All those within the sound of my voice, let it be known: I hate the Nokia E61i.
Well, hate might be too strong a word. After all, Nokia has done some things right.
To start: I decided to give it a try after it got some raves from the Nokia crowd. Since I hadn't used a Nokia in years, it seemed like a good one to try: the E61i's got a nice keyboard and a really nice screen -- although it's only QVGA it's very visible inside and out. The build quality seems pretty nice. It's a good size as these things go, a bit heavy but nicely finished.
The software bundle is good for a business device: various email connectivity tools, push email for Exchange, Blackberry, IMAP. The "today" screen does a good job of showing what's pertinent right now.
But, that's about it.
Even though the E61i was released very recently, it's not a "Feature Pack 1" device (and, from what I've been told, will never be updated to Feature Pack 1). So, perhaps my experience was suboptimal. But it's no less optimal than that of other E61/E61i users.
And, overall, it's pretty suboptimal. This is a "messaging" focused phone. Its whole reason for being is to send and receive email and react to that. That's exactly what I wanted it for. And in that, at least in my situation, it fails pretty miserably.
My server is a Kerio Mailserver (which I'm quite happy with, and will write about in a future post), which provides both IMAP IDLE support and ActiveSync/Exchange capabilities. The E61i ships with an Exchange plug-in, so I used that. It configured reasonably easily (although the layout of the various screens doesn't take advantage of the landscape display, which truncated many fields in a pretty stupid way), and began to sync. And that all worked pretty much OK.
The problems started dealing with the mail itself. First, you can't move items to folders. You can only copy them, so handling Junk mail "properly" is well-nigh impossible.
Second, there's no way to mark a message as "unread". So, if you have mail you haven't yet dealt with, but read, you'd best remember what mail it was.
Third, deleted messages stay visible in the mail list until the sync occurs.
Fourth, links in the mail highlight nicely, but open in the "Service" browser, which isn't the "good" one: it's the old, WAP-style, crummy browser. "Web", the WebCore-based browser can't be associated with links. Instead, you need to copy the link, open Web, and paste them in to a "Go To Address" dialog. Not good, but I guess it could be worse.
Fifth, while this browser mostly works, it eats memory like crazy (even though the memory status in the main menu always indicates there's lots of memory left -- go figure). This causes it to randomly start failing, crashing, exiting... pretty much at any time. So, if you're using a web-based application (as I need to, based on mail notification), you're going to lose data. Typically after typing a long reply.
And stopping the numbering, because of the low memory, the mail program probably closed, which means you need to re-open it, which means you lose context.
Whatever you do, don't click a link in mail, because it'll instance that other browser, and it's hard to get out of.
But that's not all. I haven't even started talking about the slow and blinky screen refreshes, the fact that contact notes don't sync, that calendar notes sync incorrectly (CRs get eaten), that contact details are very inefficiently presented on the screen requiring a ton of scrolling, that network connections are constantly being announced for no reason, that selecting the messaging plugin on the today screen sometimes goes to the list and sometimes to a message (depending on the number of messages there, but it feels less predictable), the awful indeterminate progress indicator, ugly fonts, poor calendar implementation... I could go on and on.
To try to take care of some of this, I installed the trial copy of RoadSync, an alternate ActiveSync application that's worked well on the M600i (a UIQ3 device, rather than S60 Series 3). But it doesn't directly support browser links either. But it does seem to sync slightly better, supports moving to folders and allows mark-as-unread.
But with a browser that crashes constantly and a battery that -- under typical "me" use -- dropped precipitously after just an hour or two... it's just not a phone I could possibly live with.
It makes me appreciate the UIQ3 and Windows Mobile devices I've tried, though! Compared to this, the M600i and Dash are absolute paragons of reliable usability!
Maybe hate isn't too strong a word. But whatever word is used, there's one thing for sure: for my usage, the E61i sucks.
23 May 2007 at 09:26 pm | #
I don’t know if you have any particular preference, but I’ve found the combination of a Palm OS Treo and the Missing Sync from Mark/Space to be unbeatable. Everything syncs perfectly into Address Book, iCal, etc. The Palm OS platform, while it has its flaws similar to Classic Mac OS, if very expandable and intuitive. Not sure if it will meet your needs, but I can highly recommend it.
23 May 2007 at 09:37 pm | #
Yeah, I’m not a big fan of the Palm. Doesn’t really multitask, has a very limited address book, push support is kind of lacking and the browser isn’t (or rather, browsers aren’t) very good… doesn’t really compare to the m600i.
24 May 2007 at 01:44 am | #
To mark a message as unread you have to open the message. Inside the menu is “Mark as unread”.
Not as nice as doing it from the list view, but it is possible.
It’s definitely a flawed device, but I couldn’t go back to Windows Mobile (and I’m a Microsoft employee!)
24 May 2007 at 06:44 am | #
This is with the Nokia-provided exchange sync, Rich, or with RoadSync? (I could do it with RoadSync...)
The biggest problem is that the E61i can’t run the two programs I use—mail and web—without constantly having web crash or mail quit mid-execution. I’ve heard that Feature Pack 1 improves this kind of thing, but that doesn’t really help the E61i, since it isn’t and won’t be a Feature Pack 1 phone.
I also think that the general softkey menu design is pretty jumbled and lousy, but no doubt it’s something you could get used to…
24 May 2007 at 12:06 pm | #
That was with Mail For Exchange, the bundled one.
Yes, the “quietly quit my applications” ‘feature’ is annoying. I noticed that if I switch apps using the running apps menu (hold Menu) they stay open, but if I jump to Standby by pressing Hang Up, apps close.
Why can nobody make a half-decent phone?!
24 May 2007 at 02:22 pm | #
Well… this was more of a “not so quietly exit with an out of memory error” kind of ‘feature’.
Someone is going to do this right eventually, Rich. I don’t think it’s necessarily going to be iPhone v1.0 (in fact, I’m pretty sure it won’t be, because I really want OTA sync of calendar/contacts along with immediate push of my own Mail, not some Yahoo account), but it’ll happen—someone is going to get the balance right…
25 May 2007 at 10:35 pm | #
Aw, darn. Because I’ve been refreshing eBay listings and have been THIS CLOSE to buying an E61i for the last couple of weeks!
What I really want is a third-generation iPhone in 18 months. But I don’t want to wait that long to replace my aging Treo 600. Generally, I like Treos (this is my fourth one), but the lack of multitasking, slow processing, and SLOW networking is driving me crazy. I need something with 3G, good email, good browser, and a decent camera.
Blackberry 8800 isn’t 3G. Treo 750 is Windows Mobile (which I’ve not been considering for religious reasons). What’s the right answer?
26 May 2007 at 07:43 am | #
Maybe the E61i will work for you, Stephen: they’re certainly in demand, so if you don’t like it you can unload it pretty easily. If your usage patterns are different than mine, the things that bugged me might not bother you at all.
I’m not pinning my hopes on the iPhone. You can hang a lot of hopes on something that hasn’t been released yet, and whose capability is kept under wraps (and then extend that 3 generations in the future). We’ll see what it’s like next month, maybe.
05 Jun 2007 at 06:19 pm | #
I don’t know about mail with it, but the E61i is as SLOW AS MOLASSES running Java -and I mean SLOOWWWW. The pluses, the camera is awesome and the wifi is great. I’m torn!
03 Jul 2007 at 07:29 pm | #
not true, you can mark read, unread. it’s doesn’t have the proble that a black jack has. you read an e-mail with outlook on your desktop and you will have to read it again on your black jack. Try sync for exchange (avialable for down load at nokia).
I have not had any problem other than know how to use it. like it took me a while to find sync for exchange.
03 Jul 2007 at 07:34 pm | #
I was using Sync for Exchange, actually—I make some comments about it in the post.
I do know how to use it generally; some features might have been a bit buried, and RoadSync was far better than Sync for Exchange, but overall I really can’t stand the thing…
28 Jul 2007 at 09:25 am | #
About folder creation and filtering: the idea is that this is the task of the imap server not the e61i. Use imap, have folders and rules and your e61i will nicely synchronise with the server.
Actually, for me, the e61i is the best mobile i have ever used. Beautiful screen, not crashed a single(!) time so far, tons of software.
1 or 2 hours of battery? No way, you must have a faulty device…
G
28 Jul 2007 at 11:01 am | #
I’m not sure what you mean about folder/filtering, Gergely: my server does filter Junk mail, but if some mail gets through, you need to be able to move it to/mark it as junk. So, that functionality is important.
The Symbian/Nokia IMAP implementation is, to my mind, absolutely awful—I’ve had a lot of experience with it since the PSION days, and it just isn’t well done: IDLE support barely works (and stops randomly), folder subscriptions are required to move mail into them, sync limits don’t apply properly to non-INBOX folders… I could go on and on.
I’m glad you like it, truly. I just hate the thing.
28 Jul 2007 at 01:00 pm | #
Ok, ok, I somehow got the impression that you were talking about pop3 and folders on e61 - now its clear it is not the case.
So well yes, the built-in mail client has some deficiencies, the most important for me is the lack of proper support for the sent mails. On the other hand there are alternatives, profimail works fine for me, for example.
IDLE support - you are also right here (although this gives the best alternative to push mail).
Overally, I think, the question is: how to judge a mobile? Is it really the builtins apps that matters - considering how many 3rd party apps are out for S60?
Finally: crashes, poor battery, slow phone etc. - this are really something I have not experienced with e61i.
So, I really like it (this reply was written, of course, on my mobile)
G