Phone calls and stuff
Let’s start with the sad part: ZN5 is not a 3G handset. This would probably be the place for some kind of crying emoticon, let’s admit: it’s quite a big flaw that the flagship phone supports only second generation networks. It is possible that marketing is the reason for this and we will soon get a ZN6, which will support this too, but on one hand I do not know of such a thing and on the other hand… so, hey, 3G is required. This flaw is partially corrected with a WiFi receiver, which supports 802.11i as well as the usual 802.11b/g, so it’s unique from this point of view. We will browse the web mostly with this, as we can only use GPRS and EDGE for data transfer. The GSM module is quad-band (850/900/1800/1900 MHz), there is Bluetooth 2.0 that supports the stereo profile (A2DP).
I had no problems during phone calls, sound quality and volume were both okay, although I think voices were a bit deeper than usual, but there is practically no problem with that. We can store 2000 contacts in the phonebook, there are lots of extra fields, we can attach images and ringtones too. The call log is also all right, we can view received/missed/dialed calls separately or on a single list and even more, not only the last 10-20 calls are stored – I’m currently at 81, I don’t know where the limit is.
There is nothing to complain about messaging either. There is MMS support and an e-mail client too, which supports authenticated IMAP servers. The size of internal memory is 350 MB, which can be expanded with a microSD card – the slot is unfortunately not SDHC-compatible, so we can’t use extreme sized cards. The slot is behind the battery, but since the handset can function as a USB Mass Storage device (like a card reader), this is not such a big issue – even more since thanks to the 2.0 data connector it’s quite fast.
A cikk még nem ért véget, kérlek, lapozz!