Typical price: £280
What is it: 3G slider phone with FM radio
What we think: Well built, if somewhat chunky, the 6280 has plenty of compelling features, including extremely good access to software with the slider closed
Nokia 6280 Review
Reviewed on: 27 March 2006
Features
The Nokia 6280 is a Series 40 device. We are much more used to seeing Symbian's operating system with Series 60 on top of it in Nokia handsets, but both the 6111 and the 6280 run on Series 40.
As a user you probably won't notice much difference, though, because the 6280 has a very familiar look and feel. It's equipped with a standard range of software that includes contact manager, calendar, to do list, alarm clock, note taker, countdown timer, stopwatch, MMS, SMS and email management, image viewer, music player with MP3 and AAC support and voice recorder. When it comes to adding extra software, Java is supported. And if you want to synchronise with a PC, you get both the software and a cable that allows you to do that.
As well as the music player there is an FM radio, and this has support for Visual Radio (you get to see content broadcast alongside music). It was easy to get to the spot where you set up a Visual Radio stations directory on the handset, but no stations are operating in the UK yet (see Visual Radio: But when are we going to see it? for more information).
When it comes to standard radio we were miffed that we couldn't autotune the 20 station presets, and also that there's no support for RDS information, so you have to enter station names manually. In practical terms this means you need to know the frequency of your favourite stations to tune them rather than just scanning the spectrum, which is tedious.
We noted earlier a feature called Active Standby. You can configure the main screen to offer application shortcuts, calendar information and more, which you can access using the navigation key. It means you can personalise things just how you like them.
There are two cameras, as you'd expect from a competent 3G handset. The one on the front is VGA resolution and designed primarily for video calling. The one on the back shoots at up to 2 megapixels.
Following the current trend, when in camera mode the 6280 is meant to be used in landscape format. As soon as you tap the camera button it presents a sideways-on view, and you have to swivel the phone to frame and shoot.
The Nokia Web site says up to 10MB of memory is available for contacts, text messages, multimedia messages, ringtones, images, video, calendar notes, to do lists and applications. 3, who supplied our review handset, suggest a more conservative 6MB is available. Our memory check after inserting our SIM on the review handset showed that just 2.7MB was free for storing data. You will need to start using the bundled 64MB miniSD card straight away.
Performance
The use of Series 40 makes the Nokia 6280 noticeably zippier than its Series 60-based relatives, which is something you will appreciate if you often skip between applications.
We got a good couple of days of use out of the handset between charges, but were not overly heavy on music playing or 3G usage. Doing much either will deplete the battery more quickly, as will using Bluetooth.
The camera only rates as average in our book, as despite its 2 megapixels, there was a lack of colour definition and sharpness to our shots that left us unimpressed. For anything approaching serious shots, we suggest you look elsewhere.
On the other hand, the 6280 produced good sound output, both from the radio and the music player, and the equaliser had enough of an effect on sound for us to recommend it. Again we have a grumble, though -- there's not enough volume for listening through the handset speaker.
Edited by Mary Lojkine
Additional editing by Nick Hide
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