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Nokia 5530 XpressMusic review: Winner by design

Gsmarena have posted their review of the Nokia 5530 XpressMusic. Here are the phone's key features, main disadvantages and final impression.

Key features:
2.9" 16M-color TFT LCD 16:9 touchscreen display (360 x 640 pixels)
Symbian S60 5th edition
ARM 11 434 MHz CPU, 128MB RAM memory
3.2 megapixel autofocus camera with LED flash and VGA@30fps video
Quad-band GSM support
Wi-Fi connectivity
microSD card memory expansion, ships with a 4GB card
FM radio with RDS
Bluetooth with A2DP and USB v2.0
Standard 3.5mm audio jack
Stereo speakers
Stylus, with its own compartment inside the phone
Proximity sensor for screen auto turn-off
Accelerometer sensor for automatic UI rotation, motion-based gaming and turn-to-mute
Office document viewer
OVI integration (direct image and video uploads, OVI Contacts)
Landscape on-screen virtual QWERTY keyboard
Excellent audio quality
Price tag on the cheap side

Main disadvantages:
No 3G support
No built-in GPS receiver
Display has poor sunlight legibility
Default font size is a bit small due to the smaller screen
Somewhat limited 3rd party software availability
Average camera image quality
Video recording quality is unimpressive
Doesn't charge off its microUSB port
No smart dialing
No DivX/XviD video support out of the box
Shaky back cover compromises build quality
No TV-out functionality

The Nokia 5530 XpressMusic certainly seems both well reasoned and reasonable. It is a clear attempt to bring the S60 5th edition to the hands of a larger audience, which in turn should motivate a bigger developer community, which in turn will make the platform appealing to an even wider user group, which in turn would make Nokia lots of money. But we digress. Considering the appeal of the handset, it sure looks an important step towards bringing the touch-enabled S60 to par with the more mature competitors.

In addition, the Nokia 5530 XpressMusic is welcome to fill a gap in the company touchscreen portfolio. Now that it has the entry-level covered, Nokia has complete supply with the mid-range 5800 and the high-end N97. We'd be quite interested in a handset that ranks between the last two and maybe a multimedia monster to top the N97 would take a bit longer. But the rate at which the platform is evolving is quite promising.

For now though, Nokia is wisely focused on fixing the bugs of its new OS and the more affordable handsets (whose shortcomings are more easily forgivable by default) seem the right way to go. The N97 was more of a prestige move and it's probably not so vastly outnumbered in the side-sliding QWERTY niche to fear a really humiliating defeat.

So a series of smart moves might have bought the Finnish company some time to get used to a world it wasn't really that well prepared to inhabit in the first place. But it sure takes a greater effort to stay on the path of success, than it does to postpone failure.

Anyway, if McLaren could rise from trailing by over three seconds a lap to a win, why can't Nokia make something similar? They do need time though to pump up their touchscreen performance against some pretty tough rivals. Let's take a look at what the other manufacturers have to offer for this kind of money.

The LG KP500 Cookie and the Samsung S5230 Star are the cheapest touchscreen alternatives by the two compatriot makers. The lack of Wi-Fi and smartphone capabilities is partially compensated by the more lively interfaces and the lower price tags but it would be a pretty safe bet that the 5530 will win this one. And that we guess is the one that matters the most - beating the most obvious rivals in the mass segment - and by a good margin too.

The 3G-enabled Samsung S5600 Preston looks a stronger contender though. Adding GPS and high-speed network data might be enough to make up for the lower-res display and the lack of smartphone capabilities.

The more exotic alternative LG KU990 Viewty is well known for its camera, but the touchscreen experience it delivers, as well as its looks seem well dated now.

Finally we come to the Nokia 5530 XpressMusic's bigger brother - the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic. The S60 touch pioneer is equipped with a larger screen and built-in GPS, plus the 3G network data, which are all pretty major upgrades. With the prices of the two pretty close at the moment thanks to some heavy carrier subsidizing, it's only the compact body and the somewhat better design that speak in favor of the 5530.

But all that being said we are still keen to take the bet that once its price settles down in a couple of months, the new XpressMusic touchscreen will be looking forward to match - and perhaps beat - its forerunner's sales. As it seems, ladies and gentlemen, we have a winner here - a winner by design, and worthy one, we should add.

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