We really enjoyed using the E52. It's a solid phone with a variety a features and it looks good. The 3.5mm headphone jack alone makes it worth upgrading to if you own and love the Nokia E51. If you're looking for standard phone with a 12-key keypad tha...
I guess after all that the only difference was the keypad! The Nokia E52 is a slim, lightweight and stylish looking phone. Geared towards business men and women, it's packed with features and applications to keep you up to date and in the loop with ev...
As BlackBerry gets ever more dominant in the business world, Nokia can’t afford any screwups. With the launch of the E52 (and the almost identical E55 that has a compact QWERTY keyboard instead of a numeric pad with T9), Nokia has ensured it as a st...
Very small for a smartphone, Easy to manage system for contacts and emails
Why ditch the E55's QWERTY keyboard?, Slightly weak battery life holds you back from making the most of it, Small screen makes surfing the web difficult
The E52 doesn't exactly break new ground. It's got a pretty standard candy bar layout and uses a normal mobile phone keypad for text entry, but perhaps that's the point. This is a smartphone for those people who don't really want a smartphone, but need so...
Compact and lightweight, Superb battery life, Usable keypad with large buttons, Two easily switchable home screens
Poor key markings, Shortcut keys are slightly awkward to use
The E52 is Nokias best candybar-format E-series handset yet. Compact and lightweight, it crams in plenty of features and delivers superb battery life. If you dont need a touch-screen, consider this smartphone...
Poor camera; keypad is less than ideal for text entry
It's not the most exciting handset around at the moment, but the Nokia E52 still manages to impress with its long battery life, excellent call quality and useful feature set ...