Your review is Submitted Successfully. ×

Nokia 5300

0 Followers
3.3

Summary

Nokia 5300
Jan 03, 2007 05:55 PM, 2510 Views
Ex. Go for it...

Nokia 5300 - A Review We live in an age where evolution is not just a way of life but a mandate. I frankly believe that this is accelerated by technology and even more so by the internet. Ref : Quaero Quero Ergo Sum (the geeky cool great-grandson of Cogito ergo Sum) Over the course of my mobile life I’ve owned several Nokia phones. It all started with a Nokia 3310, followed by a Nokia 3330 (where I was first exposed to WAP 1.0), followed by a Nokia 6600, followed by the Nokia n-gage, and another n-gage, then a 1100 and most recently a Nokia 6600.


Though I’ve owned other mobiles the bulk of my phones have been manufactured by Nokia & I haven’t had too many complaints. This post actually is about the latest Nokia I got my hands on, the Nokia 5300. I wanted to gift my mother a new phone, and the requirements from the phone were basic. Symbian for the UI, USB Connectivity, expandable memory, a decent camera (1.3 MP+) and a decent looking phone considering women are far more conscious of form factor. Expandable memory knocked out the Sony Ericsson range, Symbian knocked out Motorola, Samsung & LG and I was back hunting at a Nokia store.


The 5300 caught my eye and since it met every single basic requirement I went ahead at bought it. What’s the verdict: Brilliant (except for average battery life) Pros: Symbian 40 phones, being simpler, are much faster than their Symbian 60 cousins. Basic features like number duplication warnings make your life much easier. This is something that neither the NSeries nor the ESeries offer. A BRILLIANT PC Suite and USB Connectivity. Backing up the entire phone has never been easier. I’ve been known to curse Nokia for the shitty versions of their PC Suite and compliance / connectivity issues with their phones over Bluetooth/ IR but from all the handling of this phone & the new suite , this version ROCKS.


The ability to backup every bit of information on your phone including messages, contacts, images etc by simple drag-drop mouse commands. A crisp camera and 2GB Memory Cards. Dedicated easy access buttons for Music and deep base earphones. An additional pin to add after-market headphones. Connectivity: IR, Bluetooth, USB (you’ll be surprised how many basic phones don’t come with all 3). Cons: Battery Life. For heavy users, this can be limiting. From heavy user perspective: The inability to multitask with multiple java apps.

(1)
Please fill in a comment to justify your rating for this review.
Post
Question & Answer