
The 5500 Sport model combines rubber and steel. It also has an uncommon square-shaped display and a bean-shaped body. It pronounces text messages and is prone to fingerprints. the 5500 Sport comes with a set of tracking applications which view and record your progress, even allowing for synchronization with a PC. There’s also a 2 Megapixel camera sans autofocus.
Nokia 5500 Sport Phone Specs:
- Medium resolution display
- 2 Megapixel camera
- Music player with support for MP3 and WMA
- 64 MB onboard memory
- microSD memory card expansion, 64 MB card included
- Bluetooth 2.0 + EDR connectivity with dial-up networking and headset support
- USB 2.0 connectivity
- Speaker Independent Voice Dialing
- Tri-band GSM with EDGE support
- Text-to-speech for SMS messages and Sports application feedback
- Flashlight
- 107 x 45 x 18 mm, 103 g
- 3 hours of talk time, 7 days of standby
Nokia 5500 review by GSMarena “5500 Sport is very comfortable to hold in hands due to its bean-shaped form - you have place to put your fingers on. Considering the fact that I’m testing a non-final sample, the construction is rather stable and doesn’t creak. The upper part is firmly lined with a golden steel frame. There is a flashlight at the top, below it is the loudspeaker. The volume buttons and the camera release button are located on the left side.”
Nokia 5500 review by Infosyncworld “It’s the most advanced outdoors handset we’ve seen to date, but Nokia’s 5500 Sport still favours ruggedness over features which is evident from its mid-range set of capabilities. Its call handling is excellent, while messaging performance isn’t ideal due to issues with the keypad and a cramped screen; still, the phone makes a good overall impression but is likely to appeal mostly to those in real need of a phone that can take a beating or excercisers interested in its handy Sports application set.”
Nokia 5500 review by mobile-review “The built-in 3D sensor makes it real for the Sport mode to exist in this model. Observation accuracy is just enough for most cases, yet similarly to other phones with a pedometer on board, there is a certain measure of error possible, including random start ups when driving in a car (it’s a drawback of all sport-centric devices). But for routine trainings the 5500 provides more than satisfactory accuracy.”





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