NOKIA 5220

Friday, October 16, 2009

NOKIA 5220


NOKIA 5220

SPECIFICATIONS:-

General 2G Network GSM 900 / 1800 / 1900
GSM 850 / 1800 / 1900
Size
Dimensions 108 x 43.5 x 10.5 mm, 53 cc
Weight 78 g
Display
Type TFT, 256K colors
Size 240 x 320 pixels, 2.0 inches
-Wallpaper creator
Sound
Alert types
-Vibration
-Downloadable polyphonic
-MP3
-AAC
-3D, video ringtones
Speakerphone Yes, with stereo speakers
-3.5 mm audio jack
-Dedicated music keys and rhythmic lights flash
Memory
Phonebook 2000 entries, Photocall
Call records 20 dialed, 20 received, 20 missed calls
Internal 30 MB
Card slot microSD (TransFlash), up to 8 GB supported, buy memory
-Nokia 512 MB microSD card included
Data
GPRS Class 32
HSCSD Yes
EDGE Class 32
3G No
WLAN No
Bluetooth Yes, v2.0 with A2DP
Infrared port No
USB Yes, microUSB
Camera
Primary 2 MP, 1600x1200 pixels
Video Yes, QCIF
Secondary No
Features Messaging SMS, MMS 1.3 (up to 600KB), Email, Push Email, IM
Browser WAP 2.0/xHTML, HTML, Opera Mini
Radio Stereo FM radio with RDS
Games Yes + Downloadable
Colors Blue, Red, Green
GPS No
Java Yes, MIDP 2.1
- MP3/MP4 player
- Voice memo
- Voice dial
- Organizer
- Up to 24 h music time
Battery Standard battery, Li-Ion 1020 mAh (BL-5CT)
Stand-by Up to 406 h
Talk time Up to 5 h 15 min

REVIEWS:-

We got to play with Nokia's glossy new XpressMusic handsets, the 5320 and the 5220. Both are set to be affordable, mid-range models available from Q3 this year. During our swift fondling sessions with the phones, we formed some early opinions.

Firstly, and most importantly as far as music phones are concerned, Nokia told us it has put brand-new audio chips inside these two new models to improve sound quality over previous handsets. This is a sensible decision, as more people are turning to mobiles as their primary music players. For some inane reason, the phones were on display with headphones that can only be described as utter bullshizzle, so we couldn't judge for ourselves whether the new chips were making a real difference.

Another good move was the decision to shift the native 3.5mm headphone socket to the bottom of the handsets, as opposed to the side-mounted design seen on the N95, for example. The 5320 also has dedicated side-mounted gaming keys for use with N-Gage software, which felt very natural to use when we had a swift play. It also supports up to 8GB of microSD memory and HSDPA, but not Wi-Fi.

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