Nokia 6220 Classic

By Rosanne Hodgekiss on 18/07/2008

More Nokia reviews , RRP: AU$698.00

The good:

  • Excellent 5-megapixel camera
  • Accurate GPS
  • Beautiful Symbian interface

The bad:

  • Clicky plastic keypad
  • Slightly laggy interface
  • No Wi-Fi
  • Cannot iSync with Mac

The bottomline:

Playing on the brunette-stereotype, the Nokia 6220 Classic is a 3G smartphone that transcends its demure looks with pragmatic appeal, a stand-out 5MP camera and assisted-GPS.

Buying choices:

Editors' rating:

7.5/10

Users' rating:

7.1/10

Not to be confused with the Nokia 6220 of days yore, the Nokia 6220 Classic is a 3G smartphone that ticks off the "must-haves" on a feature wish-list — an excellent 5MP (megapixel) camera with Carl Zeiss optics, assisted-GPS, HSDPA, and room for a microSD memory card, all crammed within an ergonomic candybar form. Despite portraying itself as a business-oriented smartphone, this Nokia's greatest strength lies in its camera and integrated photo-sharing and geotagging capabilities, which will appeal to folks searching for a reason to ditch their digital camera. However, those wanting to use it as an in-car GPS may want to hold on a while, unless you're happy to pay a considerable licence fee for road directions.

Design
Despite all these goodies, the Nokia 6220 Classic is remarkably svelte, weighing in at a comfortable 90g and measuring 108x47x15mm. It fits comfortably in one hand, especially with its deliciously tactile matte backing and sensible key placement. The front panels of the phone, however, are an instant smudge-magnet; while looking resplendent in the box, the Nokia 6220 Classic will soon show its true colours after a round of texting during a fast-food meal.

Despite the key placement being very straightforward, don't expect that fast-food texting session to be a piece of cake — the oh-so-shiny keys are a little clicky, plastic-y and aren't terribly responsive. Often, the combination of key presses required to unlock the phone can take a few attempts and texting can feel a little cramped. Thankfully, the rest of the Nokia 6220 Classic's form is quite robust, with the camera-phone shutter release moulded neatly into the side of the phone and the lens is shielded when not in use.

It's the season for Apple-inspired design, and the Nokia 6220 Classic's Symbian OS interface is not immune. Its minimal, uncluttered screen layout and fade transitions from menu-to-application give it quite a luxurious, yet professional veneer. Its emphasis on connectivity ensures that features such as its Web browser, content sharing and Bluetooth are at the fore, while tucking away secondary niceties like its music player and FM radio in the feature menu.

Overall, the Nokia 6220 Classic's design is unobtrusive and doesn't break any rules. Those receptive to Nokia's litany of out-there fashion phones may greet this with a yawn, but remember that this phone isn't so much about flair as functionality.

Features
The Nokia 6220 Classic has a feature list as long as the Silk Route, however its most exemplary asset is its 5-megapixel camera with Carl ZeissT Lens and Xenon Flash, which produces crisp, radiant images with deep blues in sunlight and relatively natural colours in low-light with flash. That said, the automatic flash is not particularly good at measuring light levels, so it is best to manually activate the flash in dim light, or risk ending up with blurry, artefact-riddled photos. Also, its red-eye reduction feature isn't particularly good. A lower-quality CIF camera is also embedded in the front panel for 3G video calling. Other multimedia features include a media gallery, FM stereo radio with RDS, a voice recorder and a basic music player.

Complementing the quality of the photos is the Nokia 6220 Classic's 2.2-inch QVGA 16 million colour screen. From first boot, its crispness, clarity and vibrancy makes for a pocket wonder; its size is more than sufficient for proudly displaying your shots. To save your photos (and multimedia), the Nokia 6220 Classic includes 120MB of internal memory, which can be boosted to up to 8GB using a microSD memory card.

Partnered with photo uploading and geotagging capabilities, the Nokia 6220 Classic is a winner. Using an internet data connection, it's very simple to set up an account and start uploading to Nokia's free-and-unlimited OviT media-sharing website from your handset, which is very handy for sharing happy-snaps and trip details when you're away from your desktop. Thankfully when using OviT, images are automatically compressed prior to upload, thus keeping down your data spend. Note that this is not the case with Flickr; unless you're on a generous data plan, you probably won't want to be uploading oodles of photos at 730KB a pop. Naturally, this can all be possible using the Nokia 6220 Classic's 3G HSDPA connectivity, its in-built Web browser and a healthy data plan. For more pedestrian connectivity needs, the Nokia 6220 Classic can send email with attachments and includes Bluetooth and a USB port, which when combined with bundled Nokia Suite software, makes easy work of syncing your calendar entries and contacts with a PC. Mac users, however, do not have this luxury; at time of writing, we were still unable to sync the handset with iSync (horrors!). On both platforms, we could utilise the Nokia 6220 Classic as a storage device via both Bluetooth and USB interfaces.

Another stand-out feature is the in-built GPS receiver with assisted-GPS, what joy! The Nokia 6220 Classic uses the Navteq mapping system, which is location-searchable and can provide spoken turn-by-turn directions (the latter requires payment of a licence fee). A 10-day free trial of the road and walking directions is provided upon activation of this feature, after which you will be required to pay for one of a number of rather pricey licence packages. For example, a 12-month licence for metropolitan directions will set you out by €69.99, or roughly AU$115. Ouch. Thankfully everything else is free, which is great for getting out of a jam.

The Nokia 6220 Classic also comes bundled with a hands-free headset, a USB cable and TV-out cable.

Performance
As can be predicted with a phone crammed with features, using them all at once will result in very short battery life. For example, perpetually keeping the GPS on, taking photos with flash and transferring files via Bluetooth/USB will result in the battery life being very rapidly gobbled up within the space of a few hours' use. However, with light-to-moderate usage (ie, placing the occasional call and using the camera and GPS once a day), the Nokia 6220 Classic managed five days between cycles, which is by no means ugly. According to Nokia, talk-time is 2.5 hours (with 3G) and standby 250 hours, which from our experience, seems like a bit of a stretch.

What may become more apparent is that the Nokia 6220 Classic's interface is by no means zippy — perhaps the computing power required to generate those pretty screen transitions could be better used elsewhere. Although not absolutely detrimental to the overall experience, it may come as a slight annoyance to those transitioning from simpler, faster phones. The good news is that using the in-built browser is a simple affair and although dependent on the arrangement with your mobile carrier, internet browsing is quite efficient. Using HSDPA, the Nokia 6220 Classic can achieve download speeds of up to 3.6Mbps, but in reality this is most probably in excess of what you will ever achieve.

On matters of speed, the a-GPS is excellent in the open, requiring roughly 10 seconds to lock on to your current position and provide street-number accuracy. In a vehicle moving through traffic, the Nokia 6220 Classic had no trouble keeping up, extending accurate velocity information. However, when satellites cannot be located (eg, indoors) where the a- for assisted- jumps in, it can take a matter of minutes to pick a positional estimate. This is never really worth it if you're after accuracy, and its numbingly slow in comparison to similar devices.

As for camera performance, the camera requires five seconds to fire up and six seconds to cycle from shutter release to ready. Photo file sizes vary from about 500-800KB, which is reasonable for a 5MP camera, unfortunately the clarity achieved from such a tiny lens cannot rival stand-alone cameras with similar specifications. Thankfully colour reproduction is fairly sound and the lens does not suffer from the blur and distortion evident in lower-end cameras.

Overall
As a mid-range phone for professionals, the Nokia 6220 Classic excels in putting its priorities in order. It provides excellent functionality by virtue of a quality camera, a-GPS and connectivity features, while avoiding a descent into gimmickry and ostentatious design. Although suffering from bouts of lag and a toy-keypad, many may argue that such mild sacrifices are worth it. As the name implies, the Nokia 6220 Classic is positioned as a conservative, yet endearing and highly functional smartphone — attributes that never go out of fashion.

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berry580
13/10/2008, 09:03 PM

rating
8
/10

Had it for a few days. No major issues.
If you're looking for a camera phone with good camera/video recording, then this is something to consider seriously.
But to get the most out of this phone, you may need to play around with it to change the settings to your flavor, or navigating through it could be a challenge

Pros: -Great camera with xenon flash for more even lighting and an above average autofocus
-Has GPS, decent accuracy, averaging about 20 meters from 3 days use of experience
-Good sound quality when in voice call/mp3 and loud speaker
-Highly customizable short cut keys and menu
-slim & light
-packed with features

Cons: -Cheap keypad
-screen prone to scratches
-battery is decent lasting you around 3 days with light use, but heavy use (of GPS, mp3 player, browsing, etc) would last you around a day only.
-Good processor speed, but 6220 classic allows programs to run in the background, meaning too much programs running simultaneously could lag/freeze the phone
-good interface, but take sometime to get used to
-screen size a little too small for GPS navigation use
-need to pay for AGPS
-no wifi
-cannot synch. with mac

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sid1235
13/10/2008, 12:33 PM

rating
9
/10

yeh ok shorty1235. u like ur chocolate phone dont u. why dont ya just eat the dam thing. theres no way it is better than this phone.

Pros: charger plugs into power point

Cons: attracts absolute dicks like shorty1235 to review sites such as this

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Shorty1235
13/10/2008, 12:19 PM

rating
1
/10

The Lg Chocolate was heaps better than this pointless junk. You obviously dont know what your talking about slpelKey.

Pros: The colour

Cons: Everything Else

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slpelkey
09/10/2008, 05:47 PM

rating
7
/10

much better than the LG Chocolate I endured

Pros: overall much improvement over the last phone.

Cons: keypad isn't great to use. More features than I need but.

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anonymous
06/10/2008, 07:10 PM

rating
8
/10

Its a great phone I had it for one month now.

Pros: Great pictures, fast, complicated software, amazing features (you can add a text to be shown whenever you call or answer a certain contact, you can replace that by an active note too which is like HTML some how.

Cons: Some old fashion features are removed and an annoying photo gallery that you can change manually but no permenantly

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Dizz
05/10/2008, 11:09 PM

rating
6
/10

I've had this phone for a couple of months now after being upgraded on my '3' mobile account.

Pros: Good camera. Also you can scroll with the arrows through sms inbox, opening up the next msg, rather than having to go back to the inbox.

Cons: I'm a girl with smallish fingers, and even I find the buttons too small and fiddly. GPS function hard to work out, plus I think you have to pay for it. No smileys.

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sds65q
26/09/2008, 05:50 PM

rating
10
/10

i want to get a new phone but i want a phone with a good camera,loud speaker when playing music,loomks good,and screen is lcd and i can spend $550 what fone should i get???should i get this 1

Pros: camera

Cons: dunoo

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anonymous1
20/09/2008, 08:41 PM

rating
6
/10

I was planning to buy the phone outright but it seems expensive and from what I've heard, it is not a good phone. However, I was also reviewing the Nokia 6300, which has less features, but a higher user rating. I am perplexed. I would also like to know what you mean by the keypad being tacky? Do you mean it sticks to your fingers or it is very slippery? And when you say it has a reasonable interface, do you mean it is uneasy to use or it is up to standard and isn't set apart from other phones? I value your opinion as I am a first time mobile buyer and do not know what I should expect out of a phone.

Pros:

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chrisjbatt85
14/09/2008, 12:06 AM

rating
9
/10

I really like this phone
after being through about 5 phones in less than a year
(Motorola V3i, Nokia 6300, Song Eriksson S500i, Samsung SGH-U100)


Pros: very simple, very easy to use, love the GPS, Great TV out, Good sound quality

Cons: only problem really is connecting with my comp which runs vista

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ML
06/09/2008, 04:43 PM

rating
8
/10

i just bort this phone. when i opened the box the stupid keypad was broken
takes a while to get used to but other than that its pretty good i guess. the camera is awesome!! great slim phone

Pros: -camera
-lights up blue

Cons: -hard to navigate around

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