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Nokia 5300 Xpress Music - red (Unlocked)

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CNET Editors' ChoiceOct 06

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  • Quick specs
  • Band / mode: GSM 850/900/1800/1900 (Quadband)
  • Combined with: With digital camera / digital player / FM radio
  • Weight: 3.7 oz
  • See full specifications

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The good: The Nokia 5300 world phone has a great display, user-friendly controls, and a wide range of features including a music player, a 1.3-megapixel camera, Bluetooth, an expandable memory slot, and support for push-to-talk networks. Plus, it delivers on performance as well.

The bad: The Nokia 5300's memory card slot is an inconvenient location, and its internal memory is a measly 5MB.

The bottom line: The Nokia 5300 is a well-designed, user-friendly music cell phone that offers an amazing range of features backed up by outstanding performance.

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CNET editors' review

CNET Editors' ChoiceOct 06
  • Reviewed on: 10/06/2006
  • Updated on: 10/26/2006

Music cell phones have become a hot commodity in 2006, with almost every manufacturer getting into the game. Sony Ericsson's Walkman handsets in particular have emerged as favorites of mobile music fans, but Nokia has countered with its quality N-series smart phones that come packed with multimedia features. But let's face it, not everyone needs a fancy smart phone such as the Nokia N91 so we're glad to welcome the new Nokia 5300 Xpress Music. Packed into a unique but user-friendly design is an exceptional music player and a broad range of features including a 1.3-megapixel camera, Bluetooth, and an expandable memory slot. And yes, it delivers on performance as well. The 5300 is available with T-Mobile in black and lilac for $99. You can also get an unlocked version in red for $300, but even at that price we reckon it's worth it.

At first glance you might think there's nothing cutting edge about the Nokia 5300's design. Yes, it's a bit boxy and a little bulky (3.6 by 1.9 by 0.8 inches), but it's lighter than it looks (3.6 ounces), and ultimately it's a form factor that deserves closer inspection. First off, the 5300 Xpress Music is a slider phone. Though Nokia is just starting to ease into the slider craze, it hasn't stopped the company from succeeding here. The slider mechanism slides up and down with one hand, yet it is sturdy enough to feel comfortable in the hand. Our only quibble--and this is a small one--is that the 5300 feels somewhat top-heavy when the slider is up. As with most slider phones, the 5300 won't cradle against the curve of your head, but we've never considered that quirk to be a big deal. Durability is a key theme with this phone; its midsection is wrapped in a rubberized covering that extends down to the navigation controls (see below). We also like the offbeat red-and-white color scheme--call it the Austrian phone--but there's a black-and-white version for more traditional tastes.

The picture-perfect QVGA display measures 2 inches (320x240 pixels) and supports 262,144 colors. Equal to the gorgeous screen on the Nokia 6126, it offers an eye-popping array of colors, and displayed everything from graphics to texts to games beautifully. The simple but attractive menus are also a treat to view, and we love that Nokia provides a description of unfamiliar applications if you hold the cursor over the corresponding icon. You can change the font size and the backlight time, and even though you can't alter the brightness, the display is plenty bright as it is.

Below the display are the spacious and user-friendly navigation controls. As previously mentioned, they are covered in a rubberized skin, which makes them quite tactile and easy to find by feel. A five-way toggle also acts as a shortcut to four-user defined functions, and there's a selection of additional shortcuts on the standby screen as well. There are also two soft keys, which are programmable for one-touch access, and the Talk and End buttons. Our only complaint was that the backlighting on these keys is a bit dim. To reveal the keypad buttons, just slide up the front face. Spacious and brightly backlit, the individual buttons are raised above the surface of the phone. Such texture is unique for a slider phone, but it's a welcome change as the keys are easy to use even if they are a tad slippery.


We liked the 5300's music controls.

Lining the immediate left side of the display are dedicated music controls that give easy access to the music player. Once inside, you can play, pause, fast-forward, and rewind your tracks. Fortunately these buttons are also covered in the rubber skin, so they're every tactile and easy to find when you're not looking at the phone. The left-facing keys may be unintuitive to some users, but we didn't mind. On the right spine of the bottom half of the slider is a volume rocker and a dedicated camera shutter. The rubber texture extends here as well, and raised ridges make the volume rocker easily accessible when holding the phone to your ear. As with many other camera phones, the Nokia 5300's ergonomics give it a camera-like feel when you hold the phone horizontally with the shutter control facing up. The camera lens sits on the back of the phone, with a self-portrait mirror, but we're disappointed there's no flash. The infrared port sits on the right spine, while the power control and ports for the mini-USB cable and the charger rest on the phone's top end. Finally, the headset jack is in the top-left corner.

Our only real design complaint concerns the placement of the Micro SD card slot. You must remove the battery cover to access it, so make sure you sharpen your nails. Though you don't have to remove the battery as well, it's still a bit annoying.

There's a lot to talk about when it comes to the 5300's features, but we'll get the basics out of the way first. There's a large 1,000-contact phone book with room in each entry for five phone numbers plus a PTT number, e-mail and Web addresses, a job title and a company name, work and home street addresses, a birth date, a nickname, a formal name, and notes (the SIM card holds an additional 250 names). You can organize callers into groups or pair them with a photo for caller ID purposes. For a music phone, the choice of polyphonic ring tones was small--you get just 10, 64-chord tones--but they're assignable to contacts as well. Other standard offerings include a vibrate mode, text and multimedia messaging, a voice recorder, e-mail and instant messaging, an alarm clock, a calendar, a to-do list, a notepad, a calculator, a countdown timer, and a stopwatch.

Despite the music focus, the 5300 comes with a raft of business features including full Bluetooth with a stereo profile, an infrared port, a speakerphone, PC syncing, a mini-USB port and a unit/currency converter for international travelers. Support for push-to-talk networks is also onboard, but since the phone is unlocked, you may not be able you use it with your carrier's PTT services. For example, Cingular typically doesn't allow unlocked phones access to its PTT network. Though the 5300 comes with a Micro SD card slot that supports cards up to 2GB in size, the internal memory is a skimpy 5MB of shared space. True, you're more likely to use a memory card for storing multimedia files, but we still think 5MB is much too small for this caliber of phone.

Now, it's on to the 5300's star attraction: its superior music player. Though a lot of cell phones have experimented with mobile music, few of them get it right, beyond the Sony Walkman phones. But the Nokia 5300 has everything we look for a in such a phone--there's stereo Bluetooth and a large selection of features, it's easy to transfer files to the phone, it's user-friendly with a simple interface and well-designed controls, it has few restrictions, it offers plenty of memory, and last, but certainly not least, it offers exceptional sound quality over stereo speakers. The player supports, MP3, AAC, AAC+, and WMA files.

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Reviews from around the WebPowered by alaTest

  • alaTest.com

    Editors' rating: 86

    Summary: alaTest has collected and analyzed 1562 reviews of Nokia 5300 Xpress Music from international magazines and websites. Experts rate this product 73/100 and users 77/100. Comparing these reviews to 490059 other Cell Phones reviews gives this product an overall alaScore™ 86/100 = Very Good.

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  • 3g.co.uk

    Editors' rating: 83

    Summary: A rounded music phone with youth market appeal 3G Total Score83%   This review covers the above mobile phone only and does not address the performance of any 3G Network. The score is based on a 3G mobile phone checklist

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  • totalmobilemag.com

    Editors' rating: 80

    Summary: Brings a fun and affordable slant to the music mobile market, tempered slightly by the poor phone and low internal memory

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  • mobilechoiceuk.com

    Editors' rating: 60

    Summary: A rounded music phone with youth market appeal.

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  • pcworld.com

    Editors' rating: 79

    Summary: Overall, the 5300, with its stellar music features, is impressive, especially when you factor in the price: T-Mobile is offering the phone for $99 with a two-year contract. That's less than you might pay for a dedicated MP3 player--so it's an ...

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  • tech2.com

    Editors' rating: 70

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Nokia 5300 Xpress Music - red (Unlocked)