Nokia N95 5G is Not the Best Photoshop, But the Idea Is Good

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Everybody remembers the Nokia N95 as the forefather of smartphones, a phone that was ahead of its time and was actually meant to replace a laptop. It was launched back in 2007 and impressed everybody with its camera, infrared, the 8 GB of storage version and solid GPS mapping. The dual slider was a sight to behold. Now there’s a Nokia N95 5G rendered and the idea is not half bad.

Nokia N95 5G is the creation of SkMd Anas and it’s not the most apt Photoshop, as you can see. The edges of the edit and some bits are blurred, but we respect the point. There’s a Note 10 style selfie camera cut at the top of the facade and the back camera with a round module is definitely something Nokia would do. Nokia N95, the original one had everything and the kitchen sink, as it offered the first GPS on a Nokia phone and also the first accelerometer. It also supported 3.5G, which was a big deal back then.

The keyboard was comfy, it had a microSD, a LCD 2.6 inch screen, video call for the front camera and more goodies. Even an audio jack was on board, plus TV out capabilities. The Nokia N95 5G doesn’t get any specs from the designer, but we can easily speculate. First of all, the slider format is gone and only the back side reminds us of the older model. Then we’ve got a curved edge screen, probably a 5.7 inch to 6.5 inch panel, similar to the Galaxy Note 10 one and also feeling a bit like the Xiaomi Mi Note 10 one.

There’s a quad camera with Xenon and LED flash at the back, possibly with a 108 MP or 64 MP Sony cam in the mix. Hopefully it’s better than the very slow Nokia 9 Pureview cam. I see the back is covered with a soft touch material, maybe some sort of cool kevlar, since plastic would be a no no. It could also be a sort of matte glass. I imagine there’s a Snapdragon 865 CPU inside to avoid sluggish camera apps and 5G is present too, as well as 8 GB or 12 GB of RAM and at least a 4000 mAh battery.

I mean, it’s all fine and dandy, but aside from the name and maybe the camera I can’t see a selling point. Come to think of it, maybe a slider would be a good idea to differentiate the device from others on the market.

via Behance

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Passionate about design, especially smartphones, gadgets and tablets. Blogging on this site since 2008 and discovering prototypes and trends before bigshot companies sometimes