Nov 19, 2010 07:24 GMT  ·  By

Nokia N8, the first smartphone to come to the market with the new Symbian^3 operating system on board, shows a series of issues in some of the units shipped to end users, mainly related to power management, the latest new around the Internet report.

Moreover, it appears that the handset vendor itself has already admitted to these issues, while confirming that it is already taking action in this direction.

Several weeks ago, Finnish mobile phone maker Nokia has started to ship the Nokia N8, its latest flagship handset model, which marked a very important milestone in the company's evolution.

Now, following a series of complaints that Nokia N8 devices come with issues thaty affect the end-user experience, the handset vendor confirmed the existence of these problems.

“There have been some reports in media on the Nokia N8 quality. Niklas Savander, head of Nokia sales and marketing, addresses the issue in a video interview published today in our company blog Nokia Conversations,” a statement from the company reads, according to BGR.

In the said video, which was embedded below, you can watch Nokia’s Excecutive Vice President Niklas Savander talking about these problems with the Nokia N8.

Some of the issues that were reported are include a series of inexplicable symptoms with the device, such as the impossibility to reboot, or the fact that it wouldn't turn back on, after suddenly turning off on its own.

Nokia confirmed in the aforementioned statement that the main problems that the N8 comes with are related the power management.

“In a limited number of Nokia N8 devices, there appears to be an issue relating to power management. As product quality is a top priority for Nokia, we have taken immediate actions to address this,” the statement continues.

“As with any product performance issue, this is covered by Nokia’s warranty. Any affected consumers should contact their local Nokia Customer Care. We apologize for the inconvenience.”