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Showing posts with label Sony Ericsson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sony Ericsson. Show all posts

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Sony Ericsson W810i

Over the past couple of years, Sony Ericsson has been something of an enigma in the cell phone world. Not only has it introduced far fewer phones into the U.S market than many of its rivals, but it doesn't let the absence of a carrier sway it from rolling out new models. More important, the company has shunned the industry's major trend--skinny phones--in favor of high-featured, well-performing models. Both the Sony Ericsson W800i and W600i fit this bill, and the company now introduces America to its third Walkman phone, the W810i. Encased in an eye-catching black, the W810i offers all its predecessors' high-end, powerful features, such as a high-resolution camera, Bluetooth, and a media player, while making a number of design changes. Overall, it's a quality phone despite some minor performance issues, but it's not a huge upgrade over the W800i. Cingular now offers the W810i for a very reasonable $149 with service.Last year, Sony Ericsson definitely had orange on the brain. Both its W800i and W600i Walkman phones came in orange skins (granted, you could replace the faceplates on the W600i), as did the Walkman music player interface. For the Sony Ericsson W810i, however, the company took a slightly different track and dressed the phone in basic black. Sure, the Walkman interface is still the color of the Florida-grown citrus fruit, but the black exterior provides a nice contrast. At 3.9 by 1.8 by 0.8 inches and 3.5 ounces, it's exactly the same size as the W800i, and it retains the solid, comfortable feel in the hand. Surpassing many other cell phones in quality, the rich, vibrant display supports 262,144 colors and measures 1.8 inches diagonally (176x220 pixels). It's fantastic for scrolling through the menus, viewing pictures and videos, and playing games, but it's harder to see in direct light, and it goes completely dark when the backlighting is off. Unfortunately, you can't change the backlighting time or the text size.
For the navigation keys, the W810i takes a different design approach than it did with the W800i and W600i. Besides scrolling through the attractive, user-friendly menus (available in four styles), the sliver, circular navigation toggle serves as a shortcut to four user-defined functions in standby mode. Also, when in Walkman mode, the toggle acts as your tool for scanning through your music list. In the middle of the toggle is a raised OK button that resembles a tiny joystick. In addition to opening the main menu, the OK button is the play/pause control for the music player. Overall, both controls are tactile and easy to use, and we like that they're raised above the surface of the phone. On the downside, however, they're a bit small, especially for users with larger mitts.

On either side of the toggle are two soft keys, a Clear button, and a Back key. In standby mode, the soft keys open the main menu and the Recent Calls list. They're stiff to the touch, however, and it should be noted they double as the Talk/End controls. Sony Ericsson tends to forgo dedicated Talk/End keys; it's not our favorite arrangement, but you get used to it. The final two buttons are an orange Walkman key that turns the media player on and off and a silver control for opening a user-programmed shortcuts menu. In all, the generous shortcut options are welcome.

We've knocked Sony Ericsson in the past for its poorly designed keypads, but we're happy to report that the company got it just about right this time around. Instead of recessed or flat buttons, the W810i's keypad is raised above the surface of the phone, making it easy to dial by feel. The keys are spacious, and our only real complaint is that the orange backlighting was rather dim.

Completing the outside of the phone are a music player button and a Memory Stick Pro Duo slot on the left spine, a camera control and a volume/camera zoom toggle on the right spine, and a dedicated power button and the infrared port on top. On the bottom of the phone is the port for both the charger and the headset, which means you can't connect two peripherals at the same time. The camera lens, flash, and self-portrait mirror are on the back of the phone just above three round speakers. As with the W800i, you can hold the W810i much like a real camera to take a picture.

Like other Walkman phones, the Sony Ericsson W810i is packed with features that will appeal to multimedia mavens, but we'll get the basics out of the way first. The phone book holds an impressive 1,000 contacts with room in each entry for five phone numbers; work title and company name; a birth date; additional notes; and e-mail, Web, work, and home addresses. You can save 250 more names to the SIM card. You can assign contacts to a caller group and pair them with a picture or one of 23 polyphonic (40-chord) ring tones for caller ID purposes. A vibrate mode, conference calling, voice dialing, and a speakerphone (usable only after you make a call) round out the calling options. Organizer features include an alarm clock, a calendar, a task list, a notepad, a calculator, a timer, a stopwatch, and a code memo for storing passwords and other secure information. And for the aspiring Linda Tripp, there's a recorder for both voice memos and calls; length is limited by available memory. Finally, as with the Sony Ericsson W600i, the camera flash doubles as a tiny flashlight. Though it's not suitable for finding your way through the woods at night, it's bright enough to help you find your keys in a dark room. Alternatively, you can set it to blink rapidly in SOS mode.
Business users shouldn't be disappointed with the W810's offerings. Inside, you'll find full Bluetooth for headsets and data transfers, an infrared port, text and multimedia messaging, e-mail support, USB cable support for data transfers, and PC syncing for contacts and other files. In addition to sending files or connecting to a headset, you can use the Bluetooth feature as a remote control to connect with another Bluetooth devices. An unusual twist, there's a newsreader for access to newsfeeds from around the world. Access to BBC World News and Wired News came with the phone, but you van download more feeds if you want them. The W180i also makes it easy to pass on your contact information by allowing you to beam an electronic business card with your vital data to a contact.

Music, of course, is the primary attraction on the W810i, and the player's features, controls, and interface are the same as on other Walkman phones, but they take a little acclimation. Opening the player takes you directly to the main menu, where you can organize music by artist, track name, or playlist. Settings include album/song shuffle and loop, Sony's Mega Bass, an equalizer, and stereo widening. Switching between the cell phone and the music player is seamless, as music automatically stops when you receive a call. Hang up and press the dedicated music key, and your song picks up from the point you left off. There's an airplane mode that lets you listen to your tunes in flight with the cell phone turned off, and you can minimize the player while using other functions. Again, you must download music from a PC with the included USB cable and Disc2Phone software, and the W810i doesn't support Bluetooth stereo profiles; Sony Ericsson says it will resolve the latter gripe, however, in near future models, so stay tuned.
Music capacity is limited by the available memory, but internal space is just 20MB--skimpier than we would have liked for a media phone and less than both the W600i and the W800i. And keep in mind, it's shared with other applications, so your actual storage space may be less. We recommend investing in a Memory Stick for extra space. Our test phone came with a 512MB card, but the slot can accommodate the newer 4GB Memory Sticks. What's more, we liked that you could see separate lists for files saved to the phone and the memory card. Fortunately, you can set tracks as ring tones. You can send tunes via e-mail, multimedia message, Bluetooth, or infrared port. You also get an FM radio with 20 presets, though you must use it with a headset (which acts as an antenna). You can set it to automatically scan and program Radio Data System info from stations that digitally broadcast their names and call letters, and you can use the radio as an alarm clock.
Though it has a 2-megapixel camera, the W810i takes pictures in just three sizes: 1,632x1,224, 640x480, and 160x120. As with the W800i, we expected more choices. That said, other options are plentiful. There are Normal, Panoramic, Frames, and Burst shoot modes; a 4X digital zoom; autofocus; a macro setting for close-up shots; night mode; a flash; a time-and-date stamp; a self-timer; Black and White, Negative, Sepia, and Solarize picture effects; white-balance settings; Normal and Fine picture-quality modes; and four shutter sounds, though no silent option. We especially liked that you can use the zoom at the highest resolution.

The MPEG-4 video recorder takes clips with sound to any length that the available RAM will permit. There's a choice of two resolutions--176x144 and 128x96--and editing features similar to the still camera's. To further channel your inner artist, activate the W810i's Photo DJ, where you can add one of six fun frames; rotate the shot's orientation; and use various image effects such as brightness, contrast, tint control, and photo marking. There's also a Video DJ, and if that doesn't satisfy, there are more picture, video, and multimedia editing options on the software CD, including QuickTime and Adobe Photoshop Album Starter Edition. When finished with your shots, you can save them to the phone or send them to friends. Photo quality was quite good for a camera phone, with sharp colors and little of the blurriness that we usually encounter. Videos, on the other hand, were choppy and pixelated.

You can personalize the W810i with a variety of themes, wallpaper, and screensavers. As always, you can purchase more options and ring tones from Sony Ericsson via the WAP 2.0 wireless Web browser. Alternatively, the phone comes with a Music DJ application for composing your own ring tones. Gamers can enjoy two Java (J2ME) titles, QuadraPop and JC Does Texas, with additional titles available for purchase. We were disappointed, though, that the W810i lacks the gaming controls found on the W600i.

We tested the quad-band (GSM 850/900/1800/1900; EDGE) Sony Ericsson W810i world phone in San Francisco using the Cingular network. Overall call quality was satisfactory, but we noticed static and patchiness on more than one occasion. While the random fade-outs didn't last more than a second or two and could be related to the network, the phone's audio performance didn't quite measure up to that of its Walkman phone brethren. On their end, callers didn't report problems, but they could tell we were using a cell phone. On the upside, however, there was plenty of volume.
Speakerphone calls were about the same, with a slight echo effect, but the volume level was surprisingly loud, even when the speaker sat face down on a table. We successfully paired the W810i with the Plantronics Explorer 320 Bluetooth headset for acceptable audio quality. We also used Bluetooth to connect to the Sony Ericsson W600i and easily passed photos between the two handsets. The EDGE connection was sufficiently speedy for transferring small files, but game downloads took a couple of minutes.

Using the included Disc2Phone software and USB cable (which also charges the phone), we tried loading 40.4MB of music on to our W810i. Transfer time was relatively slow at 3 minutes, 20 seconds for the entire selection, so you'll be in for a wait if you're trying to move your entire music library. Moreover, while the software was easy to set up and had a simple interface, it wasn't without its quirks. For instance, when exiting the software after transferring some music, the W810i didn't recognize that the USB transfer was no longer active. And when we disconnected the USB cable, the phone froze for a few seconds. On the PC side, it prompted us for a driver every time we plugged in the phone. Though we didn't need to reinstall the software with each use, it was a bit annoying. Criticisms aside, music quality was on a par with that of other Walkman phones: clear and crisp, though one transferred song had some very minor hiccups. The W810i won't replace a stand-alone MP3 player, but it does the job admirably for short stints.
The Sony Ericsson W810i has a rated talk time of eight hours and a promised standby time of 14.6 days. In our tests, however, we got a little more than six hours of talk-time battery life and 12 days of standby time. According to the FCC, the W810i has a digital SAR rating of 1.04 watts per kilogram.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Sony Erisson K850i

Sony Ericsson K850i should have been the best camera phone ever, with a 5 megapixel camera, xenon flash, autofocus & automatic lens cover.Features of the Sony Ericsson K850i include:
-3G video calling
-5 megapixel camera with xenon flash, autofocus, 16x digital zoom and automatic lens cover
-Video camera
-Display: TFT, 262,144-colour, 240 x 320 pixels (2.4 inches)
-Media player
-FM radio with RDS
-MP3/AAC ringtones
-Speakerphone
-Voice recorder
-Messaging: SMS, MMS, Email
-3D Java games
-Animated wallpaper
-Web browser, RSS feeds, blogging
-HSDPA
-Personal organiser functions
-Flight mode
-Vibration alert
-Memory: 40 Mbytes plus support for Memory Stick Micro™ (M2™) (up to 4 GB) and microSD™ format
-Connectivity: Bluetooth, USB mass storage, modem
-Quadband (GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900) plus 3G (UMTS 850 / 1900 / 2100)
-Size: 102 x 48 x 17 mm
-Weight: 118g
-Talktime: 3.5 hours (3G) - 9 hours (2G)
-Video calling: (3 hours, 20 minutes)
-Battery standby: 350 hours (3G) - 400 hours (2G)

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Sony Ericsson K660i

Sony Ericsson is keen to make its K660i stand out from its other mid-range handsets by emphasising its web-friendly set-up. The K660i isn't all about web browsing though; as is becoming standard for Sony Ericssons, you get a decent spread of functionality and applications to play with.

Although not Walkman-branded, the K660i has a re-skinned Walkman-style built in music player inside, with an FM radio too. A 2-megapixel camera is included on the back panel, while the 3G capability means you get a secondary video calling camera perched above the display on the front.

With the latest high-speed HSDPA 3G connectivity, browsing the internet or downloading content over the air is a short and sweet business - full music tracks or videos from a mobile operator's portal take just a few seconds to purchase and download (or stream) to your phone.

Web optimised controls
In truth, though, although Sony Ericsson puts the spotlight on the K660i's web orientated features, this model doesn't move the mobile surfing abilities of the Sony Ericsson range anywhere radically new, despite introducing some novel illuminated shortcut keys on the numberpad.

A similar well-equipped browser as the one employed on the W890i and other recent mid-tier Sony Ericssons is included on the K660i. You can view pages sideways, in full-screen landscape mode - the default option - with a user friendly launch page featuring Google search, while Google Maps and RSS feed support enhancing its mobile broadband-speed web abilities. A decent spread of options, but nothing new for Sony Ericsson.

Its online attributes are given a more prominent position in this handset's feature roster, however, thanks to those unique backlit browser buttons on the numberpad. They come into play when the browser is fired up, appearing in landscape orientation above the 3, 6, 9 and # keys, indicating shortcuts for address entry, bookmarks, homepage and for zoom-and-pan options.

These illuminated button shortcuts take their design cue from Sony Ericsson's Cyber-shot line, where they first appeared for highlighting camera controls. While these buttons on the K660i certainly steer the user more easily through the browser functionality, using keys for browser shortcuts is familiar stuff for Sony Ericsson owners who've read their user manuals properly - only the overt lighting up of keys as a guide is a first.

Design and handling
The design of the Sony Ericsson K660i gives it a certain stand-out quality. It's a regular candy-bar shaped phone, with a fairly average 104 x 47 x 15mm build, but it comes in striking colour combinations. The more sober version is black with a 'wine' coloured band across its control key-studded midriff, while another option is white with lime trimming across the front and sides. A touch of chrome edging sets the black version off nicely. The glossy plastic surface though is a real finger-print and grease magnet.

The numberpad is akin to the K810i's, with round keys well spaced and easily pressable. The control panel is similar to the recent W890i in basic layout, with conventional call and end keys on either side of the phone, and a main navigation D-pad surrounded by two softkeys, a clear key and a typical Sony Ericsson Activity Menu fast access button for useful functions and apps.

The D-pad is labelled up for quick key access to the web browser, although you can also program in other function shortcuts. Again, the buttons are nicely sized and responsive, giving standard menu navigation a smooth flow.

The browser operation is well implemented too, and it is novel getting the launch page automatically up in landscape mode. The 2-inch QVGA 262k-colour display does a decent job presenting pages, and as well as pan and zoom controls - so you can see a thumbnail of the whole webpage and focus in on the part you want to see - there is a regular zoom option to boost the size of any particularly small text or enlarge pics.

The launch page offers a Google search option, address bar input, plus option for RSS web feeds, plus a history list and links for Sony Ericsson download site. The illuminated web address input fast key brings up an address bar in portrait mode, which may seem odd until you realise it's designed to simplify using the text keys.

As we said earlier, the browser does nothing radically new but carries out the job pretty well, offering options for full webpages or mobile optimised Smart-Fit versions. HSDPA makes it suitably snappy too.

Music player
You get a fine music player on this phone, capable of a performance on a par with its Walkman phone stablemates. The supplied earphones provide a reasonable performance, but switch in some Walkman earphones or a higher quality headset via an adapter lead, and you get a noticeable improvement and a better balanced sound. Unlike Walkman earphones, there's no adapter included in the box, which is shame. You can though add Bluetooth stereo headsets.

The player interface on here is similar to the Walkman (apart from the colours used), with tunes organised in familiar categories - artists, albums, tracks, playlists, audio books and podcasts. An FM radio is also part of the spec, and Sony Ericsson's clever TrackID application is included too, helping you identify tracks you hear around you or on the radio by recording short samples and interrogating a database automatically to give you the answer.

Supplied Media Manager software and a USB cable help you manage tracks and sync with a PC, although drag and drop copying in mass storage mode is another option.
A 256MB Memory Stick Micro memory card is packaged with the phone, boosting the modest 32MB internal storage.

Camera quality
There's a dedicated camera button on the side for switching on the camera and capturing images in landscape mode. The 2-megapixel shooter here is one of Sony Ericsson's more average efforts, with no flash or autofocus system to boost performance. Pictures are acceptable though the detail is limited. Colour rendition is good on well-lit subjects but suffers in dark environments, where images are noisy and grainy. The camera system can struggle too in sharply differentiating subtle colour tone changes. But as a cameraphone snapper for basic shooting, it's acceptable if lighting is OK.

Sony EricssonK800i

The Sony Ericsson K800i, and its variant, the Sony Ericsson K790, are mobile phones of their class from Sony Ericsson. Launched in July 2006 (for the K800i in the UK market; others may vary), the phones are the successor to the Sony Ericsson K750i. Both of the phones feature a 3.2 megapixel digital camera complete with a xenon flash, a protective lens cover, and a new "BestPic" bracketing feature, and are the first to be tagged with the Sony Cyber-shot branding. The new "BestPic" feature takes 9 full quality snapshots of a subject in quick succession, allowing the user to choose the best shots from them. On the entertainment front, the phones have a media player supporting MP3, AAC/AAC+/eAAC+ and WMA music files and 3GP/MPEG-4 video files. The phones also feature a RDS FM radio, and a Memory Stick Micro (M2) slot for expandable solid state memory (up to 4GB). It is the phone used by James Bond in the 2006 Casino Royale film.

The difference between the two phones is that the K790 supports GSM and EDGE, while the K800 supports UMTS and GSM. As a result, the K800i features a QCIF (176X144) resolution front-mounted camera for 3G video conferencing. According to the official Sony Ericsson specifications (to be found on their website), the K800's talk time drops steeply from around 7 hours when using GSM to about 2 hours 30 minutes whilst using UMTS. A modified version of the K800i, the Sony Ericsson K810i, is available the software for this model can be "flashed" to the K800i. Its successor is the 5 megapixel Sony Ericsson K850i.

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Sony Ericsson

Sony Ericsson is a joint venture established on October 3, 2001 by the Japanese consumer electronics company Sony Corporation and the Swedish telecommunications company Ericsson to make mobile phones. The stated reason for this venture is to combine Sony's consumer electronics expertise with Ericsson's technological leadership in the communications sector. Both companies have stopped making their own mobile phones.
The company's global management is based in Hammersmith, London, and it has research & development teams in Sweden, Japan, China, Germany, the United States, India, Pakistan and the United Kingdom. By 2008, it was the fifth-largest mobile phone manufacturer in the world after Nokia, Samsung, LG and Motorola. The sales of products largely increased due to the launch of the Walkman and Cyber-shot series.