transmitter that will let us listen to the music from our phone directly on a radio. This feature was introduced in the Nokia N78 but is missing on the Nokia N96.
#4 Lens Cover
Readers told me they want lens cover on their cameraphones. The camera on the Nokia N85 is protected, but not the Nokia N96.
#5 Screen
The Nokia N85 has new screen technology called AM OLED. You can read All About Symbian’s detailed explanation about AM OLED, but it basically means brighter, better colour gamut (numbers of colours that can be accurately displayed at same time), better contrast ratio, have a better response time, have better viewing angles and use less power than current Nseries devices including the Nokia N96
Get N85 it is a better phone in my opinion.
Why I like the N96 more than the N85:
N96 = 16GB + mSD Card (up to 16GB for a total of 32GB)
N85 = 85MB + 8GB mSD Card
N96 = 2.8" Screen
N85 = 2.6" Screen
The N96 just looks nicer
Who told you the SIM needed to be 64k? Who are you talking to at Nokia?Just for the record, I'm still back-and-forthing with Nokia on this. They were only too happy to transfer the licenses between the phones but we've had no luck getting it to work. At this point it looks like the problem may well be that I still have a 32k sim card, and Nokia's licensing system expects a 64k or higher. So if anyone else has issues with Nokia licensing that Nokia themselves can't seem to figure out, try going to your service provider and requesting a 64k or higher SIM. I'll be upgrading mine this weekend, and I'll report back on success or failure with maps afterward.
On another note, I am LOVING this phone as a media device. I wrote a blog post on the N96 as a media device and for the most part it's positive. There are some hiccups, like the obscure and patchy UPnP support, but these are pretty minor. These days, I don't even run music software on my PC, I just leave my headphones plugged into the N96 with a decent length playlist going![]()
I've tried the call centre and regretted it. I think they're based in Dubai or somewhere and English is their 4th language.@Sackboy Pretty much every individual at their call center by now. Why, who should I be talking to?
Last week I finally requested to be put through to an agent's superior.. but I suspect I'm still just dealing with another agent. The latest request is that I hard reset my phone (I'm busy backing everything up now in preparation for it), and then try again. If it still doesn't work, they'll give me a new license. Why they couldn't just give me one from the get-go is beyond me.