Nokia Nuron for T-Mobile review

When the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic was released slightly over a year ago, we tend to completely panned it in our review -- place merely, it felt undercooked and uncompetitive in a world where webOS, iPhone OS, and Android were all realities, notwithstanding Nokia's existing smartphone dominance through much of the world. over a year later, we're now presented with the Nokia Nuron, a reasonably shut relative of that initial S60 5th Edition device from back in the day; it's merely a carrier-branded version of the 5230, that itself may be a lower-end variant of the 5800.

Despite its flaws, the 5800 has gone on to become a world success for Nokia -- however can the Nuron do constant in a market historically unfazed by Nokia's advances? additional directly, has Nokia's initial volley in the fashionable touchphone battle evolved enough to become a prime-time player in the States? Let's ascertain.

It has been a pleasant modification of pace to play with a cellular phone that won't a high-end smartphone. Not that the Nokia 5230 Nuron may be a stupid phone. It's something however.

The Nuron is an entry-level smartphone. meaning it can do a lot over a simple cellular phone however is not burdened with so many applications and features that it rivals netbooks, laptops, tablets and connected PDAs. It additionally won't price you an arm and a leg to have.

Nokia's Nuron may be a medium-sized, white (4.4 by a pair of by zero.6 inches) touchscreen-equipped world phone and it's very light-weight (4 ounces). It operates on T-Mobile's North yank 3G network further as a pair of.5G GSM/GPRS/EDGE bands round the world.

It runs on Nokia's Symbian S60 5th Edition (version nine.4) operating system, now called Symbian^1, and supports Java and Flash Lite beyond native Symbian applications.

The rechargeable battery is said to last for four hours of speak time. It easily lasted me a day with medium use, though it would have struggled to a small degree had it been my main device throughout testing.

Nuron has a ton of features you might expect in an entry level smartphone, as well as a a pair of.0 megapixel still/video camera, 3.2-inch (diagonal) touch screen with tactile feedback, stereo Bluetooth, a music player, microUSB association (separate from the little charging connector), a 3.5mm headphone jack, Mail for Exchange 2008 software, access to Nokia's Ovi app store and a 4GB memory card,

Although it lacks Wi-Fi, it will have some features that you simply might not expect: a stylus to point on the screen (my index finger worked, too), direct printing with compatible printers, an FM radio and full-blown GPS mapping with turn-by-turn voice directions. that is GPS navigation. Built-in. For free!

Let me justify how cool that is in straightforward terms. initial of all, this sort of built-in GPS software -- as well as the maps and a friendly voice to guides you -- is sometimes found solely in high-priced, super-duper, top-of-the-line, modern-day smartphones. additional importantly, if you went out and bought a separate, stand-alone GPS unit it might probably price you far more than the 5230.

That's as a result of T-Mobile is providing the Nuron for value} price of $69.99 with a two-year contract (or $179.99 without a contract).

The phone worked perfectly throughout my tests. It created and received voice calls further as -- or perhaps better than -- a number of higher-end smartphones on T-Mobile's roster. It additionally clung onto T-Mobile's 3G network signal better than any other T-Mobile phone I've tested recently.

As a GPS navigation device it absolutely was nearly flawless. The voice directions were very correct on a 100-mile journey to and from new york city. It additionally automatically updated those directions with real-time traffic information, rerouting me around bother spots. In fact, the Nuron's navigation is much better than some multi-buck GPS devices or smartphones I've had the pleasure of attempting.

On the other hand, you have got to remember that this is NOT a high-end smartphone. It doesn't have all the bells and whistles of its dearer cousins.

The OS tends toward the basics. And, though you'll be able to sometimes use your index finger on the screen, Nokia includes a stylus for a good reason: it is the simplest way to navigate the touchscreen. that is fine if you are standing in one place however not so great if you are attempting to quickly modify the 5230's GPS navigation system whereas piloting a automotive, as an example.

Then again, this is a $70 phone that will a lot for the money. At that low worth, you have got to be willing to accept a couple of trade-offs.
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