We haven't had the opportunity to hold the 5800 in our hands just yet but from what we can tell the Series 60, 5th edition interface is attractive and easy to use. The main menu uses a series of icons, while the music player features album art. An accelerometer will rotate the display from portrait to landscape mode automatically; in landscape mode there's a full QWERTY keyboard. The 5800 also will have a "Contacts Bar" that will highlight your four favorite friends on the home screen. With one touch you'll be able to access a history of text messages, phone calls, e-mails, and photos.

The 5800 comes with a stylus and a secondary tool that looks like a guitar pick. Nokia says the latter tool is designed for use with the music player. You'll get a wired headset in the box as well, but Bluetooth can use one of the new headsets that the company also introduced Thursday. In press photos Nokia also showed the 5800 resting on a stand; we hope that's included as well.


Nokia 5800 Media Player Free Download


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how do you sync the universal music free downloads. i tried to download a song from the freebies in my laptop using internet explorer. it was downloaded in my laptop however since it is protected download, the windows media player of the laptop cannot play it, igot a message that i need to sync it with the phone using winodmws media player. so i connected the usb and tried to sync it, unfortunately a message appear that an error occured, that the video cannot be synched because it still hastnt gotten the required permission for the digital rights. , so I look again at the screen of wmp and there is a statement at the lower portion stating dowloading digital rigths. I thought it would only take several minutes to get said permission but even after an hour it is still dowloading the permission and that is only for one song.

On the other hand, I'm pretty sure this will be ignored to death just as they did for another basic media player feature (being able to select your output channel). That's the real sad part about this all.

Multimedia / Audio: Built-in stereo speakers, mic and 3.5mm standard stereo headphone jack. Supports Bluetooth A2DP stereo with AVRC. Voice recorder (records in AAC format) and music player included. Supported video formats: 3GPP formats (H.263), Flash Video, H.264/AVC, MPEG-4, RealVideo 7,8,9/10, WMV 9. Supported audio formats: AAC, AAC+, AMR-NB, AMR-WB, AU, AWB, eAAC+, M4A, MIDI Tones (poly 64), Mobile XMF, MP3, MP4, RealAudio 7,8,10, RMF, SND, SP-MIDI, True tones, WAV, WMA, WVE. Supports USB mass storage mode and MTP for music transfer over USB as well as UPnP. Includes AV cable that connects via RCA connectors to video and left/right audio channels on a TV or projector.

The 5800 maintains Nokia's reputation for creating powerful and feature-rich multimedia mobile devices. The breadth and scope of its multimedia functionality out of the box is extremely impressive, even more so considering this is a mid-tier device. The large screen and touch interaction of the 5800 are not multimedia features in themselves; they do not add any extra capabilities to the device itself. However, as we shall see in the next section of this preview, they do have a marked impact on the multimedia experience for the consumer.

The 5800's audio credentials are further burnished by the inclusion of the Podcasting and Radio applications. Podcasting, once you have set up the podcasts you want to listen to, can be left to its own devices. You can access podcasts for playback through the podcast category in the Music player's music library. Radio is a polished application with automatic station scanning and editable presets, it has also has had a small facelift for S60 5th Edition - once you have tuned into a station, its frequency and name scroll across the screen in a mish mash pattern. It is a small thing, but is exactly the sort of visual enhancement that it would be nice to see more of in S60 devices.

For media management and viewing, the 5800 uses the Gallery application. It uses the top level hierarchy (images and videos, songs, sound clips and other media), as in previous S60 implementations. Photos and videos are shown as thumbnails in a grid. Touching on a selected image shows it full screen and, as you might expect, you can flick through the images in sequence by sliding your finger or stylus over the screen. Touch the screen again and a number of shortcuts and controls appear. There's a zoom bar (the volume keys, on the side of the device, can also be used), plus shortcuts for sending the media item (via email, mms or web upload), playing the media (video or slideshow) and deleting the media. The options menu gives access to further actions, including editors (now standard in 5th Edition) for both images and videos. Gallery does get the job done and has a good range of features, but its top level hierarchy is antiquated and it can be a little slow to load or switch between images so there's definitely room for improvement.

An area where the 5800 impresses is its ability to easily upload captured media to online services (Flickr, Share on Ovi and more) through the Share online application. Both the Gallery and Camera applications integrate with the Share online application via the send shortcut (web upload). In the case of the camera, this means you can capture media and be uploading it to the web just a handful of seconds later. The Share online application does a great deal more too, you can use it to view images your contacts have themselves recently uploaded to the sharing sites and read or add comments to them. While the functionality is broadly the same as earlier versions, the bigger screen size and touch interaction makes it less fiddly to use. At the recent Symbian Smartphone Show I carried both the N78 and 5800 to post 'live' images to the front page; I ended using the 5800 almost exclusively because it was quicker and easier. There is one important feature addition in Share online in 5th Edition (and in v4.0 on selected handsets as a standalone download - Ed); it now has an outbox and you can line up as many uploads (posts) as you wish, whereas previously you had to let the last upload finish before you could start a new one.

For video playback there's Real player, which does a good job; it'll happily play videos, either locally or via streams, either diectly or those that are passed to it by other applications. It supports a wide array of formats including H.263 and H.264 codecs (3gp/mp4), wmv and flv, and is not as fussy about access points, resolution or bit rates as previous versions. The 5800's large, high resolution screen makes for an excellent video playback experience and, coupled with Real player, there's a lot of potential here.

The Video centre application provides a way to download video on the phone (via RSS feeds), but there is a limited selection of generic content available. You can also copy video directly from your PC (side loading), but there's a good chance it will need re-encoding to achieve optimum playback. Video centre does make it easy to access videos stored on the phone, but the overall experience is much less slick than that for music; side loading content is less straight forward, nor is there a video store for commercial or premium content. These limitations are likely to be partly offset by regional variants being pre-loaded with local content feeds and applications (e.g. the BBC iPlayer widget which provides a way for British users to view BBC content in a hassle free way). As Steve recently found out, with the UK variant of the N96, this can be very effective and the media-centric Nokia 5800 is an obvious candidate for this kind of local customisation.

RealPlayer is a free media player compatible with more music and video file types than any other major media player on the market. Whether you want to play audio or video files RealPlayer has got you covered. You can use it to play anything from MP4 to WMA to FLV to AAC and even supports most AVI files. Since RealPlayer is a universal media player it automatically recognizes the file format for the video or audio file you want to play. That takes all the guess work out of playing music or videos on your computer. Using RealPlayer eliminates the need to search for other video players.

Touchscreen action is centred on its large 3.2-inch touch display, but under the bonnet the 5800 XpressMusic features Wi-Fi support plus HSDPA high-speed 3G mobile data connectivity, A-GPS location finding and mapping technology, a host of smartphone multimedia gadgetry, including a substantial amount of music-playing ability.

With plenty of functionality inside, the 5800 XpressMusic does a good job in power handling. We managed between two to three days battery life with our average usage, though how much you use gadgetry like Wi-Fi, GPS or the music player will impact on overall battery performance.

The next step is pairing your phone to your computer. This is really really simple, but just in case you don't know how, I'll explain it.


As explained earlier, navigate to your phone's Remote Control function. For the purposes of testing, go to the 'Desktop' controller - to use the mouse and some simple desktop-navigating-like functions. Here it will find the device that your phone could use this control with, in my case 'MSI Star Key'. It will ask if it wants to add this device to your phones list of devices, select yes. Now choose a 'passcode' you can use anything, 1111 is always a good idea, as it's hard to get too wrong. You wont need to remember this number for long, so don't worry.


Soon after you choose your passcode, and select 'OK' on your phone - a bubble will appear on your computer near the clock (it will look something like below). Click the bubble, and enter the passcode into the window following the bubble (it may now be called a 'PIN' code for some reason, but they're the same thing). Once you have inputted this number, click 'OK' and there you go. You can now use your mobile phone as a human interface device! If you are happy with what you have, stop reading this instructable now, for some customisation and to make your remote control really useful, read on.


There are two other options on the Remote Control part of your phone (probably), one for Presentations, and one for a Media Player. I'm not sure exactly what media player the default functions are for on my phone, but they do not work perfectly with my favourite Media Player, Windows Media Player 11 (I'm not up for an iTunes/winamp/WMP war, I really don't care) Welll, I say they don't work perfectly, it's bearable, but the volume up/down doesn't work properly, nor does the mute function. 0852c4b9a8

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