You can’t really swipe across the homescreens ‘fast’ as no matter how quickly you swipe, they’ll change at the pace that was programmed. The Asha 311 packs in a 1GHz, but that’s pretty meaningless since there aren’t any apps to take advantage of it and the ones that come with the phone are very sluggish. Playing Angry Birds on the 311 will only make you angry in frustration It also has toggle switches for data, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and silent mode. There’s a drop down notification bar that lets you jump to tasks like SMS, call and music player. You get three homescreens: one with the date and time and shortcut to apps, the second is the dialer and the third is the list of all the apps. The 3-inch capacitive screen responds well to touch and there’s support for two-finger multi-touch as well. Just like the Asha 305, the 311 also runs on the Nokia Series 40 OS, so there’s no multitasking as such, but it’s a lot more functional than what Series 40 used to be. It also feels very comfortable even if you have large hands. The Asha 311 is a smart-looking phone (when not covered in fingerprints) and you get A-Grade build quality. The speaker is placed at the bottom around the back along with the 3.2MP camera. We have the volume rocker and sleep/wake button on the side, along with the 3.5mm headphone jack, microUSB port and thin-pin charging port on the top. The buttons on the Asha 311 are uncomfortably hard and it takes an effort to use them.
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