Sensor Music Player For Nokia 5800
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On 21 August 2009, Nokia announced a new variant named Nokia 5800 Navigation Edition. In addition to the normal Nokia 5800, it has the latest version of Nokia Maps pre-installed. It also comes with a car charger and car kit inside the box because the GPS decreases the battery life. Both the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic and the 5800 Navigation Edition, however, have free lifetime navigation, due to the new version of Ovi Maps.[19]The service was available at nokia.com.[20]
On 19 April 2010, firmware version 50.0.005 was released. This new major update brought some new features available in Nokia N97, such as an upgrade to the existing web browser to version 7.2 and full kinetic scrolling and auto-full screen while browsing the web; a new music player with mini-album art in the song list and the album list, initial letter filtering of track titles in the music player while scrolling using the scroll-bar. As a result, the search function was removed from the music player. A new application called Ovi Sync was installed and the Nokia Music Store received a revamped user interface and was renamed to "Ovi Music". In some regions, Quick Office 4.2.374 is integrated with full free license. Search application's icon was changed and a few more minor updates for better touch sensitivity and tweaks for faster operation of the phone are present. And a little update to the color, the option you select is in silver, but when hold an option, it is still being white like v40. There is also the new feature, one-touch dialling.
The Nokia 5800 XpressMusic features a 3.2 inches 360 x 640 pixels fully touchscreen LCD screen with an accelerometer sensor for auto-rotation along with a stylus hidden on the bottom right corner. The phone uses a Symbian S60 5th generation operating system which is used in most Nokia phones. The 5800 supports WiFi b/g as well as HSDPA, A-GPS and has a 3.5mm headphone jack as well as a 3.2 megapixel camera with LED flash and 81mb of internal memory and can hold up to 16GB on a MicroSD card.
Battery life on the 5800 is better then any phone I have reviewed. I left the phone on for a full week already and only 2 bars have dropped. Nokia states that the standby time can last up to 406 hours, talk time up to 8 hours and 45 minutes and music playing time with up to 35 hours. The 5800 uses a 3.7v 1320mAh battery and prices start from anywhere between $10.00 to $50.00 online.
Touchscreen action is centred on its large 3.2-inch touch display, but under the bonnet the 5800 XpressMusic features Wi-Fi support plus HSDPA high-speed 3G mobile data connectivity, A-GPS location finding and mapping technology, a host of smartphone multimedia gadgetry, including a substantial amount of music-playing ability.
Touchscreen apart, music is naturally centre-stage. The S60 music player interface hasn't been re-invented; there's none of the whizzy visual touches or cover-flow style browsing as the iPhone. The conventional-looking set-up is straight ahead and fine to use.
With plenty of functionality inside, the 5800 XpressMusic does a good job in power handling. We managed between two to three days battery life with our average usage, though how much you use gadgetry like Wi-Fi, GPS or the music player will impact on overall battery performance.
The touchscreen operation may lack the Apple sparkle, but the functionality within the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic certainly delivers, with plenty of top features for the price that makes this device an attractive music majoring proposition.
Multimedia / Audio: Built-in stereo speakers, mic and 3.5mm standard stereo headphone jack. Supports Bluetooth A2DP stereo with AVRC. Voice recorder (records in AAC format) and music player included. Supported video formats: 3GPP formats (H.263), Flash Video, H.264/AVC, MPEG-4, RealVideo 7,8,9/10, WMV 9. Supported audio formats: AAC, AAC+, AMR-NB, AMR-WB, AU, AWB, eAAC+, M4A, MIDI Tones (poly 64), Mobile XMF, MP3, MP4, RealAudio 7,8,10, RMF, SND, SP-MIDI, True tones, WAV, WMA, WVE. Supports USB mass storage mode and MTP for music transfer over USB as well as UPnP. Includes AV cable that connects via RCA connectors to video and left/right audio channels on a TV or projector.
When making and taking calls, we found the 5800 worked a treat, with clear and reliable calling and network signal handling up to scratch. The touchpad uses a proximity sensor to disable the screen when your face is next to it, the better to conserve battery life and prevent accidental button presses.
When it comes to music, Nokia's XpressMusic just can't be ignored. The latest touchscreen Nokia 5800 costs about the same as the Sony Ericsson W902. The camera performance on the 5800 sucks, but it offers a touch-based user interface, Symbian OS, GPS, Wi-Fi and really great audio quality. The huge screen, VGA video recording and the 3.5mm audio jack don't make things for the W902 either.
The Nokia 5800 XpressMusic, a mid-range music-focussed phone, was launched today in London. It is Nokia's first touch enabled S60 phone. It runs S60 5th Edition on Symbian OS 9.4, has a 3.2" nHD (360 x 640) touch screen, WLAN and 3G connectivity, a 3.2 megapixel auto-focus camera, integrated A-GPS and accelerometer and proximity sensors. To underline its music potential, the 5800 has a standard 3.5mm audio jack, stereo speakers, ships with a 8GB microSD card and will be one of the first phones to support Comes with Music (Q1 2009). It will be available worldwide in Q4 for 279 Euros (£215) before taxes and subsidies. Read on for much more.
Below the display are the three keys: Call, Menu and End. Above it are the earpiece, the light sensor and the proximity sensor. On the right, there is the volume rocker, the phone lock and the camera key. On the left, you will find the microSD slot. On the back, there is the 2 MP camera and the stylus slot with the battery compartment. No complaints on the design side considering its low pricing.Hardware and User Interface (3 out of 5)The Nokia 5233 is quite capable when it comes to hardware. It sports the same internal hardware as the Nokia 5800 and the Nokia 5230. It runs the Symbian OS 9.4 S60v5 UI. It has an ARM 11 434 MHz processor and 128 MB RAM. The UI is very intuitive; Symbian users will feel right at home with it. The resistive touch screen is pretty sensitive and the interface is fairly responsive. However, a capacitive touch screen, like the one in the Nokia X6, would have definitely been better.
Nokia has decided to launch its first Touch screen phone in India namely known as Nokia 5800 Xpress music.The model has been designed with unveiled globally and pegged by analysts as the iPhone killer.
Nokia has decided to launch its first Touch screen phone in India namely known as Nokia 5800 Xpress music. It touch screen mobile phone has a display screen of 360×640 resolutions a tilt sensor. It has also comes with a 3.2-megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss lens, LED flash and video capability.
Nokia 5800 XpressMusic is specially targeted to music lovers.This set is the latest version of Nokia Symbian operating system and its also offers new technology like GPS big touch screen, 3G.This mobile is look like a candy bar and its body part coated with beautiful colours.
With S60 5th Edition, the user interface is extended by the introduction of touch and with full support for tactile feedback. Enhanced display resolution support and a new Widescreen mode further compliments the touch UI and enables engaging visual experiences. Also, for the first time, the platform includes a framework for the use of advanced sensor technology. This all allows S60 device manufacturers to create innovative new device concepts for a wider range of user segments, while preserving the rich capabilities of the existing software platform. The first S60 5th Edition based device, designed for music lovers, was announced today - the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic.
Nokia turned up the volume on its music offering today by unveiling the new Nokia 5800 XpressMusic, a mobile device for music that brings innovative new features to the mass market. Delivering on Nokia's vision to provide the best total music experience possible, the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic will be among the first devices to support Comes With Music, Nokia's groundbreaking service which offers one year of unlimited access to the entire Nokia Music Store catalogue.
Media Bar, Contacts Bar - putting people firstTaking advantage of touch screen technology, the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic introduces the 'Media Bar', a handy drop down menu that provides direct access to music and entertainment, including favourite tracks, videos and photos. The Media Bar also offers a direct link to the web and to online sharing. Because the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic supports Flash content, individuals can surf the entire web, not just pieces of it. In addition, the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic offers all the music essentials, including a graphic equalizer, 8GB memory for up to 6000 tracks and support for all main digital music formats, and a 3.5mm jack. Built-in surround sound stereo speakers offer the industry's most powerful sound.
Nokia 5800 XpressMusic also provides access to browse and purchase tracks from the Nokia Music Store, where applicable, while the newly updated Nokia Music PC software allows for drag-and-drop transfer of songs and management of any music collection.
Music for the massesThe Nokia 5800 XpressMusic supports 60 languages worldwide, which covers nearly 90 percent of the world's population. As people around the world use their phones in different ways, the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic offers a variety of input methods including a virtual alphanumeric keypad, a virtual computer-style QWERTY keyboard, a pen stylus -- and for true music enthusiasts, a plectrum -- are all available. 781b155fdc