FARNBOROUGH, England – Creating a smartphone for everyone, such as the new Nokia C7, isn’t without its challenges. Sure, it shares much of the same architecture as the new Nokia N8 and incoming Nokia C6-01, but it’s still an individual device in its own right. Consider that it’s being sold through many network operators around the world, that it’ll be used by people from multiple cultures, who speak myriad different languages and you start to get a picture of the complexity involved. We caught up with the man behind the plan, Tim Allen, the product manager responsible for bringing the Nokia C7 to life.
Texting is a big part of the Nokia C7 users’ interaction with the device and Tim says it was vital to get texting just right on the Nokia C7 touchscreen. So the project team implemented a new method of haptic feedback, using a linear vibra to offer the feedback instead of using a traditional rotary vibra (the vibra is a mechanical device which causes the vibration you sense from the haptic feedback). This enabled them to better tune the response so it was just right for the volume of texting Tim and his team felt users would be doing. Having played with the device for the past couple of weeks, I was surprised I hadn’t turned the haptics off – something I normally do with a new touchscreen device as I’m not really a fan of that kind of feedback. “It works, then” was TIm’s response.
Although the device is now going on sale across the globe, the work doesn’t stop there. The team are already nearing approval stage for the first software update and the second one is already in the works. They are monitoring initial feedback, to ensure that where possible, key features early users may be looking for are part of the road map for software updates. Late in the development process the team weren’t happy with the portrait QWERTY keyboard so it was left out of the final build. Since then though they’ve continued development and although Tim tells us it isn’t quite there yet, it will be very soon. Expect to see it in an upcoming software release.
Tim believes his role is “to represent the consumer” and ensure all the things he believes they will want in a device, appear in a device. Resources are finite though, and deadlines need to be met, which is where tough decisions need to be made. It’s Tim and the team who need to make those calls and he says “it’s a question of finding the sweet spot, not trying to do everything for everybody”. Having played with the C7 for a few weeks now, I’d say he’s pretty much got it right. What do you think? What else would you like to see?
Texting is a big part of the Nokia C7 users’ interaction with the device and Tim says it was vital to get texting just right on the Nokia C7 touchscreen. So the project team implemented a new method of haptic feedback, using a linear vibra to offer the feedback instead of using a traditional rotary vibra (the vibra is a mechanical device which causes the vibration you sense from the haptic feedback). This enabled them to better tune the response so it was just right for the volume of texting Tim and his team felt users would be doing. Having played with the device for the past couple of weeks, I was surprised I hadn’t turned the haptics off – something I normally do with a new touchscreen device as I’m not really a fan of that kind of feedback. “It works, then” was TIm’s response.
Although the device is now going on sale across the globe, the work doesn’t stop there. The team are already nearing approval stage for the first software update and the second one is already in the works. They are monitoring initial feedback, to ensure that where possible, key features early users may be looking for are part of the road map for software updates. Late in the development process the team weren’t happy with the portrait QWERTY keyboard so it was left out of the final build. Since then though they’ve continued development and although Tim tells us it isn’t quite there yet, it will be very soon. Expect to see it in an upcoming software release.
Tim believes his role is “to represent the consumer” and ensure all the things he believes they will want in a device, appear in a device. Resources are finite though, and deadlines need to be met, which is where tough decisions need to be made. It’s Tim and the team who need to make those calls and he says “it’s a question of finding the sweet spot, not trying to do everything for everybody”. Having played with the C7 for a few weeks now, I’d say he’s pretty much got it right. What do you think? What else would you like to see?
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