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Nokia 5330 Mobile TV Edition review: As seen on TV

Monday, June 14, 2010

Gsmarena have posted a review of the Nokia 5330 Mobile TV Edition. Here are the phone's key features, main disadvantages and their final impression.

Key features:
* Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE support
* Tri-band 3G
* 2.4" 16M-color QVGA display with excellent sunlight legibility
* 3 megapixel enhanced fixed-focus camera with LED flash
* QVGA video recording at 15fps
* DVB-H TV receiver
* Series 40 UI, 6th edition
* Stereo FM radio with RDS, Visual radio
* Bluetooth (with A2DP)
* Standard microUSB port (charging)
* microSD card slot (16 GB supported, 1GB included)
* 3.5mm audio jack
* Dedicated touch-sensitive music keys
* Great audio output quality
* Maps for S40 preinstalled

Main disadvantages:
* No WLAN
* No HSDPA
* No GPS receiver
* S40 is feature-wise outdated, though visually updated
* No preinstalled document viewer
* No smart dialing
* Below par video recording capabilities
* Poor build quality

The Nokia 5330 Mobile TV edition is a device that’s hard to recommend. Sure it looks pretty sleek at first but turns into a greasy scratched mess so quickly that you won’t have enough time to enjoy it.

It does bring a feature to the mid-range that we have only met once before but the problem is that DVB-H streaming TV is still only available to a very small audience. Even if you’re among the lucky ones, we aren’t particularly sure if watching a limited number of TV channels on such a small screen is enough to warrant spending the extra money on this device, especially given its limited feature set.

Even if you aren’t into touch-driven phones (where Nokia offers some great bang for your buck), there are still plenty of better alternatives than the Nokia 5330 Mobile TV edition. Let’s list a few.

The Sony Ericsson C903 might be a bit dated but it comes with a Cyber-shot camera, packs a more advanced user interface and costs less than the Nokia 5330 Mobile TV.

If your budget is fixed anyway the Sony Ericsson Hazel will even throw in GPS, Wi-Fi, splash-resistance and a bigger screen on top of that for the same kind of cash as the Nokia 5330. It’s hard to beat that.

We couldn't help but notice that in-house competition looks even more threatening. The Nokia 6700 classic is a definite contender despite its age. We actually feel it has the upper hand and if having a smartphone isn't a necessity, it represents great value for money.

Elsewhere from within Nokia’s own stables, the 6700 slider and the bar-shaped Nokia C5 will give you smartphone capabilities, a better build and the choice between GPS and Wi-Fi. And with Nokia smartphones a built-in GPS equals free lifetime voice-guided navigation with Ovi Maps so the offer is definitely worth a look.

To finish up, we would say that if you happen to be among the lucky ones with DVB-H broadcasting in your area and you are a real TV addict you might consider the Nokia 5330 TV edition. After all it’s not that expensive and if it allows you to enjoy one of your favorite pastimes on the go it definitely sounds like a deal.

However if you don’t have DVB-H where you live, or you do not plan to use it, then avoid this handset. It’s overpriced, badly built and packs a user interface that no longer cuts it against the competition. Sure the battery life and the decent screen might have some value but it’s peanuts compared to what similar-priced non-TV devices can offer.



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