Appearance of new products about Nokia
The Nokia 5610 Xpress Music offers a satisfying music-centric feature set and admirable performance. The design is well-constructed and easy to use, and it offers a brilliant display.
——-one of our Customers
The Nokia 5610 Xpress Music offers a nice higher-end alternative to the Nokia 5310 with a flashier design and upgraded features. It’s a good performer, too.
——-one of the Nokia Engineers
Almost a year ago, Nokia released two new Xpress Music phones, the 5610 and the Nokia 5310. Though we only got a few minutes to play with them at the time, we were excited to see both handsets since we had such a good experience with Nokia’s original Xpress Music model, the 5300. T-Mobile quickly emerged as the rumored carrier for both models, but the company took its time in adding the phones to its lineup. But now that it’s finally happened, we’re happy to report that our original instincts were correct. Like the 5310, which we reviewed in May, the 5610 has a well-stocked music player and quality performance. Yet it shows up its sibling by offering a higher-resolution camera and world phone support in a flashier slider design. Though its navigation array could use a slight tweak, the 5610 is a nice alternative for music phone fans who can’t handle the quirky controls on the Motorola Rokr E8. You can get it for a very reasonable $99 with service.
Design
A quick look at the Nokia 5610’s design will show that it’s aiming to outdo its sibling in more ways than one. While the 5310 sports a traditional candy bar design, the 5610 is a slider phone with unique navigation controls. It’s both attractive and distinctive without being too showy. At 3.88 inches by 1.9 inches by 0.67 inch, it falls between the 5300 and 5310 in size, but at 3.9 ounces, it weighs more than both models. The extra heft may be a turnoff to some users, but we didn’t mind it all. The 5610 remains portable and it has a solid and comfortable feeling in the hand. What’s more, the slider mechanism was sturdy without being stiff. T-Mobile is selling the 5610 in two versions: black with red accents and white with silver accents. Alternatively, you also can get an unlocked 5610 in both black and blue. We reviewed the black and red model, but the features are the same on all versions.
Front and center on the 5610 is its brilliant 2.2-inch display. With support for 16 million colors (240×320 pixels), it offers eye-popping graphics and readable text. Menu icons could be a bit sharper, but the interface is intuitive. You can set a sleep mode and choose a font size and color. You can’t alter the brightness, but the display should be bright enough for most users. It is better visible in direct sunlight than many comparable phones.
As mentioned earlier, the 5610 offers a unique navigation array. But the result isn’t always effective. On the upside, we liked the music slider bar that sits just below the display. Essentially it replaces the dedicated music buttons on both the 5310 and the 5300 by offering one-touch access to the music functions. Slide the bar to the left to instantly open the music player menu or slide it to the right to start the FM radio. It’s an innovative and easy-to-use feature, and we like that its spring-loaded design limits accidental start-ups.
For more demanding users, the 5610 offers many of the same options as the 5310. You’ll find full Bluetooth with stereo and object exchange profiles, PC syncing, a voice recorder, a world clock, a unit converter, USB mass storage, and instant messaging. E-mail again is limited to Yahoo and AOL POP3 accounts, and you must log onto the Web browser to access your messages.
The 5610’s music player is similar to the 5310’s and that’s a good thing given its lack of restrictions and the simple, yet intuitive, interface. Features include an equalizer, playlists, shuffle and repeats modes, stereo widening, and an airplane mode. The 5610 supports album art and you can choose one of five color skins. Supported file formats include MP3, MP4, AAC, AAC+, and WMA. You can’t play tracks from iTunes, of course, but you can use tracks as ringtones.
Nokia again makes it easy to get music on the phone. Just connect your 5610 to your computer via a USB cable or transfer tracks on a mini SD card. No software is needed and your computer should recognize the phone immediately if you chose ”data storage” mode. You then can access the phone as external storage and drag and drop music back and forth. Your tracks will sync automatically with Windows Media Player 10. When listening to tunes, you can minimize the player so you can access other functions, and the player automatically pauses when you receive a call. By and large it’s a great experience, but as we mentioned earlier the navigation toggle was somewhat tricky to use. If radio is your thing, the 5310 also offers an FM tuner with station presets.
Photo quality was pretty good, fortunately. Colors were bright and there was little image noise. Also, the autofocus works well. When finished with your shots, you can transfer them to a PC or printer using the USB cable, Bluetooth, or the memory card. It’s a quick and painless process. We also like that the phone shows how much space is left in the phone’s memory. While we knocked the 5310 for offering just 7.3MB of internal storage, the 5610 offers a healthier 20MB of space. But even so, we advise investing in a memory card; the 5310 can accommodate microSD cards up to 8GB.
The camcorder shoots videos in three resolutions with sound. Other options are similar to those of the still camera, and you can mute the sound if you wish. The short mode lasts about 30 seconds, but you can also shoot longer clips, depending on the available memory. Video quality is nothing special, but that’s typical on a camera phone. And in any case, the camera can only shoot clips at 15 frames per second. Yet, since the video player can support videos at 30 fps, higher-resolution clips can look very good.
You can personalize the 5610 with a wide variety of screensavers, animations, wallpaper, themes, and light effects. You can download more options and more from T-Mobile’s T-zones service via the WAP 2.0 wireless Web browser. Games include demo versions of AMF Bowling Deluxe, Diner Dash 2, Surviving High School, Dance, Dance Revolution, and Guitar Hero III. You can buy the full versions.
Performance
We tested the Nokia 5610 Xpress Music in San Francisco using T-Mobile service. On the whole, call quality compared favorably with the 5310. Voices sounded natural, we enjoyed enough volume, and the signal was clear. We noticed the same tinny/metallic effect that we heard on the 5310, though it was slightly exaggerated here. It doesn’t make the phone unusable by any means but it is there nonetheless. The T-Mobile signal was relatively strong, but we did have trouble getting reception in subway stations and deep inside buildings. On the upside, there was no static or interference and little of the ”GSM buzz.” The 5610 is a quadband (GSM 850/900/1800/1900) world phone, which is a welcome improvement over the triband Nokia 5310. On the other hand, while Nokia originally announced that the 56120 would support 3G UMTS networks, the T-Mobile phone tops out at EDGE.
On their end, callers said we sounded loud and clear. A few didn’t know we were using a cell phone, but most people could tell we were talking on a mobile. Like on the 5310 we had a few reports of excessive background noise, but those complaints mostly came when we were talking in a noisy place. Automated calling systems could understand us most of the time.
Speakerphone calls were quite good, actually. Despite the fact that the speaker faces the rear of the phone, it provided impressive output and clarity. We could hear our conversations even if we weren’t right next to the phone. Speakerphone calls in very noisy locations didn’t fare as well, but that’s not unusual. Callers said they could hear us most of the time and we were able to get up and walk around a quiet room and still be understood. Calls on the included headset were fine, as were calls on a Bluetooth device.
Music quality was up to the usual Xpress Music standards. The external speaker is quite improved over the 5310; its volume output is loud enough to create a small party outdoors. Not surprisingly the speaker doesn’t have an impressive range, but by and large we were pleased. A headset, wired or Bluetooth, will provide the best experience.
The 5610 has a rated battery life of 4 hours talk time and up to 10 days standby time. According to our tests, we had a talk time of 5 hours 46 minutes. According to FCC radiation tests, the Nokia 5610 has a digital SAR rating of 1.13 watts per kilogram.
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