My dog has an Instagram account. It's managed by my girlfriend and yours truly, and while it doesn't have millions of followers (you're welcome to follow it!), we try to publish a photo each day. One day it's my turn to hunt through my camera roll for derpy shots of my 16-pound pup, and on the next, it's hers. But I have a confession: I've only posted once since the middle of November. That's when I started using the Nokia 6.2.
They say the best camera is the one you have with you, but when the camera is slow and its results are often blurry, then the old adage doesn't quite ring true. My partner has picked up the slack as I've slowly lost interest in capturing moments of my life (er, dog) these past few weeks, not because the triple-camera system on this phone is wholly bad, but because it requires a little too much work for my liking.
If you don't want to crazily document every day of your dog's life, don't care about snapping the perfect selfie, tend to use a mirrorless camera, or are continually shocked at the prices of smartphones—then the $249 Nokia 6.2 is another reminder of just how good cheap phones have become.
Modern Nokia phones run Android and aren't actually made by Nokia anymore. A Finnish company, HMD Global, licenses the brand. HMD is comprised of ex-Nokia employees, but it has made a name for itself making well-built budget phones since its inception in 2016. The company has yet to make a phone that can live up to the legendary camera excellence in Nokia predecessors, but its latest steps up in other ways.





