Nokia also launched its new free media-sharing service "Share on Ovi," which it opened for live testing last week, and an updated version of its navigation software.
Nokia unveiled a new N96 top-of-the-range model, successor to its top profit generator, the N95.
It comes with 16 gigabytes of internal memory, and is expected to retail for around 550 euros, excluding subsidies and taxes.
Its new N78 model, a successor to the N73, Nokia's top-selling multimedia phone, will start sales next quarter for around 350 euros.
Nokia has sold some 15 million N73 handsets.
The company also unveiled new mid-range phone models 6210 Navigator, to sell for around 300 euros, and the 6220 Classic with a 5 megapixel camera, priced at around 325 euros.
Nokia's media-sharing site allows people to share photos and videos, and is built on technology acquired last year with the U.S. firm Twango.
"We have taken the know-how from Twango and put it on top of our mobile experience," Niklas Savander, the head of Nokia's new Internet services unit told Reuters in an interview.
"We have optimized mobile upload - you take a picture, click twice and it's on the site."
The media and mobile phone industries have been looking for user generated content boom to move over to cellphones, but so far limited usage of Internet on handsets has put a lid on the potentially lucrative business.
"As we continue to free the Internet from the limitations of the desktop, we are taking mobility into a completely new realm of possibility," Nokia Chief Executive Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo said in a statement.
Nokia, which made 40 percent of all cellphones sold in the last quarter of 2007, is the first handset maker to make a major push into the content sector.
Millions of users have downloaded songs, video clips, programs or documents since the company launched the Nokia music store and Mosh, a file sharing site, last year.
(Reporting by Tarmo Virki; Editing by Quentin Bryar and Jason Neely)
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