HMD Global has introduced its new Nokia flagship smartphone at MWC 2019. The key feature of the Nokia 9 PureView is its six-module camera (five lens + Time-of-Flight) co-designed with Zeiss and Light that promises to deliver quality of photos never-before-seen on smartphones. The handset is powered by Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 845, comes with a large pOLED display, and has an eye-catching design.

When it comes to smartphones, the Nokia brand is renowned for two key qualities: high-clarity displays, and advanced imaging capabilities. Being the 2019 flagship offering from HMD, the Nokia 9 PureView features both. 

A Custom ASIC for Dissecting Image Data

The Nokia 9 is the world’s first handset to use a camera featuring six sensors/modules: two 12 MP RGB sensors featuring Zeiss optics, three 12 MP monochrome sensors using Zeiss lenses, and a time-of-light (ToF) depth sensor. The camera is controlled by a tiny 14 mm2 ASIC developed by a company called Light that specializes on imaging solutions using 6, 12, or 18-camera arrays.

The Light ASIC independently controls all camera modules in order to focus them, adjust exposure levels per aperture, calculate white balance, etc. Once the cameras capture their images, the ASIC fuses them together into a single ‘RAW’ image (as Nokia puts it, ‘HDR image’) containing both color and lighting/shadows information. Then the chip transfers the ‘RAW’ data using two MIPI transmitters to a host for further processing. Since contemporary Qualcomm Snapdragon SoCs do not natively support six camera modules, Nokia needed the ASIC from Light not only because it controls the sensors, but also because it packs the data into a format that a mobile SoC can consume and process.

Once the data gets to Qualcomm’s Snapdragon, the magic from Nokia kicks in. The company developed algorithms that use Qualcomm’s general purpose, ISP, and DSP hardware to process the image data from the sensors. According to Nokia, use of the ASIC as well as various hardware capabilities provided by the Snapdragon enable the Nokia 9 PureView to do some serious image processing without dramatically harming battery life.

Combining data from five 12 MP sensors, according to the company, enable the Nokia 9 PureView to capture a gargantuan amount of color and light details. Obviously, using the data available, the phone itself can apply various effects to photos on-the-fly using the Pro Camera UI, including the popular depth-of-field (bokeh effect), various kinds of blur, tilt, shift, etc. What is, perhaps, more important is that RAW (DNG to be more precise) images that the Nokia 9 PureView produces can be later edited in all ways possible, focal points may be changed and so on using pre-installed Adobe Lightroom app (or Google Photos depth editor). With its six-module camera, Nokia essentially unlocks possibilities previously only available to photographers with high end cameras practically to everyone.

Powerful imaging capabilities of the Nokia 9 PureView do not end with the highly-custom camera on the rear. The smartphone has a 20 MP sensor on the front to make selfies. The imaging software also works with this camera as well.

The 5.99-Inch PureDisplay

The handset is equipped with a custom 5.99-inch pOLED display that covers almost the entire surface of the phone’s front side, but still has a small notch. The screen features a 2880x1440 resolution (537 PPI), as well as a very high contrast ratio common to OLED-type displays. In a bid to make the screen standout from the crowd, Nokia did a number of PureDisplay enhancements to further improve quality of the display it uses on its top-of-the-line offering.

For biometric security, Nokia installed an in-screen fingerprint scanner. Meanwhile, the display is protected using Corning Gorilla Glass 5.

The Hardware

The Nokia 9 is based on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 845 application processor (four Kryo Gold 385 cores at 2.8 GHz, four Kryo Silver cores at 1.7 GHz, Adreno 630 GPU) accompanied by 6 GB of LPDDR4X memory as well as 128 GB of NAND flash storage (for full specs, please check the table below). The choice of the previous-gen high-end platform may look a bit odd, but keep in mind that Nokia had to ensure that all of its custom imaging capabilities/algorithms work well with a particular SoC, which required a lot of time to work correctly. 

When it comes to wireless connectivity the Nokia 9 PureView offers everything that its SoC does: 802.11ac Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 5.0, 4G/LTE Cat 16 with 4x4 MIMO, GPS/AGPS+GLONASS+BDS, NFC, ANT+. On the wired side of things, the phone has a USB Type-C connector for data and charging.

The Nokia 9 PureView comes with an integrated 3320 mAh battery and supports Qi wireless charging, just like the majority of today’s high-end smartphones.

The Looks

The Nokia 9 PureView comes in a chassis featuring an aluminum frame and Corning Gorilla Glass on both sides. The frame is rounded with chamfered edges which look rather exquisite, enough to compete for the style-minded crowd addressed by the Nokia 8 Sirocco, HMD’s former flagship. The handset will be available in deep — almost black — blue color, which is to emphasize positioning of the device while still being different from black and grey flagships from other companies.

Style has always been an important feature of higher-end Nokia phones, so this one is clearly not an exception. Meanwhile, the handset is IP67 water and dust resistant.

Price & Availability

The Nokia 9 PureView will be available starting later March at a price of $699, which does not look too expensive for a unique flagship smartphone with very advanced imaging capabilities.

The Nokia 9 PureView
   Specifications
Display pOLED
5.99"
2880x1440
Corning Gorilla Glass 5
HDR10
SoC Qualcomm Snapdragon 845
Four Kryo Gold 385 cores at 2.8 GHz
Four Kryo Silver cores at 1.7 GHz
Adreno 630 GPU
RAM 6 GB LPDDR4X
Storage 128 of NAND flash
Local Connectivity Wi-Fi  802.11ac Wi-Fi
Bluetooth Bluetooth 5.0
Data/Charging USB 3.0 Type-C
Audio No 3.5 mm jack
NFC Yes
LTE X16 Modem
Navigation GPS/AGPS+GLONASS+BDS, ANT+
Rear Camera 2 × 12 MP RGB sensor with Zeiss optics, f/1.8, 1/2.9", 1.25µm
3 × 12 MP RGB sensor with Zeiss optics, f/1.8, 1/2.9", 1.25µm
1 × TOF depth sensor
1 × dual-LED/dual-tone flash
Front Camera 20 MP, 1.0µm
Battery Capacity 3320 mAh
Expected Life ?
SIM Size Nano SIM
Sensors accelerometer, gyro, proximity, compass
Biometric Security Fingerprint In-screen sensor
Facial Recognition -
Dimensions Height 155 mm | 6.2 inches
Width 75 mm | 2.95 inches
Thickness 8 mm | 0.31 inches
Weight 172 grams | 6.07 ounces
Colors Midnight Blue
Protection Drop Protected
Water, Dust IP67
OS Google Android 9.0
Launch Countries EMEA, APAC, USA
Price €620, $699

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Source: Nokia

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  • prisonerX - Tuesday, February 26, 2019 - link

    Yes, it should say that but it doesn't.
  • 5Gfun - Monday, February 25, 2019 - link

    Nokia keep this camera arrangment for your 5G phone with Snapdragon 855, totally get rid of bezels and make front camera popping out. I give you my money then even if it is a solid heap of hay.
  • DontTreadOnMe - Tuesday, February 26, 2019 - link

    Yes, and I will buy the 845 version and save some money. :) I suppose I could just buy a last-year-flagship with similar effect, but that's throwing away a year's worth of security patches.
  • prisonerX - Tuesday, February 26, 2019 - link

    Why are you offering Nokia money, they don't make this phone.
  • nikon133 - Monday, February 25, 2019 - link

    I really hope it will deliver on image quality promise... though I'db e tempted to buy it just for DoF control. Even 1" sensor cameras struggle to provide meaningful DoF control as soon as shooting approaches aperture of 2.0.

    This will not replace my large sensor camera - but it could be great sidekick that also happens to provide all the benefits of modern smartphone.
  • boozed - Monday, February 25, 2019 - link

    How's your trypophobia?
  • FreckledTrout - Monday, February 25, 2019 - link

    Spider phone, spider phone, doing whatever a spider phone does.
  • wr3zzz - Monday, February 25, 2019 - link

    I don't understand the design logic of using rounded corners when the screen is not curved.
  • IBM760XL - Monday, February 25, 2019 - link

    I find it to be more ergonomic. It comes closer to matching the natural grip of the hand carrying the phone than a device with angular corners.
  • Exodite - Tuesday, February 26, 2019 - link

    I imagine wr3zzz was talking about the display rather than the phone edges?

    Assuming that's the case I agree.

    Rounded display edges are stupid, even for phones with rounded exteriors and minimal bezels, as no actual content is suited for it.

    The exterior is more a subjective thing I'll grant you, though personally I prefer completely flat devices with minimally rounded edges as that works best with my use cases.

    On the plus side this is one of the few devices available seemingly without a camera hump so that's a big plus in my book, even if I don't particularly care about the camera.

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