Nokia has just finished officially unveiling one of its most leaked handsets in recent memory at the recently concluded Nokia World Expo in London, England. Pictured above, the Nokia Lumia 800 is referred to by Nokia as the world's first real Windows Phone. Now I know what you're thinking, it looks like a bar of soap. Well, perhaps it does, but this bar of soap just might be the kind of thing that Nokia needs to rub down its long streak of bad luck in the smartphone arena of today.
The Nokia Lumia 800 features a 1.4GHz Qualcomm MSM8255 SoC, the same chip that powers mobile heavyweights such as the HTC Desire HD, Sony Ericsson Xperia Arc, and Acer Iconia Smart. It also comes with an Adreno 205 GPU as standard for its configuration as part of the Snapdragon family. The body of the Nokia Lumia 800 is made out of a thick piece of durable polycarbonate plastic, and its design is reminiscent of the Nokia N9. It's a bit on the chunky side at 12.1mm thick, but I wouldn't hesitate to pick this baby up even if it were truly a bar of soap (if you know what I mean).
Up front, there appears to be nothing but the curved 3.7-inch 800x480 ClearBlack AMOLED touchsreen display (standard with most Windows Phones nowadays), and around the back, the only thing you'll find is an 8-megapixel snapper with Carl Zeiss optics. There will be only one version of the Nokia Lumia 800 for sale and it will offer 16GB of internal storage (plus 25GB of free SkyDrive storage from Microsoft).
If you head on over to Nokia's web site right now, you'll find a list of select countries where it's already available for pre-order. Come November, it will be officially available in France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain and the UK under leading telecom operators and select retailers. Meanwhile, Hong Kong, India, Russia, Singapore, and Taiwan will see each see a local release of the Nokia Lumia 800 before the year ends. Availability in other countries (read: rest of world) is scheduled to follow in early 2012.
Impressive hardware as always. But will Windows Phone be enough to salvage what remains of the former champion of Symbian? If you're thinking of bagging one of these for Christmas, expect to pay €420 or about $585 USD (~25,000 Pesos) Read on for a few more photos and the official press release of the Nokia Lumia 800 smartphone.