Nokia Lumia 810: First Impressions and Screenshots

T-Mobile's Windows Phone 8 entry is a winner

AT&T isn’t the only wireless carrier in the US to get new Windows Phone 8 handsets this week. Tomorrow, T-Mobile will begin offering the Lumia 810, which, like its Lumia 820 stable mate, offers a surprisingly well-rounded package for very little money.

My assumption is that the Lumia 810 and 820 are genetically very similar, if not identical. And while the two devices do indeed share many innards—see below—this isn’t the simple rebranding job I’d expected. They’re quite different physically, with the 810 offering a slightly larger body and sharper edges, with completely different removable back plates, battery and back configuration.

Indeed, the Lumia 810’s battery is significantly bigger than that of the 820—1800 mAh vs. 1650 mAh—offering better talk, standby, and media playback times than its AT&T rival. But despite being a bit bigger, it doesn’t seem any heavier to me in the hand.

Specification-wise, these devices are indeed identical, with the same 1.5 GHz SnapDragon S4 processor, 1 GB of RAM, 8 GB of internal storage, and microSD expandability (with up to a 64 GB card). Both feature NFC, LTE, and optional Qi-based wireless charging, though the latter will require an optional back plate. Which is fine, because like the 820, the 810’s is removable and replaceable with color options. (Presumably. I don’t see any on offer yet.)

It features the same 4.3 inch screen with the same 800 x 480 resolution. Back when this was all you could get on a Windows Phone handset, critics noted that Android and iOS offered better resolution devices. But now that I’ve used HD Windows Phone 8 devices, I can tell you, again, that none of this matters. The 800 x 480 screen on this device—as with the 820—is beautiful. You’ll never notice any missing pixels.

The 810 also appears to offer the exact same 8.0 megapixel camera as the 820. It’s excellent. And while I’ll again stress that it doesn’t quite reach the heights of the flagship Lumia 920, what does? This is a solid camera for a smart phone and on par with what I see in the HTC 8X and Lumia 820. It’s close to iPhone 5 quality.

Of course, no one is really going to choose between the Lumia 810 and the 820. You’re going to choose based on wireless carrier, and if you’re a T-Mobile customer, this appears to be an excellent option. You get the great Nokia apps, of course, and also a weird selection of T-Mobile apps. And a crazy pink T-Mobile theme. Naturally.

Here are some photos of the Lumia 810, some of which compare it to the slightly smaller (and AT&T based) Lumia 820.

Discuss this Article 7

saqrkh
on Nov 13, 2012

The internals (CPU, RAM, etc) are much more important than screen resolution. As long as said mid-end phone can give you access to the full WP8 experience, it's good to go. The only real problem with the Lumia 810 and 820 is - in my opinion - the high off-contract price. In Canada, the Lumia 710 (same internals as 900) was coming in at $250-300, this should be the approximate price point for 810/820. It's possible we'll see a genuine (4 inch?) 710 successor, I can see the demand for it.

cardiff
on Nov 13, 2012

Is it possible to uninstall the apps that T-Mobile preinstalls? I currently use an Android device on T-Mobile and find it annoying that I can't remove the preinstalled apps without rooting the phone. It would be nice if Microsoft created a non-carrier branded phone along the lines of the Google Nexus without the preinstalled apps. Perhaps they could brand it Microsoft Signature for Windows Phone?

Thermogenic
on Nov 13, 2012

It's actually a requirement of Windows Phone that all apps can be uninstalled, so yes, you can remove all of the T-Mobile pre-installs. It's very painless to do so.

roncerr
on Nov 14, 2012

Leo made an interesting comment about an Android phone that had been upgraded to Ice Cream Sandwich. Thanks to the carrier it lost some feature that is part of Ice Cream Sandwich. Leo said he could use the Factory Reset option to get the true Android experience without the stuff the carrier does to it. Even more surprising he said it would keep the latest Android version while eliminating the carrier stuff. Can anyone confirm? And wouldn't that be a great way to get rid of the carrier stuff on Nokia if it also applies? (Sounds to easy to be true.)

saqrkh
on Nov 13, 2012

Carrier apps can be pre-installed on Windows Phone just as easily as marketplace apps, there's no deep integration.

Mathis Linde
on Nov 13, 2012

My, from the pressshots it looked to me like the 810 is a much more attractive device compared to the 820 visually. However, seeing the size-difference, maybe the 820 is better for me. 920 and 8X are just too humongous; then again - might be because I'm european.

YoursTrulyx3
on Mar 27, 2013

OMG ! I Love This PHONE ! :D Totally Get This Phone Ths Saturday <3 I'm So Excited Lol Good Looking Phone Too

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