If you close your eyes and think of a Nokia candybar -- even a particularly stylish one -- we're guessing the
7500 Prism is about the furthest thing from what you'd envision. The oddities don't stop with the unusual geometric pattern adorning the phone's surface, either; despite using the latest and greatest version of Series 40, the 7500 is merely a 2.5G handset, unusual for even a midrange Nokia in the year 2007. But wait, it gets even better: take a gander at the bottom of the phone and you'll find a mini USB port where you might expect to find a Pop-Port (yeah, we know Nokia's been doing this
as of late, but it's still a little bit of a shocker every time we see it). Was Nokia's little venture off the beaten path worth it? Read on to find out.
Update: Our bad, it turns out the 7500 is running Series 40
3rd Edition, not 5th. Still a solid platform, we reckon!

Thanks to the good folks at
Wireless Imports for the hookup!
Naturally, the first thing you notice when you tear open the Prism's generous packaging materials is the handset's design. Nokia gives you a little preview of the goodness inside by printing similar geometric patterns on the box itself -- thoughtful, no? Anyway, the face is entirely glossy, while the back alternates between glossy and matte black triangles in a seemingly random pattern (the camera and flash peep through diamond and triangle windows, respectively). The sides transition at a hard, 90 degree angle -- befitting the phone's geometry theme, we suppose -- with chrome and blue (?) stripes sandwiched between black. The styling cues seemed to draw out all sorts of emotions; we personally didn't hate it or love it, but we definitely didn't think it had a particularly "premium" appearance.

From a distance, we figured we'd have all sorts of trouble with the triangular keys, but we were pleasantly surprised -- we consistently busted out numbers with total accuracy and reasonable speed. Our biggest problem ended up being with the thumbstick -- the Prism's directional input device of choice -- which was a little tight for our liking. Not a dealbreaker by any means, but something to keep in mind. The handset gets a dedicated volume rocker on the right side; it was a little too flush with the rest of the phone, making it difficult to locate quickly. Like the thumbstick, though, not a big deal.
As usual, Series 40 shows its just-shy-of-smartphone brilliance here, and having
5th Edition loaded certainly doesn't hurt. The configurable Active Standby is extremely well-executed, the music player looks great, and in general, pretty much everything is where we'd expect it to be on a Nokia. Helping matters along is a simply gorgeous QVGA display and a loudspeaker that we actually found loud and crisp enough to use for the occasional tune or two. Imagine that!
So yeah, phones are still made to call people, so how'd that go? Reception was quite good, especially considering that the Asia-specific Prism lacks GSM 850, but call quality was an issue for us. Calls generally sounded tinny on the earpiece and we could've used a bit more volume, so we'd consider the Prism a "headset first, handset second" kinda phone.
Do we recommend the Prism? It's always hard to give a strong recommendation to a tri-band GSM phone, especially one that's intended to be used primarily in the States. But if you can find one for a good price, it sure makes a good conversation piece -- and we can pretty much guarantee you'll be the only Prism owner in any company.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
james @ Aug 6th 2007 3:48AM
Looks like a good phone from nokia i don't think it is really fashionable as nokia said it was.
Robbie @ Aug 6th 2007 3:53AM
-edge is technically considered 3rd gen
-mini usb should be expected due to the china release
(mandates have been passed recently that require handset manufacturers to use usb in china)
Taylor Alexander @ Aug 6th 2007 4:37PM
What the crap is a Pop-Port?
-Taylor
Jamar @ Aug 6th 2007 5:41PM
It's made for China, of course there's no 3G(not till the olympics, apparently). Heck, in most of China we don't even have EDGE (Guangdong province is the only place I know of that has it).
Jordan @ Aug 7th 2007 12:28PM
Engadget, please muffle the flash. A lot of the pictures come out too bright. Just hold a thin piece of paper an inch from the camera. It would help a ton. Tracing paper works great.
rell109 @ Aug 7th 2007 12:34PM
whats the carrier?
wayde96 @ Aug 7th 2007 1:42PM
seems like a nice secondary phone. pics look perfect from here.
i wanna know what a pop-port is too...??
Chase @ Aug 16th 2007 2:21AM
nokia's "pop-port" was their proprietary jack used for most connections on the phone, so think where you'd usually see a mini-usb on a current handset, you'd see a pop-port jack on a nokia...i think the name came from the fact that their FM reciever headsets plugged in there and they figured pop = popular = popular music? who knows...
priyanka @ Sep 10th 2007 5:31AM
its really a nice handset but what is the price of thsi particular handset
p.k.garg- advocate @ Oct 16th 2007 11:57PM
I purchased newly introduced Prism-7500model of Nokia on 7/10/2007. Till today i.e on 17/10/207, I have noticed the following problems with it.
1. I do S.M.S, out of ten SMS only 5/6 are sent by it. In 4/5 cases, after its sending, these are not even traceable either in sent folder nor drafts folder or any other folder. And receivers also confirms that they had not received any SMS. Nor any delivery report is there. The whole message go missing.
2. Speed dials behave very unpredictable. If I push/dial no.3 digit, telephone number fed at 6 no. starts dialing. If digit 6 is dialed/pushed the number fed at 9 or 2 would be dialed. However, please note that it makes mistake only during first attempt and does not repeat the mistake at second time, if the same number is pushed again.
3. If a call is on, and in between some call comes. After the call is finished, the miss call number would not be there on the screen. If you are too busy in talking, the person calling in between get annoyed if he does not get a call back. And I am unable to call him as I never knew that in between there was some call.
(P.K.Garg)
advocate
9811819855
Delhi