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Nokia 3230 review

In this review

Features
A main selling point of the Nokia 3230 is Movie Director, an application for editing video clips and producing 'muvees', as it annoyingly calls them. You can apply a range of filters to videos and join smaller clips together. There are several preconfigured styles, or you can choose your own music, text and general style. Completed muvees can be sent as MMS messages. It's fiddly to use, though, and we tired of creating muvees as quickly as we tired of the novelty spelling.

You shoot footage with the built-in camera, which is also capable of capturing stills, at resolutions up to 1280x960 pixels. The built-in Kodak Mobile software enables you to upload your photos to the Web for sharing or to order prints. Alternatively, you can transfer your photos to a PC using the built-in Bluetooth or via the memory card, and share them from there.

The 3230 has another multimedia trick up its 70s retro sleeve: Visual Radio. Also available on Nokia's 7710, Visual Radio allows you to see content relevant to the current show, but only if stations choose to broadcast that content. As of yet there are no such offerings in the UK, but watch this space.

In the meantime, you can take advantage of the 3230's standard FM radio. Audio quality is fine, assuming you're in an area with reasonable reception. There is both automatic and manual tuning, and you can save 20 station presets. You must have the headset plugged in to use the radio, because its antenna resides in the cable, but you can send output to the 3230's speaker. The speaker or headset can also be used to listen to pre-recorded music, thanks to RealPlayer, which supports MP3 and AAC format files.

With all this media capability, you'll want plenty of storage. There is good and bad news here. It is great that you can enhance the built-in memory with RS-MMC cards, and just as good that cards can be hot-swapped, because they live under the battery cover but not under the battery itself. However, it's annoying that Nokia only provides a 32MB card to augment the rather measly 5.6MB of on-board memory. In our view, 32MB just doesn't cut it for a multimedia phone.

Among the other goodies built into the 3230 is a full Web browser with the useful ability to automatically remember the last six sites visited. You also get extras including a voice recorder for both calls and voice notes, calculator, calendar, alarm, voice dialling and three Java games. One of these games, Agent V, had us hooked for hours. It uses the camera's current view to act as a backdrop to a point-and-shoot scenario in which you are charged with ridding the environment of nasty viruses. Clever and addictive.

Performance
Audio calls were loud and clear, and you change volume using the joystick, which is as easy as it should be. Texting is painful, though. This is not due to the keys, which are tactile enough, but because of the generally top-heavy nature of the handset. Rather than balancing ergonomically in the palm for one-handed use, the 3230 feels as though it may forward-roll out of your grasp during message writing, and indeed it did so on more than one occasion. It may be that you need a larger palm than ours to cradle the 3230 for one-handed use, but we suggest you give it a texting test before you buy.

We had no problems with the battery, which gave several two- and three-day stretches of use between charges. If you are heavy on the music and radio use, or get the muvee bug, expect to charge it daily.

Edited by Mary Lojkine
Additional editing by Nick Hide

User reviews3

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X X's avatar
3 stars out of 5

X X 5 October 2005

Good: Quality look and feel, nice screen, good Web capability, Symbian OS

Bad: Dreadful (near useless) mp3 player sound quality, silly beep before ringtones, a bit slow, feature list padded out with frivolous novelty or network u

Comment: The 3230 is a missed opportunity by Nokia to make an excellent phone whose abilities match it's quality look and physical feel. The longer I own this phone the more disappointed in it I am. The (mono) mp3 player in particular is an utter disgrace, it's painful to listen to it as distorts so much. The user interface could do with some improvement too. Personally I'm not fond of having no option but to assign all manner of application shortcuts to various buttons and joystick actions. As for the beep (you can't switch it off) that goes off two seconds before the ringtone when receiving a call/message... Nokia, what were you thinking?

Jacob Kobe's avatar
3 stars out of 5

Jacob Kobe 6 August 2005

Good: mp3 and fm radio

Bad: design, battery life, camera

Comment: battery life is poor, camera isn't great, doesn't fit into some of my pockets but at least it has an mp3 player and radio.
overall not bad, but not great either, there are other phones out there that does a lot better job in the same price range

Andy Napper's avatar
5 stars out of 5

Andy Napper 24 June 2005

Good: Applications, screen, Log of all communications

Bad: Nothing (Yet?)

Comment: Excellent phone showing that Nokia can make a smartphone that didn't come from another planet!

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