This is a phone personally review by me now which my brother own.
Elegant design and wonderful screen
The beautifully soft-to-touch matte black polycarbonate on the 920
screams quality. Yes, I had to say that. Here is a phone (apart from the
8X, One X) that finally looked and felt the price he paid for it . What a phoneit was. No cheap things here, just a classy,
understated matte black polycarbonate shell and Corning Gorilla glass 2
for protection which looks premium when holding.
Just the phone is little bulkier. But after using for a week or two, I hardly notice
the weight now. But when i weighed it , its almost exactly as heavy
as a Samsung Galaxy Note 2.


Its such a beautiful, premium looking phone that you end up spending a
disproportionately large time just feeling the surface or ogling at the
very-natural-no-eye-popping-colors screen. I personally found not much
of a difference due to Nokia's much touted Puremotion+ screen between
the 920's screen as compared to that of the 8X, but the Nokia did feel a
wee bit smoother than it. Daylight visibility is great. You dont get much
control over the LCD brightness (just auto,low,medium and high modes)
but to my pleasant surprise the auto mode works surprisingly well. So
well, that even a very picky guy like me has been satisfied with the
automatic mode. The curved edges to the screen also make it very
pleasant to swipe form the edges of the screen. A little but often
overlooked fact is that the screen-lock/power button is on the side of
the phone and not on the top which makes a world of difference to one
handed operation. The 3.5mm jack is at the centre of the top of the
phone, while the dual speakers line the bottom on either side of the
micro-USB/charging slot. And lastly it comes with built in wireless
charging capability compatible with the open Qi standard, even if
presently just for bragging rights.
Fluid WP8 UI is a refreshing change from static icons
I wont harp about the Windows phone 8's UI because any prospective buyer must have
surely known about it by now. Its the one of the most soft and smoothy OS out there in the
market right now according to me .Yes it much better than iOS. Its not exactly lightning quick, but Microsoft has
made clever use of fluid animations to mask the delay in launching apps
so that the user gets a sense of something always "happening" and its a
very well implemented trick. Nokia drive takes about a couple of seconds
to launch, but never feels like that it lags or is slow. Testimony to the
clever design of this OS. The tiles are a love or hate affair - I, for
one, adore them. They make the homescreen look alive, there is something
always moving about at some part of the screen making up for a very
lively experience. Its a refreshing departure from the static icons
reminiscent of the PC. I have seen isolated app-crashes but the phone
always recovers gracefully from any such untoward event, not something
that can be said about Android.
The keyboard though lacking in haptic-feedback has a nice feature that
almost every reviewer forgets to mention - next word prediction. In
addition to the usual autocorrect, the keyboard predicts the next word
depending upon your current word and if you type in proper English, its
very accurate. Say you type I and press space, then you immediately
notice that "am" "was", "think", "have", "dont" etc are already on the
prediction line on top of the keyboard. It has to be seen to be fully
appreciated and for people like me who text a lot its a god-send. has a
special section to store recently used emoticons separately from the
mass of other smileys, a nice touch. All these combined mean that I am
having to actually punch in much lesser to type the same message on my
920 as compared to my Xperia ray. also find it much much easier to edit
single mis-spelled characters thanks to the "floating" cursor (activated
by a tap and hold on the text area). A very nice touch indeed.
Notifications appearing on the top can be swiped away to the right. I
dont miss the notification centre personally, though its heavily
personal (I dont use any IM or FB,whatsapp on my phone).

A little bit of camera magic
I have to divide this into two parts - day and night : In bright
daylight the camera performs decently well but certainly not any better
than the others. I for one found that the One X had slightly sharper
pics but not by much. In any case the 920's photos are more than
acceptable at this elevated price point as well. Then there is the night
time photos (no I am not talking about the dedicated night mode) when
the 920 really gets on. I'll make this short. In a random, handheld,
full-auto-settings shot test of dimly lit streets the pics from the 920
matched the ones from my Canon EOS 600D with the stock 18-55 lens (with
optical image stabilisation) for detail and actually beat it in terms of
color reproduction and flash effectiveness and more importantly -
usabilty. Yes, I know that sounds incredible and I do not make that
statement lightly. All that optical-image-stabilisation mumbo jumbo
conjures up every trick in its bag to give some incredible images with
very less noise, and thats without even the flash being used.
But if you do get a chance, do use the camera at night and see for
yourself. Video recording too, benefits immensely from the image
stabilization producing really smooth videos.
Another less noted fact is that the microphone does not distort the
sound when recording elevated volumes. To test this I recorded a video
in a car with the windows rolled up and the speakers blasting at full
volume. The 920 captured the sound well and with no distortion as
claimed. Further it dd capture a good amount of bass which the other
high end phones struggle to capture when recording voice/video
Apps and ecosystem :
Its smaller than both android and IOS but I am not a heavy app user, so I
cant really comment on this. I found decent apps for everything I
needed to look for. IE is a good browser, in fact among the fastest ones
out there right now.
Nokia maps and Drive are really good for what they do, though I miss the
ability to rotate maps a la Google maps. As good as the maps are I
still feel Google maps are slightly superior in a couple of areas -
Detail/accuracy and eye-candy. Dont get me wrong, the Nokia maps is very
detailed atleast for the part of India I live in, but I have noticed
that it shows a road where no roads exist. Google maps doesnt have this
mistake. Secondly the colors on Google maps are very optimised, so much
that you tend to find everything a fraction of a second quicker on it -
I'd mark it down to better use of colors, the details just stand out
better. The other thing I miss is a scale. There is no scale on the
Nokia maps and for someone like me who walks around a lot, a map is
sometimes annoyingly useless without a scale. Also I'd much prefer to
have the zoom buttons on the side than at the bottom-centre within Nokia
maps.
Also, when you
walk towards an intersection, there is a
non-zero chance that Nokia drive will think that you are taking a
left/right when you are just following the straight path. It takes a few
seconds (anywhere from 3-7 seconds) to get it back right about your
direction. The change in direction as perceived by the app (wrongly, of
course) is followed with a rotation of the "view" making this new
direction the "upside". And a few seconds later it switches the view
again as it finally realises its folly. This quick rotation of the maps
is so acutely dis-orientating that its almost a deal breaker for me. If I
had the choice of using Google maps here, I'd gladly do so. I wish to
clarify that this happens only rarely and only when walking.
On the brighter side, the Nokia navigation apps are simple to use
without being any simpler than they should be. I have found the GPS
locks to be very good and quick , though on a couple of isolated
occasions (in the first week) I had seen false locks reporting I was
about 10km away from where I actually was. Fortunately I haven't had
this issue recurring. Another nice feature is that the GPS lock can be
maintained even under the lockscreen if you dont manually quit the app
by pressing the back-key. Bottom line is that though there is definitely
room for improvement, I am satisfied with the mapping experience on the
Lumia 920.
The other Nokia apps like the lenses on the camera (Smart shoot, that
enables you to select the best pic from a series and also remove any
distracting moving people, Panorama, Cinemascope - I havent used this
one) and the fun-useful apps like Photobeamer (has to be downloaded
separately) surely add value to the experience. They are simple, sweet
and do exactly what they are supposed to do with minimum fuss - just the
way I like them. There is also a local version of Nokia transport - not
very useful right now in Bangalore though.
Battery :Not Enough
Lasts one day with decently heavy usage that involves approximately
70-80 SMSes and a couple of phone calls each about 4 min long, Wi-Fi on
(set to disconnect on lock) and the screen turned on for a good amount
of time (~1 hour in addition to the activities described above)doing
nothing more than just exploring the phone with brightness set to auto
and music through headphones for about 2 hours and about 30 minutes of
GPS navigation (location services are turned on all the time though).
Surprisingly the battery life seems to improve with a few use cycles and
now comfortably lasts a day with good usage. No problems in the battery
life department.
Pleasant music experience and free downloads
I cant quite understand whats the big fuss about the music output of
this phone is. I honestly prefer to tweak the equalizer myself than
relying on some software to enhance bass. FYI, I fount that the much
touted Beats in HTC phones makes the bass muddy, the 920 is much better
in that regard. And yeah it comes with one year's worth of unlimited
free music.
The things that make you go WTF ?!
The delivery reports appear as messages and have to be "seen" to be
removed from the list of unread messages. The camera is good in
sunlight, but you expect more from a superb hardware like this. Bing
search cant be replaced with google or be remapped to perform some other
function. Dont like the new windows logo at the centre, the one on the
Lumia 800 is cooler. Also the new logo lights up a tiny bit too bright
for my liking (No-one else had any such opinion though). Yeah I am
nit-picking now

I do miss the notificaction lights, although its rumored that a future update will fix that particular niggle.
Closure
Nokia finally has a phone that's worthy of being called a WP flagship - one
that can stand in the crowd of multi-core giants from Samsung and HTC and the svelte beauties from Apple and not feel
overwhelmed. In fact the lumia 920 is the first phone from the Finnish
manufacturer that can actually gives these others an inferiority complex
in more areas than one. Truly the most exotic phone.....
But its a fickle market out there and the questions that a potential
buyer in this segment will have on his mind are primarily two - Is this
the best smartphone out there? Does the Lumia 920 justify its price tag?
The answer to the first one depends on the user. If you are the kind
that wants to tweak every last setting on your phone, flash it with
every beta-ROM, then you wont like WP8 or this phone. But if you are the
kind of user who has money to spend and wants a phone that just works,
doing everything you want it to do with style forgoing a bit of
nitty-gritty control in the process, then you'll love this phone. And
for the second question the answer is an unequivocal YES. Yes this phone
more than justifies the price tag. Its arguably the best-looking, best
built, one with the best camera and the most lag free phone that money
can buy right now. If that is not enough to satisfy a person and you
still cringe for quad core this and multi-core that, then maybe you are
missing the point. A phone was supposed to make our life easier, make it
convenient, make it more pleasant and I cant see how the quad-core
monsters do it any better than the 920. On the other hand the 920 does a
lot of things that no other phone on the market does. It has the
ability to genuinely surprise you on more than one occasion.
Maybe you should stop hating the underdog, maybe you should give the
Lumia 920 a chance. Its just too special to be ignored. Despite going
years without a proper flagship Nokia hasn't forgotten how to make
desirable hardware. The Lumia 920 is not perfect. But its a flawed genius,
and for quite a few people out there - the best phone money can buy ,
irrespective of price.YES YES YES .I HAVE BUYED IT AND I AM HAPPY >>>>ARE YOU?