Nokia X5-01 review: Round the square
Round the square
The 5MP fixed-focus camera
The Nokia X5-01 is equipped with a 5 megapixel fixed-focus camera for a maximum image resolution of 2592 x 1944 pixels. It has a LED flash but no lens protection whatsoever. This means that the glass covering the lens is prone to finger smudges and perhaps occasional scratches.
The X5-01 is not a cameraphone by any means, it’s what you use when you’ve forgotten your point and shoot camera.
As far as settings go, the camera on the X5-01 offers several scene presets, one of which is user defined. There's limited control over light sensitivity (it has low, medium, high and auto settings) as well as some control over sharpness and contrast.
The bar on the right side of the screen hosts a set of shortcuts to various camera settings. You can add and remove shortcuts so you can have quick access to the settings that matter to you – adding to a total of 16 viewfinder shortcuts.
The rest of the settings include flash control, self-timer (2, 10, 20 seconds), night mode, automatic panorama mode and multi shot.
There's also a Sequence mode to let you capture consecutive images at a predefined interval (from 10 seconds to 30 minutes).
The image quality is below the best of the 5MP range but still, the Nokia X5-01 produces some quite usable photos. The contrast and color rendering are good and the amount of captured detail is decent. However, the produced images are quite noisy which, combined with the sharpening algorithm, produces jagged edges. The noise reduction algorithm also has a tendency to smear out areas of low contrast.
The major missing feature – autofocus – becomes apparent when you try taking a macro shot. Anything closer than 50cm is a no-go.
Synthetic resolution
We also snapped our resolution chart with the Nokia X5-01. You can check out what that test is all about here.
Nokia X5-01 resolution chart photo • 100% crops
Video recording
As for video recording, the Nokia X5-01 shoots in VGA resolution at 15 fps. Videos are MPEG-4 encoded. Although the specs sound decent, the quality is quite poor actually. The compression is dialed a bit too high, which brings the effective resolution down, and the modest framerate brings down the perceivable quality even further.
Here’s a video sample from the Nokia X5-01 – VGA@15fps.
Connectivity is good
The Nokia X5-01 has all the connectivity basics covered – quad-band GSM/EDGE support make sure that if there’s a GSM network around you can connect to it. Tri-band 3.5G (HSPA) is also available.
The X5-01 has Bluetooth covered too – v2.1 with A2DP – and also Wi-Fi b/g (no 802.11n support though). You can also tick the UPnP and DLNA checkboxes.
The microUSB port can be used both for charging and for data connections. In the case of the Nokia X5-01, this will probably be the quickest way to transfer a few files to the microSD card, since it’s hidden under the battery.
Such a great web browser deserves a larger screen
Browsing the Internet on the Nokia X5-01 is as good as it gets on a non-touch phone. Even the most elaborate pages are rendered well.
For navigation you get a virtual mouse cursor and a mini-map, which can help you find your way around large sites where lots of scrolling is required. The mini-map activates automatically if you scroll longer, and you can use it as an overview.
The zoom level is also easily adjustable and searching for text on a page is straightforward. Scrolling, panning and zooming are fast in all but the most complex pages.
The very good web browser downed by the small display
The browser offers goodies like visual history, form and data saving and multiple tabs –there is no way to open a new tab however, unless the web page opens a pop-up. This is an old problem with the Symbian browser and we’re not getting our hopes up for it to get fixed before Symbian^3.
YouTube video playing in the browser • the video playing in fullscreen
The Symbian browser has had Flash support for ages and the Nokia X5-01 is not an exception, though the small screen makes viewing less than ideal and the performance is not as smooth as we would have liked. To be honest, you’d be better off using the dedicated YouTube app.
The YouTube app is easier to work with
The setback of the Nokia X5-01 web browser is a hardware problem, not a software one. At only 2.36 inches and QVGA resolution, the smallest fonts aren't always readable and you have to go for larger ones. This in turn limits the amount of text that can fit on screen and will force you to scroll even more.
Reader comments
- AnonD-1046991
- 19 Jul 2022
- wv8
"I will burn this piece of junk in the backyard" are just e-waste
- sharp
- 03 Jul 2013
- 3sE
I think its a nokia mistake, I don't even receive GSM network any longer as it stops seeing my SiM.
- To be binned ASAP
- 15 Apr 2012
- nCe
This is one of the worst phones I have ever had, and the last Nokia I ever buy. Next week I am getting my Galaxy, and is the day when I will burn this piece of junk in the backyard. It is horrible, software is buggy, camera can't record videos (it ca...