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Omio Review: Comes With Music Service on Nokia X6

With Nokia’s premier music phone starting to spin the decks on many of the major networks, we thought this a perfect time to cover exactly what makes the Nokia X6 32GB worth the extra readies – the Comes With Music download service.

Comes With Music and Nokia’s Ovi Player are set to take on iTunes with an interesting alternative method of musical distribution – simply giving it away to paid-up subscribers. Read on to see whether the Finnish phone maker’s innovative offering is music to our ears…

Comes With Music

The premise is beautiful in its simplicity. Buy a ‘Comes With Music’ device, be it the iPod-bothering Nokia 5800 Xpressmusic or the top-flight X6, and get unlimited access to over 6 million songs…for a certain length of time.

For the duration of the licence purchased (anything from 12 to 24 months), users can simply log in to the iTunes-aping Nokia Music Store and download to their heart’s content.

However, all the songs downloaded are DRM-ed to the hilt, meaning only one PC (no Mac support, sorry!) and one Comes With Music phone can be supported at a time, as well as a discernible inability to transfer any music to a particular iDevice…

Once the subscription is over, the complete collection of tunes can be kept and are free to be listened to indefinitely.

Subscribers are free to peruse and purloin absolutely everything from the Store’s ample virtual shelves, from the latest albums from popstrels like Ellie Goulding to some of the biggest stars in the history of music, from Michael Jackson to Johnny Cash.

Strong distribution deals with all the biggest labels mean there are few gaps in the Store, with most music tastes amply catered for.

With at least a year to pick and choose music, there’s plenty of opportunity to build out a handsome collection of digital anthems before it expires.

However, extending a subscription isn’t a matter of buying a gift card and getting back in the game, rather customers are required to buy another Comes With Music device and port their existing account and library across, otherwise the Store reverts to a iTunes clone complete with per-track billing.

Nokia Music Store

Now, being a iTunes clone is hardly a bad thing, with the Music Store’s simple and clean layout enabling quick and easy navigation.

The home screen showcases the latest albums dynamically with a huge tabbed menu, whilst album art is emblazoned across each page, proving inviting to the casual clicker.

From the home screen the sidebar enables the current top 40 albums and singles can be scoured with ease, as well as the latest releases (the new Gorillaz album was day and date with availability in stores) and the chance to ‘rediscover’ the cream of artists from yesteryear.

Genres are also exhaustively listed along the sidebar, and the choice of a 30-second sampler or downloading the track is a simple matter of clicking the prominently placed orange buttons beside each song title.

Downloading a track produces a discreet progress section to appear at the bottom of the Music Store, showing each song as it is transferred to the PC at blazing fast speeds.

Between 20 and 30 seconds per track resulted in full albums being downloaded in less than 5 minutes, the Store is really fast, and great for those who become addicted to the all-you-can-eat nature of Comes With Music.

The software is also a fully fledged music player, with altogether familiar playback buttons nestled at the top of the interface.

Comes With Music on the Nokia X6


The experience of Comes With Music on Nokia’s flagship music phone is markedly different – shorn of the real estate offered by a PC screen, the process is somewhat less elegant but still straightforward, working a treat for getting music on the move.

The mobile version of Nokia Music has a similar layout, showcasing new artists and and the latest tracks, albeit with a significantly smaller selection on display and tiny thumbnails illustrating each artist and album.

Pared down to the essential features, the menu now has navigation and search buttons at the top of the screen, with three buttons at the bottom leading to a barebones main menu, account settings and download progress respectively. Not pretty, but decidedly functional.

The large green button takes you to a list of tracks, each of which have to be clicked on and downloaded individually to the phone.

A little frustrating when attempting to get a 12-plus track album, particularly as the X6 tends to get into a tizz, stuttering a lot when the songs mount up.

Downloads are pretty swift, and look familiar to anyone used to queuing up applications from the Ovi Store. The progress bar at the bottom depicts download progress, and can be performed in the background by pressing the ‘hide’ button.

However, we found that attempting to perform any other functions whilst tracks were being downloaded often caused a huge strain on the device, causing it to hang on menus and crash on at least one occasion.

We advise patience for the 20-odd seconds it takes to download a track (on wi-fi, expect considerably longer over 3G), and the X6 will be grateful for it.

Once downloaded, however, the Store transitions seamlessly into the X6′s media player, each song appearing with correct labels and (sometimes pixellated) album art.

The Store does not use MP3s but rather the WMA format for its output, but the bitrate quality of the audio is impressive, tracks sounding more than good enough to blast out of the X6′s speakerphone.

Playing a track is preceeded by a couple of seconds where the X6 verifies the DRM as present and correct, then it gets to the business of media playback, which is identical to the device playing music sourced from iTunes or any other location.

Moving music between the PC client and the handset is quick and painless for those unwilling to traverse Comes With Music on the X6′s smaller screen, and editing names and images is a cinch to boot.

Summary

All in all, the Comes With music service is an entirely impressive solution to the issue of legal downloading, a relatively liberating where any song from almost any artist can be accessed in seconds, and transferred to a mobile in moments.

The DRM is a necessary evil, giving users the keys to the candy store has to come with caveats, and locking the music to just a single PC and phone is constricting but understandable. It rarely gets in the way…as long as you are adhering with the rules.

The premise of Comes Wth Music is brilliant, and the extra cost is negligible in comparison to the amount of tunes on offer.

The freedom to sample new artists, dabble in foreign genres or simply let yourself be inspired by Nokia Music’s intelligent suggestions make the service a brilliant alternative to the nickel-and-dime nature of current digital download outlets.

The torrent (if you’ll excuse the pun) of legal tunes the Comes With Music service flows into Nokia phones it a perfect aural accompaniment to an entry-level Xpressmusic device, but we think it may just push the high-end Nokia X6 into prohibitively expensive territory.

A great source of music – both as a player on a home computer and as a place to purchase new content – Nokia needs to relax the security restrictions, iron out the glitches and simply allow more subscribers for Comes With Music to become a legitimate iTunes alternative for the millions of X-series phone owners around the globe.

It’s that good.

Nokia 5235: Comes With Music Comes On The Cheap

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The Nokia 5235 Comes With Music takes the Finnish manufacturer back into familiar territory, a bargain touchscreen smartphone with plenty of musical clout.

Echoing the form factor of the popular 5230 and 5800 XpressMusic phones whilst sharing software seen on the high-end Nokia X6, the Nokia 5235 is equipped with the all-you-can-eat Comes With Music download service, which offers 12 months of unlimited downloads.

The Nokia 5235 is a 3G device that packs a 3.2″ resistive display, a 2 megapixel camera, FM radio, Bluetooth support (although no Wi-Fi), a 3.5mm audio jack and support for the Ovi Store. Memory comes in the form of microSD card support for up to 16GB, plenty of space for music and movies but none is supplied with the device.

The price is the most appealing factor about this device, an RRP of £129 (€145) is great value for a impressive touchscreen handset and tons of tunes on your mobile from Comes With Music.

Arriving in both black and silver colourways, the Nokia 5235 is earmarked for a Q1 2010 release date.

Nokia 5800 Navigation Edition: A Lifetime Of Direction For £250

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If the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic wasn’t already good enough at getting your toes tapping to the latest grooves, the new Navigation Edition will be able to point you towards the nearest club too!

This revamped model (note the snazzy sliver detailing on the face!) is bundled with the latest version of Nokia’s GPS software Ovi Maps, complete with weather reports and 3D landmark details, as well as an in car kit and charger.

The latest generation Ovi Maps is good for both on-foot navigation and turn-by-turn, so lifetime subscriptions to the WALK and DRIVE licences are in this raving rambler’s dream package.

The Nokia 5800 XpressMusic Navigation Edition is due for release in Q3 2009, at a price of around £250 SIM-free.

Nokia 5530 XpressMusic Gets Release Date, Timed Exclusive With Carphone Warehouse

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The new Nokia 5530 XpressMusic is poised for release on the 11th of August, and according to Mobile Today, will be a timed exclusive to the Carphone Warehouse throughout August and September.

The Nokia 5530 XpressMusic is the latest addition to the Finnish manufacturer’s touch phone armoury, a cut-price caller that will be placed as a step down from the highly successful 5800 XpressMusic.

Sacrificing 3G but retaining the cool yet simplistic styling of its big brother, the 5530 XpressMusic is set to appeal to multimedia fans on a budget, arriving in 5 colours and a 4GB memory card for storing all those movies and music tracks.

It manages to look a little more refined than the 5800 with a sleek stainless steel finish around the 2.9″ TFT touchscreen, and offers up to 27 hours of music playback.

The handset brings a bevy of  impressive social networking features, including a rolodex-style carousel of close contacts, and live widgets providing updates from friends appearing directly on the home screen.

The handset will be available at a price of £130 on prepay, and lower tier pay monthly tariffs.

UPDATE: Mobiles.co.uk (part of CarphoneWarehouse have already released pre-order Nokia 5530 deals.)

Nokia N97 Mini: It’s Real And It’s Coming!

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From the early rumblings on a hastily deleted Vodafone Ireland thread (of all places) to recent sightings in the flesh, the Nokia N97 getting a little brother is the biggest non-Apple tablet story currently doing the rounds in the tech blogosphere.

So it’s only right that one of the interweb’s biggest bloggers lays down some concrete details, as Mobile Review‘s Eldar gives the world the lowdown on the Nokia N97 Mini.

Unwired View has brushed up on their Russian and picked out the salient points from all that he told them…

What is it? It is indeed the Nokia N97 Mini, and will be named as such. The name is apparently stealing a march on another manufacturer’s intentions to release a slimmed down version of a popular handset as the ‘Mini’. Sneaky…

What’s it got? It is indeed a smaller N97, with similar features and specs, albeit…well, smaller. The display is said to be reminiscent of the new Nokia 5530 XpressMusic, so we’re talking a 2.9″ screen at a 640 x 360 resolution.

The d-pad on the left side is gone as the images suggested, and the internal memory will be either 8GB or 16GB, depending on the model.

Why? It will be a sleeker, sexier alternative to the slightly bulky original, and cheaper too at around €100 (£85) less than the N97.

When? Well, the big reveal is said to be Nokia World ’09 in Stuttgart on the 2nd and 3rd of September. Release? Eldar doesn’t say, but he does mention the degree of faith that Nokia has in the N97 Mini’s success.

It’s cute, but does it really have what it takes to do Nokia N95 numbers? Time will tell.

We have a sneaking suspicion that even a Nokia 5800 XpressMusic with a decent software upgrade would be more of an <insert today’s hot smartphone name here> killer than a diddy N97 Mini might…

Nokia 5800 XpressMusic To Get N97 Homepage Widgets, Decent Scrolling

Nokia 5800 new UIA firmware update is set to make the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic even more fly, hip and mackadocious to the kids, as it gets bolstered by some genuinely impressive new features!

We were harsh on the scrolling through menus in our Nokia 5800 XpressMusic review, particularly the decision to opt for the inconsistent and annoying (after using the iPhone, anyway) ‘up is up’ dragging movement for navigating menus, and the annoying and inaccessible scroll bars along the right side.

All that is to be a thing of the past, as the handset embraces kinetic scrolling on the homescreen, contact lists and web browser. A nice start, but we would really want to see it throughout the handset…nothing more frustrating than using one convention, only to have it change in the following menu. Single taps? Double taps? make your mind up, 5800!

Also, the homescreen is set to get a refurb, looking far more like the version currently gracing TV screens up and down the land on those Nokia N97 adverts. Little widgets which are constantly updating information to your handset, from weather to news and Facebook status updates. A great move, but without that unique selling point, what makes the N97 such a great choice?

The Nokia 5800 XpressMusic will also be getting tweaks under the bonnet, including a swifter response to user inputs and improved camera performance, making for a very cool touch handset for the money. Between this device and the entry-level Nokia 5530 XpressMusic (a 5800 sans GPS and 3G) coming soon, the Finnish manufacturer seems set to have the music phone game sewn up.

However, we’ll soon see what the Sony Ericsson W205 has to say about that…

Nokia 5800 XpressMusic Tops Chart As UK’s No.1 Selling Portable Music Player!

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On the way into work this morning, I saw this ad on the side of a London bus this morning proclaiming that God was awesome.

Which was…interesting.

I also saw an advert on another bus proclaiming the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic as the UK’s biggest selling portable music player. I remember thinking, “Wow, that sounds like Nokia are directly comparing the 5800 to iPod sales. That can’t be true!”

Turns out it is. The number crunchers at GFK Retail and Technology have the Nokia 5800 at the top spot in 2009 for both volume and value between January and March in the UK, with 2.6 million sold!

This was enough to beat the sky-high sales of even Apple’s iPod, making it indeed this year’s best selling portable music player.

Why so serious successful? The combination of an aggressive low-end price point, the appeal of a unique and edgy Nokia and the 3.5mm headphone jack all make the 5800 a genuine alternative to an iPod in the pockets of cool kids…

That being said, blanket TV advertising and recruiting Britain’s Got Talent winner George Samson to invent a new dance in the handset’s honour can’t have hurt!

With Nokia pumping out one million units per month across the world, the success of Nokia’s first touch screen phone is showing no signs of abating in the immediate future.

Check out our Nokia 5800 XpressMusic deals to catch the biggest music player on the market at the smallest price!

Source: Mobile Today

3D Photo Browser For Nokia 5800 XpressMusic!

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One of the few shortcomings of the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic despite being their first big handset to take advantage of touch was photo browsing. It was slow and unintuitive in an otherwise simple device. Fortunately, Nokia has improved things a great deal with a prototype of their new 3D Photo Browser!

A quick swipe offers a swish visual effect which emulates flying across a ‘wall’ of your stored photos. A press and hold reveals a virtual magnifying glass to view images in clearer detail too! The addition of face recognition allows for a stroke to travel between faces in a picture automatically, quickly and easily. Watch the demostration below, then download the Nokia photo browser from here!

It’s good that Nokia are maintaining support for this handset, between this and the recent major 5800 software updates they are making real efforts to improve this phone even more post-release.

Whilst only compatible with the 5800 and the forthcoming Nokia N97 at present, they hope to release a version of the photo browser for non-touch Nokia phones in the near future.

Source: Symbian Freaks

Nokia Music Event On Wednesday?

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On Wednesday 11th March, Nokia will be hosting an exciting music-based event at 9am according to Electric Pig.

Much has been made of the Comes With Music service, and we think that the lack of support for their most high-profile handsets like the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic was a truly missed opportunity. So we are certainly glad to see them redoubling their efforts in the music sector.

With the tagline of ‘your music player is ringing,’ what could it be that the Finnish manufacturer is unveiling? A new handset that is music first, phone second? A refurbished, DRM-free Comes With Music service for all Symbian devices?

Who can say, but with a virtual announcement (as opposed to the all-singing Koko launch of the 5800) followed by extensive Q&A session suggests to us a reveal in a relatively minor chord.

Omio will let you know what it is on Wednesday!

Nokia 5800 XpressMusic Lands With A Bump In United States

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The Nokia 5800 XpressMusic is a fun little device, and very much a ‘soft launch’ into the touchscreen game for the Finnish manufacturer before coming hard with the top spec N97 in June.

Despite a successful launch for the 5800 in the UK, the handset has come under fire from all sides over a number of recently revealed blemishes on it’s otherwise clear record…

Firstly, the lack of integration with the Comes With Music service seemed like a huge missed opportunity, as the XpressMusic handset was perfectly suited to the all-you-can-hear music download service. With no backward compatibility, those early 5800 adopters will have to do without it…

Then there was the embarrassing admission that the 5800 XpressMusic had a manufacturing malfunction whereby all handsets made before the end of January had faulty earpieces due to a misplaced screw. This results in spontaneous volume changes and subsequent volume loss altogether, but it’s a problem which can be rectified if the phone is sent in for repairs.

Now the handset has gone on to try and make it big on the other side of the Atlantic, reception has been mixed…literally. Issues regarding US 3G connectivity have been reported, with some 5800s having no reception whilst others getting full bars in the same location.

Nokia have yet to comment on this latest headache, but the Tube phone which we have waited so long for is a teensy disappointment now that it finally here. Or did we just expect too much from the number one manufacturer’s first touch phone?