Posts Tagged ‘5800 XpressMusic’

Nokia 5800i XpressMusic hits the FCC: it’s like the 5800, only less so

Friday, July 31st, 2009

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Over the years we’ve found that usually, when a company takes a model number and slaps an extra letter on the end of it, there’s some sort of feature or update they’re highlighting. iPhone 3GS? That one’s easy: “speed.” But if we’re reading this FCC business correctly, Nokia’s new 5800i XpressMusic handset apparently differs little from its older sibling — save for the fact that they’ve removed that pesky WiFi antenna from the thing. Because, really, what would you do with all that connectivity, anyways? Also, while still sporting a 3 megapixel camera, those specs are listed as a 4.6mm on the new handset (the original is 3.7mm). As GSM Arena has pointed out, this could be due to either a narrower field of view or a larger sensor — probably the latter. Not too much more info here, but if you’re morbidly curious, please feel free to check out the gallery below. It’s a blast.

Read – Nokia 5800i XM shows up. Loses Wi-Fi connectivity
Read – FCC teases with Nokia 5800i XM – better camera, but no Wi-Fi?

Nokia 5800i XpressMusic hits the FCC: it’s like the 5800, only less so originally appeared on Engadget Mobile on Fri, 31 Jul 2009 15:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Is Shipping – 5800 XpressMusic Smartphone!

Tuesday, December 2nd, 2008

Nokia announced yesterday that its 5800 XpressMusic smartphone began shipping in Spain, Finland, Russia, India, and other select countries around the world, with global shipments planned to begin soon. The 5800 XpressMusic is the first smartphone to use Nokia’s new S60 5th Edition, which adds touchscreen support to Nokia’s popular S60 platform.

The 5800 XpressMusic features a large 3.2″ touchscreen display and a 3.2 megapixel autofocus camera with a dual-LED flash. WiFi and a built-in GPS receiver are also on board, alongside a microSD card slot and standard 3.5mm audio port for music enjoyment.

The Nokia 5800 XpressMusic will be priced differently in each region, as some units will be included in the Comes With Music initiative.

Phone Review: Nokia 5220 XpressMusic

Monday, November 17th, 2008

Compared with Sony Ericsson’s rapid-fire succession of Walkman phones, Nokia’s XpressMusic roll-out has been distinctly low-key, with just a handful of models sporting Nokia’s music-majoring label. Now, with the launch of Nokia’s Comes With Music unlimited music download service, and its soon-to-arrive 5800 XpressMusic touchscreen smartphone, the spotlight is starting to shine on Nokia’s mobile music line-up. But as well as the top-of-the bill devices and services, Nokia is continuing to plug away at the lower end, with the 5220 XpressMusic one of Nokia’s latest low-cost newcomers.

Budget music mobile phone. Like the 5310 XpressMusic, Nokia’s debut Comes With Music device, the 5220 doesn’t have a wow-inducing set of high-end features – it lacks 3G connectivity, for instance, and has a pretty ordinary 2-megapixel camera built in. Instead, though, the 5220 XpressMusic’s appeal is based on getting the tune-playing performance right in an attractively slim design, and throwing in some decent additional features.

Slim design. The XpressMusic family look is obvious on this model, with the usual black bodywork with sharply contrasting electric blue or red trim, plus dedicated music player controls lined up the side of the display. But Nokia has given the 5220 XpressMusic a very distinctive twist. The body has an unusual asymmetrical design, with a sloping top and bottom that gives the phone a kind of funky retro-modern feel (Sagem did something similar with some of its phones back in the late 90s). It’s skinny too. Those variable sloped-shoulder dimensions work out at around 108(h) x 43.5(w) x 10.5(d) mm, and weighing a mere 78g it will slip easily into the tightest pockets. Another design touch is a strap hole in the bottom corner of the phone, for those who want to dangle rather than pocket their handset.

Handy headphone socket. It has an adequate 2-inch, 256K-colour QVGA (320×240 pixels) display, and the numberpad is well designed, with well spread, slightly raised buttonry that’s pleasingly responsive. It feels quite solid too, despite its glossy plastic fascia. One very welcome touch is the inclusion of a proper 3.5mm headphone socket on the top of the phone. While this should be normal practice for any would-be music phone, it’s often overlooked, but it gives you the scope to improve audio performance significantly by simply adding better earphones.

Nokia user interface. The 5220 XpressMusic runs on Nokia’s commonly used Series 40 user interface, so will be familiar to many Nokia devotees. Its standby screen has a row of changeable Active Standby shortcut icons that at a click give you fast access to key features and applications. There are also separate information updates lined up on the screen, plus music player and FM radio status info, so you can operate these from standby with the music buttons – play/pause forward and rewind – on the edge of the phone. Other softkey shortcuts are to hand as well, while the main menu system is typical Nokia, too, operated mainly with the phone’s nicely usable central navigation pad, and with an icon-based grid structure leading you into a host of sub menus.

Easy access music player. It’s an XpressMusic phone, so the music player is of course the headline act. It can be fired up and worked by pressing the illuminated control buttons on the side, or (the long way around) by popping into the menus. When it’s playing onscreen, the central navigation pad doubles up as a control panel, in a way that’s standard across Nokia handsets. The main benefit of the dedicated controls is when the music player’s running in the background; it’s easier to use these than keep tapping back into the menus.

Excellent audio performance. The music player doesn’t break new ground for Nokia, but its menus are sensibly constructed and work efficiently. You get familiar music player track categories (artists, albums, tracks, genres, videos, playlists), which you can scroll through to find tracks. It’s easy to create your own playlists, or to tweak sounds using the equaliser functions. Onboard storage is limited to 30MB of memory, but MicroSD cards are supported and Nokia includes a 512MB card in-box. And if you want to carry more tunes in the phone, cards of up to 2GB can be slotted in to the side. For any music player, it’s what’s in the grooves that counts and the Nokia 5220 XpressMusic is capable of an excellent audio performance. With decent earphones sound is rich and detailed, with plenty of bass.

Invest in better headphones.  Its supplied earphones don’t hit the top mark though – they’re reasonable for a phone at this price level, but not exceptional. But swap these for a higher quality set of headphones (plugging into the welcome 3.5mm socket) and sound quality is really lifted, making the most of the audio processing gadgetry Nokia has built in. It’s well worth trying – you don’t have to spend a fortune for decent earwear that will make a big difference. Stereo Bluetooth headphones are supported on this model too if you want a wireless option. On the other end of the tech scale, you can play back tunes surprisingly loudly via the in-built loudspeaker – though quality is typically bass-light and abrasive at higher volumes. You can listen to the FM radio through this as well, provided the earphones are plugged in; it puts in a decent performance.

Fully-featured camera. Less impressive than the 5220 XpressMusic’s tune-playing abilities, its camera is a run-of-the-mill 2-megapixel shooter. There’s no autofocus or flash but there is the usual tick list of standard phone tweakery and settings adjustments – white balance, colour effects, multi-shot options, and so on. It does a reasonable shooting job within its quality limitations; colour rendition is quite good, although picture detail is limited. Indoors, image quality deteriorates and low-light performance is poor, restricted by lack of added illumination. An option is available to upload snaps – and video – straight to online Flickr accounts, should you wish to. Video capture quality, however, is limited, with maximum shooting resolution restricted to 176×144 pixels, giving low resolution, typically stilted footage.

Additional application. For a low-range phone, Nokia has given the 5220 XpressMusic a good set of additional features – with a typical bundle of pre-loaded applications and tools. Although there’s a Nokia browser onboard, it has also pre-loaded the excellent Opera Mini browser, which provides a fine way of checking out full websites. Other familiar Nokia Series 40 phone added applications include Yahoo! Go – an app that provides information updates, news, online entertainment services, mapping info and email on one homescreen – and Nokia’s own WidSets widgets application – pulling together updated widgets from favourite websites and blogs on one screen.

Nokia maps. There’s no GPS capability on this handset, but thanks to Nokia Maps software, you can look up maps, search for routes and look for places of interest, with information updated over the air to the phone. You can also download maps from Nokia’s website to add to the phone’s memory card, if you prefer, via Nokia Map Loader software and a USB cable supplied. And if you connect it up to an optional Bluetooth-enabled GPS module, you can use the 5220 XpressMusic for precise location finding and routing. A Search facility – using Yahoo! or Windows Live Search engines – is another handy extra embedded in the phone’s software. In addition, the usual supply of organiser tools are in place, with a calendar function, to do lists, notes, various clock and timer options, calculator, world clock and voice recorder application. For a bit of added fun, Nokia has lined up four Java games and embedded a wallpaper creator tool.

Battery performance. Music may be the major key for the 5220 XpressMusic, but for voice calling it also puts in the a solid, high quality performance. Its power usage is also not bad; Nokia reckons that in best-case network coverage users can achieve up to 5.25 hours of talktime or 406 hours of standby time. Alternatively, using the music player alone, it can run for up to 24 hours between charges. In our tests, with average levels of usage, we managed a decent three and a bit days between charges, though naturally this declined faster if we listened to more tunes.

Looks: 3.5/5
Ease of use: 4.5/5
Features: 3/5
Call quality: 4.5/5
Value: 4.5/5

Nokia unvelived The 5800 XpressMusic

Sunday, October 5th, 2008

Nokia unvelived its first touchscreen-equipped S60 smartphone, the 5800 XpressMusic, at an event in London. The 5800 XpressMusic, long known as the “Tube” on the rumor mills, is the first smartphone to feature Nokia’s new S60 5th Edition user interface, which adds support for touchscreen displays to the platform. The 5800 XpressMusic breaks the ice with a large 3.2″ touchscreen display that is capable of showing 16 million colors at 640×360 pixel resolution. A built-in accelerometer handles automatic screen rotation activation.

The 5800 XpressMusic also features a 3.2 megapixel camera with autofocus and Carl Zeiss optics. A newly designed suite of image and video editing tools is also on board, alongside the microSD card slot and an 8GB microSD card that is included in the sales package. The 5800 XpressMusic sports a 3.5mm audio port that supports standard wired stereo headphones as well as the 5800 XpressMusic’s TV-out capabilities. The device also comes equipped with a pair of stereo speakers built-in that one Nokia rep described as “quite powerful.”

There will be three different configurations of the 5800 XpressMusic available. All three support quad-band GSM/EDGE, while two of the versions also support 3G connectivity; one supporting HSDPA on the 900 and 2100MHz bands, the other on the 850 and 1900MHz bands. WiFi is also included for even higher-speed data transfers. A GPS receiver is built-in, as is Bluetooth 2.0 with A2DP support for stereo headsets, which should allow for a great music experience. The 5800 XpressMusic also ships with a handy desktop stand for enjoying your videos comfortably.