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The new Lumia 650 is gorgeous, but it isn’t powerful enough for Continuum

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The Lumia 650 is Microsoft’s latest Windows 10 smartphone to be announced, following numerous rumors regarding the device, including talk it may be the last Lumia phone of the year for the company. Whether it is, or if the Lumia 750 or Lumia 850 will still make an appearance isn’t known yet. In the meantime, here’s everything you need to know about the Lumia 650.

Microsoft’s pushing two aspects of the Lumia 650 — the design, and its overall suitability for business use. Described as a”beautiful phone,” in the release blog post, it’s hard not to agree when you actually get your hands on it. The Lumia 650 has a aluminum frame and measures just 6.9mm thick — that’s 0.2mm thinner than the iPhone 6S — and crucially, weighs only 122 grams.

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That makes it very comfortable to hold, and it easily slips into a jacket or trouser pocket. However, the phone’s not made of solely high-end materials. The rear is plastic and very smooth. It’s also dull, with only the four-square Microsoft logo to break up the monotony.

There’s a 5-inch AMOLED touchscreen on the front, which sounds excellent, but sadly, it has a 720p resolution, which gives away its distinctly mid-range status. It’s the same story for the processor, which is a Qualcomm Snapdragon 212 quad-core chip with 1GB of RAM. The 16GB of internal memory isn’t much, but there is a MicroSD card slot ready to increase this by up to 200GB, so space should never be a problem.

If you’re a suit-wearing business type, keen to keep the Windows theme from the office running when you’re out and about, Microsoft wants you to buy the Lumia 650. It touts the inclusion of OneDrive for easy cloud syncing, Office 365, and various security features as reasons to pick one up. However, Continuum is probably the biggest draw for business customers, and the Lumia 650 isn’t powerful enough to support the feature.

In addition to all this, the Lumia 650 has an 8-megapixel rear camera, a 5-megapixel front camera, 4G LTE connectivity, Bluetooth 4.1, NFC, and a 2,000mAh battery. Microsoft will put the phone on sale from February 18, but has only announced it for Europe — and no more precisely than that — at the moment. The price has been given in U.S. dollars though, and it’s set at $200, which suggests a U.S launch will come soon.

The price is reasonable, the build quality is excellent, and the aluminum body does give the Lumia 650 a certain style, but it’s still very business-like. It also lacks the one main feature draw of Windows 10, which is unfortunate.

Andy Boxall
Andy has written about mobile technology for almost a decade. From 2G to 5G and smartphone to smartwatch, Andy knows tech.
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