Nokia 3220 Review

November 30th, 2006 · No Comments

Nokia 3220Nokia 3220 was introduced in 2004 Q2. PCmag reviews th Nokia 3220 and writes about 3220’s ringtones, “The 3220’s ringtones aren’t that great from an audio perspective: many phones do better than 16-voice MIDI. But the whole experience of a flashing, vibrating phone is pretty amazing. It’s a good thing the phone comes with seven themes and 26 ringtones, because standard MIDI ringtones don’t turn on the lights. The same goes for games: the 3220 plays Java games, but only the five that come on the handset use the lights and vibration.”

dooyoo.co.uk reviews the Nokia 3220 and writes, “I’ll start with what is right about the 3220. A lot about the phone is very good, and therefore it is a shame that all its good points, in my opinion, are overshadowed by its bad one! Those of you who are familiar with the Nokia will not be surprised what this phone has to offer. You get your normal menus to choose from. The first menu is for messages. It enables you to write SMS and multimedia messages with great ease. I have eventually mastered the predictive text messaging, and the dictionary already installed is pretty impressive. Impressive also is the capacity of the phone, as it allows you to store upto 100 messages.”

CNET talks about keypad, “Nokia is known for its unique keypad designs. Although the layout on the 3220 is conventional, the implementation is no less creative. With the 3220, each dial-pad key holds two characters (the 1 and the 4, the 2 and the 5, and so on) separated by an indentation. Though the keys are tiny, the design does make for easy touch dialing; sending text messages, however, can quickly become tedious. The keys are also brightly backlit in white, so dialing in dark environments isn’t a problem. The power button at the top of the handset is among the best we’ve seen on a Nokia phone. Where you have to strain yourself to push the power button on other Nokia models, this one is easy to press, yet it’s firm enough to make it unlikely that you’ll turn the phone on or off accidentally.”

GSMArena reviews the Nokia 3220 and writes about email client, “The integrated email client is in fact a Java application, but common users wouldn’t notice that. It supports POP3 and IMAP4 servers and is very simple. The client can’t work with attachments, neither download only headers of emails. Well, it’s sufficient for easy email operation. You can use Instant messaging with Nokia 3220 also.”

Nokia 3220Mobile-Review reviews the Nokia 3220 and writes, “It is possible to keep up to 1000 names in the internal memory and it is the maximum number of entries. It is achievable if you enter not much information for a name, just one or two fields. And with medium filling, that is 6-7 fields for a name you may keep about 500 entries but not more. As it have already become clear it is possible to enter up to 5 numbers for a name and choose a type of the number (primary, mobile, home, office, fax). The first entered number becomes a default one and may be changed later if you wish. When entering the number for the first time, you type in only a name and one main number, all the other things are committed later from the edit menu. One may consider this not very comfortable, one will on the contrary say that keeps only one number for a name. Both will be right. Considering that similar input is realized in all the phones by Nokia, we’ll surely say that it makes no troubles.”



Tags: Mobiles Reviews · Nokia · Nokia 3220



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