Nokia 5800 Xpress Music Focus Tastiera da Telefonino.net
Nokia 5800 Xpress Music Focus Multimedia da Telefonino.net
Annoncé cette semaine, le Nokia 5630 Xpress Music et un Smartphone Symbian S60 3.2 orienté musique avec une page daccueil proche de la perfection Le design est assez déroutant mais en terme dinterface utilisateur cest ce qui se fait de mieux à ce jour sur un Smartphone S60! Je vous conseille vraiment de regarder la démo de la page daccueil, à noter que la photo des contacts saffiche enfin en plein écran lors dun appel sous S60
Nokia 5800 Xpress Music by batista70 www.cellularmagazine.it thanks to www.duebevolution.it x il device and to www.ecamera.it x la consulenza sulle riprese
Podcast du Nokia 5530 XpressMusic! Ce mobile annoncé ce lundi par Nokia et vraiment sympa… Multimédia et écran tactile pour ce mobile petit frère du 5800 XpressMusic Merci à Jérémie de nous avoir permis de le faire.
Nokia aren’t known for making touchscreen mobile phones, despite making them in the past. That’s about to change with the release of their first mainstream touchscreen phone: the frighteningly brilliant Nokia 5800 Xpress. A Touching History – Nokia touchscreen mobile phones through the ages Nokia’s history of touchscreen mobile phones hasn’t exactly been brilliant. The first, the Nokia 7700 was only slightly advanced, and was vile. Its follow-up, the Nokia 7710, wasn’t a great deal better. Nokia have never released a touchscreen mobile phone that’s really hit the big time; they’ve always been, at best, niche mobile phones, or in most cases, not mobile phones at all (as in, they were Nokia internet tablets). With the release of the iPhone, though, it was clear there was a market for touchscreen mobile phones, so Nokia said, ‘We’re having some of that!’ The result is the mobile phone I’m talking about today, and thankfully, the new Nokia 5800 Xpress is far nicer than its predecessors! Nokia 5800 Xpress – why it rocks The key thing that’s different about the Nokia 5800 Xpress is its operating system, which, rather than recycling one from old mobile phones, is the brand, spanking new, never-seen-on-any-other-mobile-phones Symbian S60 Touch interface. And just like its top-end rivals in the world of touchscreen mobile phones, the Nokia 5800 Xpress is designed and optimised to use finger control rather than a stylus. In that respect, the Nokia 5800 Xpress is aiming very clearly at beating the iPhone. Features-wise, it easily does that, with a 3 megapixel camera, full-fat HSDPA internet speeds, and built in GPS. Oh, and video recording, something the iPhone lacks. It’s also got access to its own music store, and there’s not getting away from the fact that the Nokia 5800 Xpress is one of the most anticipated mobile phones to be released this year. But is it going to rule the world? Nokia 5800 Xpress – ruling the world in two easy steps? Well, it certainly has the chops to go far, but will the Nokia 5800 Xpress rule the world of mobile phones? Sure, it’s got the novelty value of having that unique touch interface (that’d be step 1), and it’s got the massive brand-power of Nokia behind it (step 2). But. . . and it’s a big but. . . what will stop the Nokia 5800 Xpress from ruling the world is what’s missing from the mobile phone; specifically, a big ‘N’ on it to show it’s an Nseries phone. I know it may sound silly, but I honestly think that launching the Nokia 5800 Xpress in any range other than the Nseries may well hurt its sales. But not that badly. Make no mistake, the Nokia 5800 Xpress WILL be one of the biggest mobile phones of 2008!
77 million Symbian mobile phones were sold in 2007. That figure should be vastly increased over the next few months, as two phones will be taking it to new heights: the Nokia 5800 Xpress, and the mind-blowing Nokia N96. Nokia and Symbian – long-time bedfellows In truth, Nokia have a long history of using Symbian in their mobile phones, going all the way back, in fact, to their first camera phone, the 7650 (a huge beastie of a thing it was, too!). Some of the most powerful Nokia mobile phones ever made have run on Symbian, quite often using the patented Series 60 interface. In fact, it’s fair to say that Series 60 is the most important version of Symbian, since it’s the one that powers Nokia’s top of the range mobile phones: the prestigious, world-renowned Nseries. To this day, Nseries mobile phones have a reputation for being world-beaters, including probably the most well-known of them all, the N95. Well, now, the Nokia N95 has evolved into a new form: the sleek, smart Nokia N96. Nokia N96 – the ultimate Nseries phone The Nokia N96 really is the next evolution of the N95, since you get the same high-end feature-set (but with loads more bits added on), but in a sleek new body. In fact, the body of the Nokia N96 is reminiscent of another one of the earlier Nseries mobile phones: the N81. The similarities are striking, so much so that you could put down the Nokia N96 and N81 next to each other, and not tell which one’s which. Not that that’s a bad thing, since the N81 looked nice, and so does the Nokia N96. Certainly one of the prettier mobile phones on the market, and the Nokia N96 backs all that up with raw power. A 5 megapixel camera. . . GPS. . . HSDPA. . . 16GB of memory. . . and the big feature, multimedia. You see, the Nokia N96 is the king of mobile phones when it comes to media, especially video. It even includes BBC iPlayer (can’t say that about many mobile phones!), and a little kickstand-type thing, to keep the Nokia N96 upright while you’re watching videos! Nokia 5800 Xpress – the future of Symbian? Meanwhile, another offshoot of Symbian has appeared on mobile phones. Well. . . on one mobile phone so far, the Nokia 5800 Xpress. It’s important for 1 reason: it’s made for touchscreen mobile phones, which is exactly what the Nokia 5800 is. Ok, granted, the Nokia 5800 Xpress might not be their first touchscreen phone, but it IS their best, with 3 megapixel camera, HSDPA, GPS and that all important touchscreen, with the brand new Symbian interface, not seen on any previous mobile phones. It’s fair to say Symbian is alive and well, and evolving still. With the Nokia N96 this Christmas, and the Nokia 5800 Xpress all set to wow us in the first months of next year, Symbian mobile phones are definitely on the up and up!
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The Nokia Xpress Music range of mobile phones has now expanded to include the Nokia 5610 Blue Edition, a sliding music orientated phone that has just been released as a SIM free handset.
The Nokia 5610 Blue offers exactly the same great features, design and technology as the original Red Nokia 5610 but with some cool blue coloured accents around the outside of the handset.
The Blue Nokia 5610 Slider is the second of two new XpressMusic handsets to be added to the Nokia range.
The Nokia 5310 offers a 2. 0 mega pixel camera, whilst the Nokia 5610 features a 3. 2 mega pixel camera and enjoys the luxury of autofocus, built-in dual LED flash and a secondary camera for video calling.
The Nokia 5610 Blue also features a slighter larger QVGA display screen measuring 2. 2 inches rather than 2 but the Music features are pretty much identical with a Music Player that supports MP3/MP4/AAC/eAAC/WMA file formats, FM Stereo Radio with RDS and the optional 4GB microSD card which will hold 3,000 songs.
Available in Black with Red or Blue accents to choose from, the Nokia 5610 XpressMusic phone is 3G enabled which makes downloading music, browsing online and video calling that much faster.
3G services will keep you entertained with clips from the Angry kid, keep you posted on the latest financial updates, weather, news and sports headlines and make available a whole host of other downloadable content, whether it be games, music, video clips or horoscopes.
Another point worth mentioning is the amount of music playback time, the Nokia 5310 offers 18hrs whereas the Nokia 5610 offers 22hrs of playback.
The aluminium side panels add to the high level of design and good looks of the handset, whilst the dedicated music keys add to the easier usability factor.
A symbian series 40 handset, the Nokia 5610 comes with Bluetooth v2. 0 with A2DP Stereo support, EDGE technology, UMTS support and miniUSB.
Nokia sensor, World Clock II and Converter II add important secondary applications options to the phone and built-in handsfree makes voice calling that much less demanding.
So apart from being a Music Phone with great photographic abilities, accessing emails, booking last minute reservations and shopping online are am absolute.
The Nokia 5610 Blue has not yet been released by any UK networks but it has been made available as a SIM free handset with network launches expected very soon.
This is great news for consumers as they can now simply buy the handset and insert their current SIM card that holds all of their existing account details and mobile number.
No extra ongoing costs of line rental or minimum term contract periods, sim free mobile phones are great for people who may have had their phone stolen or simply lost.