Nokia 6263 (black, T-Mobile)

CNET Editors' Rating

3.5 stars
    Overall score: 7.7 (3.5 stars)

Very good

Average User Rating

57 reviews

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Nokia 6263 - black (T-Mobile) - OVR Nokia 6263 - black (T-Mobile) - PALM Nokia 6263 - black (T-Mobile) - BUTTON Nokia 6263 - black (T-Mobile) - POCKET
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CNET Editors' Review

CNET Editors' Rating

3.5 stars Very good
    Overall score: 7.7 (3.5 stars)
  • Design: 8.0
  • Features: 8.0
  • Performance: 7.0
  • Reviewed by:
  • Released on:
  • Reviewed on:
  • Updated on:

The good: The Nokia 6263 has a simple, user-friendly design, a vivid display, satisfying call quality, and a decent feature set that includes stereo Bluetooth, a music player, and world phone support.

The bad: The Nokia 6263's user interface was rather sluggish, and the speaker has a sensitive sweet spot. The middle row of its keypad felt a bit cheap.

The bottom line: With a solid combination of design, features, and performance, the Nokia 6263 is a worthy successor to the Nokia 6133.

Review:

It's clear that T-Mobile is up to something. Though it is the only major carrier not to have a 3G network (at least at the time of this writing), that hasn't stopped it from adding 3G-capable phones to its lineup. First, it was the Samsung SGH-T369, and now it's the new Nokia 6263. What's more, while T-Mobile also is the only carrier to lack a music downloading service, it's still gone ahead and introduced a couple of music-themed handsets. First was the Samsung Beat SGH-T539, and now it's (you guessed it) the Nokia 6263. ... Expand full review

It's clear that T-Mobile is up to something. Though it is the only major carrier not to have a 3G network (at least at the time of this writing), that hasn't stopped it from adding 3G-capable phones to its lineup. First, it was the Samsung SGH-T369, and now it's the new Nokia 6263. What's more, while T-Mobile also is the only carrier to lack a music downloading service, it's still gone ahead and introduced a couple of music-themed handsets. First was the Samsung Beat SGH-T539, and now it's (you guessed it) the Nokia 6263. Though it somewhat resembles T-Mobile's earlier Nokia 6133, the 6263 adds dedicated music controls, stereo Bluetooth, and the aforementioned 3G capability. The functional design remains minimalist but appealing, and the call quality is satisfactory. We noticed, however, that the 6263's Series 40 user interface was the slightest bit slow. The 6263 is a reasonable $209 if you pay full price, but you can get it for a reasonable $79 with service. To find accessories for this phone, see our cell phone ringtones and accessories guide.

Design
If it weren't for the dedicated music controls below the external display, you might think that the Nokia 6263 is a redressing of its 6133 predecessor. Both phones share a similar flip-phone design in basic black with a silver interior. It's not a particularly exciting design, but it's simple and user-friendly. We continue to like the smooth lines and rounded edges. The 6236's dimensions (3.72x1.88x0.85 inches) are almost unchanged as well so you won't have a problem carrying the phone around in a pocket. The 1.35 inch (128x160 pixels) external display measures and supports 265,000 colors. It's bright and easy on the eyes, and you can add a wallpaper design if you like. The camera lens sits just above the display. There's no flash, but you can use the external display to take vanity shots.

Nokia 6263
The Nokia 6263 offers dedicated music controls below its external display.

Fortunately, Nokia fixed one of the 6133's flaws by moving the microSD card slot from behind the battery cover to the left spine. On the right spine, you'll find a volume rocker and a dedicated camera button, while on the top of the phone sit a series of connection points including the charger and headset jacks and a Mini-USB port. Though the headset jack accommodates 2.5mm headsets, Nokia included a handy 3.5mm adapter in the box. The music controls below the external display are large and tactile, though they're not quite as user-friendly as we'd like. While you can activate and control the player with the phone closed, you must open it again to turn the music player off.

The 6263 does not offer the 6133's button for opening the flip, so you'll have to use the traditional method of using your fingers. But that's fine with us, as we considered that feature to be rather gimmicky. Once you get it open, however, you'll be drawn to the lovely 16-million color display. Like on the 6133, it measures 2.2 inches and supports 240x320 pixels, so it's rich and vibrant and displays everything well, including the intuitive Nokia Series 340 menus. You can set an active standby mode, change the standby font color, and alter the messaging and phone book font size.

The 6133's navigation array is carried over from the 6133. There's a four-way toggle with a central OK button, two soft keys, and the Talk and End/power controls. There's no clear/back key, and though the 6263 also lacks dedicated shortcut buttons, you can set the toggle to give one-touch access to four user-defined functions. Also, there's a secondary shortcuts menu that you can program with your favorite features. And in a change from traditional Nokia style, the End button also turns the phone on and off. On the whole, the navigation array is spacious and tactile, and we like that the toggle is raised above the surface of the phone.

The keypad buttons are improved over the 6133. They're not nearly as slippery, and instead of being flush, they're slightly raised. The result is a large, user-friendly keypad with a bright backlighting and distinct separation between the individual keys. The numbers on the keys were small, and the middle row felt a tad cheap, but otherwise it does the job.

Features
The 6236's phone book holds 1,000 contacts with room in each entry for five phone numbers, an e-mail address, a URL, a formal name, a company name and job title, a nickname, a street address, a birthday, and notes (the SIM card holds an additional 250 names). You can save callers to groups and pair them with any of eight, 64-chord polyphonic tones. That's a rather small selection of tones, but oh well. You can assign your contacts a photo or video, either of which will show up on the external display.

Basic offerings include a vibrate mode, text and multimedia messaging, a speakerphone, an alarm clock, a calendar, a to-do list, a notepad, a calculator, a currency and unit converter, a world clock, a countdown timer, a stopwatch, and a voice recorder. More demanding users can take advantage of full Bluetooth, voice dialing, USB mass storage, audio messaging for sending voice mail directly to another phone, push e-mail (with attachments), PC syncing, and instant messaging for Yahoo, ICQ, Windows Live, and AOL clients.

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Average User Rating

2.0 stars out of 57 user reviews

Rating Breakdown

  • 5 star: 11
  • 4 star: 10
  • 3 star: 6
  • 2 star: 12
  • 1 star: 18

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Most Helpful User Review

3.5 stars 9 of 10 users found this review helpful

"Flimsy phone with GREAT feature set" By snackdirector

Pros awesome UI, big easy to press keys, bright colorful screen, mp3s as ringtones, decent call quality, loud ring volume, lightweight

Cons casing feels cheap, can access programs a little slowly, mini-display lacks features, no camera light, top heavy (not the easiest to flip open), volume rocker hard to use

Summary I didn't get this phone for its 3G capabilities, but it will sure be great when T-Mobile finally allows access to the 3G network. The main reason I wanted to try this phone was its user interface, which ROCKS. You can put all your shortcuts on the main display ... Expand full review

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Specifications

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Quick Specs

  • Service provider: T-Mobile
  • Cellular technology: WCDMA (UMTS) / GSM
  • Sensor resolution: 1.3 megapixels

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