Can the Nokia 5300 play music on sports car speakers?
Answers: the phone come with an adapter that fits adjectives 3.5mm headphone jack. so if u were to seize that phone it better has that adapter inclcuded. explicitly not a problem if u buying it brand new. the phone itself have a radio so the fm tuner would work or if u have a cassette deck surrounded by your car buy the cassette adapter which have the 3.5mm jack. otherwise ask the folks at radioshack
It's hard to bring back excited about music phones—so lots of them have turned out to be clunky duds that don't even come close to unseating the iPod (even the Motorola iTunes phone for Cingular doesn't do that). So I be a little jaded and skeptical when I get the Nokia 5300 Xpress Music to test out final week. Yes, the two-toned Mondrian-esque slider has be out since November in an unlocked magazine from Nokia since last Fall, but T-Mobile is very soon offering it for as little as $99, completely configured to work with that network's features, including myFaves (which give you anytime calling and texting privileges with up to five friends). The T-Mobile text also comes in Lilac/White or Black/White accent (the unlocked GSM version comes surrounded by Orange/White).
Sure, it's weird that T-Mobile doesn't enjoy a bonafide music download store, but no matter since you can use Windows Media Player to verbs MP3 and WMA files (or the Nokia Music Manager to transfer non-iTunes-purchased AAC files). Now, that sounds great printed, but the reality is that not adjectives AAC or WMA files are created equal: Due, no doubt, to DRM, I be unable to play any of the WMA tunes I purchased past its sell-by date of the Verizon Music store for my PC (I guess the only phones they'll work on is Verizon phones).
That said, I own plenty of MP3s that I've ripped from my own CD collection, and lately I've be buying a lot of stuff from TuneTribe and eMusic, which go tunes in the non-DRM MP3 format. Those files transferred seamlessly using a USB cable and Windows Media Player. I be able to squeeze in the order of five or six albums onto the measly on-board five megabytes of memory, but you can upgrade using an up to 1 gigabyte microSD card.
But here's where the phone shines: The interface and music access is user-friendly, music controls (on the side and on the front of the phone) are surprisingly responsive, and the volume go up to 11 (though you'll need to use the included adapter to use any kick-*** music player phone like the Ultimate Ears triple.fi buds I be using—I'd skip the tangle-prone white headphones included beside the 5300).
It's got a 1.3 megapixel camera and a comfortable keypad that you access by sliding the phone initiate. What's handy is you can navigate around the phone (and control music) even when the phone is shut by using the four buttons and joypad on the front.
Overall, the 5300 is a sleek little package specifically decent competition for most devoted music players.
avena
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