Live photos of Nokia 5320 XpressMusic
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Table of contents:
- Positioning
- Design, size, controls
- Display
- Keypad
- Battery
- Memory
- Hardware
- Performance
- USB, Bluetooth
- Camera
- Music department
- Extra applications
- Impressions
Sales package:
- Handset
- Li-Ion battery (BL-5B)
- Charger (AC-8)
- microSD memory card (512 Mb or 1Gb – size varies by region)
- Wired stereo-headset (HS-45) with a remote control (AD-57)
- User Guide
- Software CD
Positioning
The Nokia 5320 is another expansion of Nokia’s music-centric range, although this time around it’s aimed at the youth looking not only for sound quality, but also unconventional features. The 5320 just happens to have some, including Say and Play that allows the user to press a button, say some song’s title and artist and the handset will start playing it. But by and large, it is a mere gimmick that won’t be particularly craved among the phone’s audience. It works well, although it’s more along the lines of Sony Ericsson’s TrackID – happens to be useful, but very rarely. All in all, Say and Play aims to give the phone a bit more “wow” effect and bragging rights to its owner; in other words, just the thing the youth needs.



Design, size, controls
The 5320 XpressMusic design sways more towards the “no-nonsense” end of the market, which used to be a trademark trait of Sony Ericsson’s products. Among its attractions are good plastic, glossy front fascia and sides decked out in matte plastic. The 5320 comes in a choice of two colors – blue and red, but they only differ in the color of the side plates and navigation key.









Display
The handset utilizes a 2-inch QVGA (240×320 pixels, 31×42 mm) display, capable of up to 16 million colors and outputting a pretty bright and discernible picture. All in all, the 5320’s screen is nothing to complain about. It can accommodate up to 8 text and 3 service lines with some modes pushing the upper limit even further – to 14 lines of text. All fonts are very readable.




Keypad
The 5320’s navigation cluster is pretty sizable, although the buttons are somewhat crammed together, so it is a bit inconvenient to handle. The numeric pad is made of plastic with all keys sitting right next to each other and thus delivering a lower level of comfort that you’d expect from this phone. The keypad is lit in reasonably bright white. One of the 5320’s traits is its 8-way navigation button that packs in 4 extra directions for games. All in all, the keypad found in this handset is below average – in fact, it’s the biggest problem of the Nokia 5320 XpressMusic; it just feels on the cramped side and there is nothing you can do about it.


Battery
The phone is equipped with a 890 mAh Li-Ion battery (BL-5B). The 5320 XpressMusic is rated for 3.55 hours of talk time and 250 hours of standby. Music time – up to 24 hours, max quality video recording – up to 140 minutes, video playback – up to 160 minutes.

- Video playback – 4 hours
- WEB-surfing (EDGE) – 3 hours
- Music (in earphones) – 24 hours
- Radio – 18 hours
- Games – 4.5 hours
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Memory
The device comes equipped with 28 Mb of RAM, after first launch you will get around 96 Mb of free memory at your disposal, which is enough for running a dozen applications and browsing “heavy” web-pages – the word “slow-down” is definitely not in the 5320’s vocabulary. Although it shares the platform with the Nokia N78 (both software and hardware), the 5320 is a bit more on the sluggish side when launching applications, also it tends to freeze up during navigation to upload maps.
The user almost has 140 Mb of storage available, where any data can be stored.
The 5320 deals with microSD memory cards (hot-swappable), the phone comes packaged with a 2Gb unit. There are no restrictions as far as memory card’s size is concerned – our handset easily identified a 8Gb card.
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Hardware
Using the Nokia N82’s TI OMAP 2420 platform wouldn’t be the right thing to do in a relatively cheap solution, so for the 5320 XpressMusic they went for a single-chip platform from Freescale with the ARM11 CPU running at 369 Mhz inside.
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Performance
The 5320 XpressMusic is almost no different from the Nokia N82/N78 performance-wise, so it is pretty much in line with other state-of-the-art S60-powered devices.



USB, Bluetooth
USB. You pick one of these 3 connection modes in the USB settings of the 5320 XpressMusic:
- Data Transfer (Mass Storage USB) – memory cards is available, no drivers required, as your OS identifies the handset automatically.
- PC Suite – used for device management via Nokia PC Suite, enables all features of the phone, data backup etc.
- Image Print – no explanation required.
Data transfer speeds top out at around 1 Mb/s.
Bluetooth. The phone comes with Bluetooth v2.0, with support for EDR. The following profiles are supported:
- A2DP
- AVCRP
- BIP-ImagePush
- DUN-GW
- FT-Server
- HandsFree-AG (1.0)
- Headset-AG
- OBEX
- OPP-Client
- OPP-Server
- SIM Access-Server
The top speed you can get with the 5320’s Bluetooth connection is around 100 Kb/s. We also tested its A2DP profile in pair with the Sony Ericsson DS970 headset, which worked just fine – we managed our play list, skipped within tracks and adjusted volume seamlessly, however we couldn’t make current track’s title show up on the 5320’s display.
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Camera
Just like many S60-powered devices, the 5320 houses a 2 Mpix CMOS-camera manufactured by Toshiba. But unless you are in great lighting conditions, the shots will keep going out noisy and blurry and regrettably the LED flash here is much of a help.










Back to the table of contents >>>
Music department
All S60-based smartphones employ a dedicated sound processor these days, so you won’t notice any difference between the Nokia 5320 XpressMusic and, say, the Nokia 6210 Navigator in terms of music quality. However, the 3.5 mm headphone jack, dedicated music-minded keys and a remote control coming boxed with the 5320 give things a new turn, making the phone so much more of a true music playing device.
General performance
| Test | Nokia 6210 | Nokia 5220 | Nokia 5320 |
Frequency response

Noise level

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Extra applications
The 5320’s standard set of applications features already par-for-the-course applications, including QuickOffice for reading office documents and presentations. Its full version (purchased separately) will allow you to edit docs. On top of that the handset can deal with Adobe Acrobat files and ZIP archives. There is also a new app bundled with the 5320 - Dictionary, whose name says it all.
The 5320’s games pool includes Jelly Chase, Groove Labyrinth 2 and Marble Cannon.
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Impressions
Call quality was never an issue with the 5320 XpressMusic, as it easily lived up to our expectations of a Nokia-branded phone. Ring tones sounded quite loud; we also found the 5320’s vibro alert to be average strength-wise.
The 5320 XpressMusic is set to arrive early in February with a price tag of 220 Euro, which is quite a bargain for a competent music-playing device, which just happens to be a smartphone running the FP2 and enjoying NGage functionality. The youth will be happy having such an offering around. On balance, since it’s beyond competition, sports likable design and solid materials, plus comes preinstalled with some games, the 5320 is bound to become sought-after within its target audience. Although it’s important to realize that it’s a narrow niche, rather than a mainstream. All in all, Nokia has struck gold with the 5320 XpressMusic, which, along with the Nokia 5220 XpressMusic has the mid-tier market for music playing phones covered pretty well. Other manufacturers will have to do something really special to break this duo and throw their own solutions onto consumers’ short-lists. The 5320 may find a rival in the face of the Nokia N78, but it won’t be a direct clash, since the latter is more expensive, being less of a music-centric offering at that.
















































































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