^

Telecoms

Nokia E52: A good-looking, highly capable mobile phone

- Manny N. de los Reyes -

MANILA, Philippines - I’ve never been the touch-screen or QWERTY keypad type of cellphone user. Call me old school, but I’ve always had a fondness for the traditional monoblock handset with a conventional numeric keypad.

Which is why the sleek (9.9-mm thin) and lightweight (98g) E52, in its metal gray aluminum glory, caught my eye. (A golden aluminum version is equally gorgeous.)

The whole device is splashed in various shades of business-like gray. A brushed metal background surrounds the D-pad and other shortcut buttons. The whole front of the phone is ringed by a polished metal accent while the rear plastic battery cover sports a very nice textured finish. The gray-colored keys are just the way I like them — large and well-spaced.

The quad-band E52, which retails for P17,580, runs on the S60 platform (ver 3.2), so any mid- to high-end Nokia user will be right at home using it. I particularly applaud the E52’s ultra-fast 600MHz processor that enables it to jump from one application to another as fast as your fingers can hit a key.

On the business side, the E52 has a Document Editor for Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and PDF files; HTML e-mail support; voice commands; a text-to-speech message reader; a digital mic; an organizer; a photo editor; Nokia Maps; voice memory; and an A-GPS digital compass.

The 3.2MP camera with LED flash and 4x digital zoom takes decent photos although video recording maxes out at a so-so VGA at 15 fps. It does have various modes for flash, white balance, light sensitivity, and color tone.

Connectivity is via Wi-Fi, EDGE, 3G, Bluetooth, and microUSB. Entertainment comes from stereo FM (with 3.5-mm audio jack) and N-Gage-compatibility.

It may be a business phone, but the E52’s music-playing capability is second to none. Its media player boasts an equalizer; shuffle/repeat functions; loudness on-off switch; stereo widening; music selection via artist, album or genre; and album graphics display.

The 60MB of onboard memory can be expanded via memory card slot that can take up to a gigantic 16GB microSD card.

Wish list? I have three: the otherwise brilliant auto-rotate (landscape/portrait) 16-million-color 2.4-inch screen could be bigger; the numeric keypad could have a firmer spring action for better control when speed texting; and the upper button of the D-pad (at least for my test unit) seemed much less responsive compared to the other three buttons. That’s it.

All things considered, Nokia’s E52 is one good-looking, highly capable, reasonably priced handset not just for E-series fans, but also for any mid-range phone user for that matter.

vuukle comment

BLUETOOTH

BUSINESS

DIGITAL

DOCUMENT EDITOR

E52

N-GAGE

NOKIA

NOKIA MAPS

WI-FI

  • Latest
Latest
Latest
abtest
Are you sure you want to log out?
X
Login

Philstar.com is one of the most vibrant, opinionated, discerning communities of readers on cyberspace. With your meaningful insights, help shape the stories that can shape the country. Sign up now!

Get Updated:

Signup for the News Round now

FORGOT PASSWORD?
SIGN IN
or sign in with