Nokia 6500 Classic Review

£from freeNov 2007

Stuff says 4

The 6500 Classic’s gorgeously sculpted body work is just about enough for us to overlook its feature failings. One for the sophisticated style hounds among you

Images

Stuff magazine Wed, Nov 14 2007, 7:00AM

The 6500 Classic and Slide may share a codename, but that’s largely where the similarities end. Whereas the Slide packs powerful features like a 3.2MP camera, the Classic uses its wafer-thin 9.5mm torso to court the style hound. 

It’s not a complete simpleton – the inclusion of 3G is helpful for web browsing – but the cameras is only 2MP and there’s no expandable memory. Still, it’s mined from the finest metal and also individually polished by nubile Scandinavian underwear models so not one phone is alike. Okay, we stretched the truth a little there – but we still couldn’t tell the difference between the two Classics we played with.  

Part metal jacket
Unique finish or not, the Classic uses anodized aluminium instead of stainless steel. This gives it that cool metallic touch and lovely curved edges, although its quality build is slightly let down by a plastic back cover. 

The keypad is nicely spaced with ridges for thumb grip while the 2in display is another 16-million colour, QVGA-quality stunner in the same vain as the 6500 Slider. It uses the well known Symbian Series 40 OS and plays out exactly like similar Nokia handsets: highly intuitive with Simple Simon tendencies.  

Headphone headache
Despite the diluted camera and video performance and limited 1GB internal memory the 6500 Classic does match some of the 6500 Slide’s feature flourishes. This includes a new look and lively sounding music player with audio equalizers.

But with one mini USB port to hook up the headphones, charger and PC connection, you’re a slave to the supplied tinny earphones, unless Nokia provide a suitable adapter to link up your quality 3.5mm jobbies. 

With only 1GB onboard storage space the Classic isn’t geared for becoming your primary music player but is good enough for snacking. You could always fall back on the built-in FM radio if you fancy a change from your tunes. 

Average cam
The 2MP snapper isn’t the sharpest tool and is accompanied by a crude LED light that does struggle for consistent and even illumination in dark conditions. Video capture is also set disappointingly at QCIF quality (176x144 pixels) and is naturally riddled with judder and drag. 

Elsewhere, you get the cinch-to-set-up email and Yahoo! Go internet app that handily integrates your web mail, internet search RSS feeds and access to FlickR. The other software boon is the Opera Mini web browser that brilliantly compresses and fits full-fat web pages onto the 2in display. 

Sure, the 6500 Classic can’t compete with the Slide on the feature front but Nokia has carved a refined and elegant fashion phone that still flaunts the odd neat feature flourish.

 

Comments

  1. wekaty

    4 years ago

    The classic sits nice in the hand and has a quality feel to it, I like its sleek design. Good for play back with mp3 when using headphones, loudspeaker lets it down, to be fair it is not a walkman so it does it's best, Camera not bad, Don't expect too much when you use the zoom feature, Nokia could have done better with the inbuilt antenna, reception can be a problem, a bit week compared to my last nokia, Overall i would recommend this Classy little phone.

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Tech Specs

Bluetooth
Yes
Dedicated MP3 player software
No
Dimensions
109.8x45x9.5mm
FM radio
Yes
Main camera resolution
2 MP
Memory card slots
No
Operating system
Symbian Series 40
Quad band
Yes
Screen resolution
320x240 px
Standby time
216 hours
Supported music formats
MP3, AAC, WMA
Talktime
3.5 hours
Video resolution
176x144 pixels (15fps)
Weight
94g
Wi-Fi
No
Xenon flash
No