While the Nokia Lumia line of phones has long been gone from the market, Finnish company HMD (who briefly licensed Nokia’s smartphone business) has adopted the design of Nokia’s older Lumia devices with the HMD Skyline, a midrange phone launched just this year.
The Skyline features a removable backplate for easy repairability, and runs on Android 14 with what HMD calls a “Detox Mode” for folks who want to cut down on their smartphone usage every now and then. In front you get a 6.55-inch display, while inside there’s a Snapdragon 7s Gen 2 chipset with up to 12GB of RAM, and a 4,600 mAh replaceable battery.
For cameras, the phone features a 108 MP Main sensor, aided by a 13 MP ultrawide sensor and 50 MP telephoto camera; in front there’s a 50 MP selfie camera with autofocus. HMD says that the phone will come with two years of major Android upgrades and three years of security updates – you can check it out using the link below.
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