Pros & Cons
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- Amazing battery life.
- Attractive styling.
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- Tinny voice quality.
- So-so QWERTY keyboard.
- No voice dialing.
- Terrible music playback.
- Buggy, poor quality camera.
Nokia C3 (AT&T) Specs
| 802.11x/Band(s): | No |
| Bands: | 1800 |
| Bands: | 1900 |
| Bands: | 850 |
| Bands: | 900 |
| Battery Life (As Tested): | 17 hours 54 minutes |
| Bluetooth: | Yes |
| Camera Flash: | No |
| Camera: | Yes |
| Form Factor: | Candy Bar |
| High-Speed Data: | EDGE |
| High-Speed Data: | GPRS |
| Megapixels: | 2 MP |
| Phone Capability / Network: | GSM |
| Screen Details: | 320-by-240-pixel |
| Screen Details: | 65K-color TFT LCD screen |
| Screen Size: | 2.4 inches |
| Service Provider: | AT&T |
| Storage Capacity (as Tested): | 54 MB |
Nokia may still be the number one
Design and Call Quality
Let's start with the basics. The C3 measures 4.5 by 2.3 by 0.5 inches (HWD) and weighs four ounces. It's available in a pleasing slate blue color with silver accents. It's made mostly of matte plastic, but the aluminum battery cover gives it a touch of class, as that's the part you're holding most often. The 2.4-inch, non-touch LCD offers 320-by-240-pixel resolution. It looks bright and colorful, and the UI responds quickly to the five-way control pad and six function keys.
The four row QWERTY keyboard features large, silent keys. They're a bit stiff, though. And the spacebar just felt weird; each time I pressed it, I felt multiple clicks underneath the plastic. Dialing numbers also felt cramped, mainly because Nokia centers the numeric keys and puts the zero to the right of the nine key; this is easy to get used to, though.
The Nokia C3 is a quad-band EDGE (850/900/1800/1900 MHz) phone with no 3G or Wi-Fi. Voice quality was just so-so. Callers sounded thin, tinny, and even harsh at higher volumes, and there wasn't enough gain available for loud environments. The microphone was better; callers said they didn't hear anything terribly wrong, although it was clear to them I was on a cell phone. Reception was fine. Calls sounded clear through an
User Interface and Apps
As a prepaid phone, there are no GPS navigation or other fancy media features. But you do get some basic messaging apps, including e-mail, IM, and Social Net, which hooks into Facebook and Twitter accounts. The WebKit browser does a good job rendering pages, though controlling the on-screen cursor is a little fiddly. There are also some basic games available.
The Symbian Series 40 OS is quite dated, but for a low-end phone like this, it's more than up to the task. The unlock sequence was a little weird; the phone displays a numeric keypad showing you which two keys to press, but the phone doesn't have a numeric keypad, and the "function" key is unlabeled. (It's the bottom leftmost key, with a graphic of an arrow pointing to the top right).
The phone can access Nokia's confusing Ovi Store, which offers ringtones, wallpaper, and some basic apps. This isn't a smartphone, though; don't let the store icon confuse you. The apps available here are more basic and limited than you'll find on a smartphone.
Multimedia, Camera, and Conclusions
Nokia rates the side-mounted microSD slot for 8GB cards, but my 32GB SanDisk card worked fine. There's also 54MB of free internal memory. Music tracks sounded awful over
The 2-megapixel camera has no auto-focus or flash. The camera also seemed buggy; the phone randomly chose between saving photos in a readable JPG format and a non-readable, much larger "NRW" format. For the ones that worked, images looked sickly, with a green tint and a grainy texture that looked like artificial over-sharpening. Test 320-by-240-pixel videos played quite smoothly at 24 frames per second, but were a bit dim, soft, and pixelated thanks to a low bit-rate encoding.
The Nokia C3 is a good value for voice calls and basic messaging. That's it. If you're shopping for a prepaid AT&T texting phone, there are some better choices if you're not afraid of a refurbished model. They include the
Benchmarks
Continuous talk time: 17 hours 54 minutes
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Final Thoughts
Nokia C3 (AT&T)
The Wal-Mart exclusive Nokia C3 is a cheap prepaid phone that looks sharp and lasts seemingly forever on a single charge, but it's far from Nokia's usual quality standards.