Nokia N9 113 page Manual and internal photos as Nokia N9 passes FCC
So last week we got instructions from Nokia themselves (well for the service folks) how to take apart a Nokia N9.
Well since it has passed FCC there is a bounty of information (each could have been worthy of individual post discussion).
Imagine only this bit was the N9. (Just sleek black all the way around). Completely all screen on the face.
Check it out at FCC
There’s a huuge 113 page manual to look at if you want to indulge yourself as a would be Nokia N9 owner. Not that most of us would read a manual (you’d just dig in and play).
If you’re on the fence about the N9, reading this might push you towards forking over your money.
Ovi Maps is not yet Nokia Maps here. By the time it’s available, hopefully the manual would be updated to reflect the newer branding that the consumers will see.
There’s something extra of interest too but I’ve put that in a separate post as I don’t think it fits here.
What does fit are the sexy external photos of the N9.

Source: FCC
Via: Engadget
Cheers mrprince and Marcel for the tip!
Cheers also to Glenn!
About the Author (Author Profile)
Hey, thanks for reading my post. My name is Jay and I'm a medical student at the University of Manchester. When I can, I blog here at mynokiablog.com and tweet now and again @jaymontano. We also have a twitter and facebook accounts @mynokiablog and Facebook.com/mynokiablog. Check out the tips, guides and rules for commenting >>click<< Contact us at tips(@)mynokiablog.com or email me directly on jay[at]mynokiablog.comComments (10)
Trackback URL | Comments RSS Feed
Sites That Link to this Post
- Tearing down the Nokia N9 » Geko Geek | November 18, 2011











I asked about Ovi Music and Ovi Maps to the N9 Product Manager and was told the names wont be changing by launch, but by June next year everything will be a Nokia service.
The more widely used services such as Ovi Music will be the last to be rebranded
Ah awesome. Were you at a N9 event?
June next year huh? That’s going to be a little confusing with Maps already called Nokia Maps.
Well by 2012, we might have disappeared as this writer suggested. Bought out possibly by HTC, lol.
http://mynokiablog.com/2011/06/22/nokia-brand-to-disappear-in-2012-htc-potential-buyer-_/
http://www.myhtcblog.com sounds dumb…
nokia will stay alive… There is a time AFTER Elop and WP7
Like there was a time after S60v5.
Sure was, like i have said before.
Main tidbits he gave away were
- Belle by Septemeber
- New Exciting Accessories coming
- N9 hopefully by September
- 64GB not to be in wide production with carriers
- Nokia NFC does no support payment but should work with any NFC device.
- No USB-HOST
- No Flash support coming, future is HTML5
I actually asked about Ovi Music so not sure if the same really does apply for Ovi Maps, maybe thats sooner.
He did have carrier links on his phone such as TelstraOne, but other than that not much is known on the software front.
They mentioned having product reviews like the ones seen in the TabCo videos so found that funny.
- N9 hopefully by September
What worldwide? Which regions?
- 64GB not to be in wide production with carriers
You serious? That’s lame.
- No USB-HOST
Check out TMO, this is def. do-able.
May not be with 1st build upon N9′s release. But support was/is evident in kernel dump.
- No Flash support coming, future is HTML5
Also checkout thread where jolo last commented.
This is still a WIP…
Jolo has been working on testing/dev’ing fenec+flash for N9, it works fine.
The only road-block is convincing management to give Adobe $ for a signed binary.
The USB host dongle supplied with the N8 and E7 will not fit the N9. It doesn’t have the square-edged socket
See an easy way to acees battery?
Instructions here for dismantling. Not really ‘easy’ imo.
http://mynokiablog.com/2011/07/15/nokia-n9-disassembled-instructions-inside-service-manual/
as said earlier on the linked engadget article:
“Nokia N9 arrives at FCC, opened up to see where all the MeeGo comes from”
Never mind the FCC, i want confirmation from Nokia that there are no contractual or warranty impediments to British phone carriers offering the N9 on contract, regardless of whether Nokia chooses not to directly sell the device in this market.
Listen up; i don’t want your WP7 tat!
http://jedibeeftrix.wordpress.com/2011/06/26/meegoharmattan-a-woefully-misunderstood-platform/