Sony Ericsson Xperia X8 Review – Hands on with the Sony Ericsson Xperia X8 Midrange Android Smartphone
Monday
Feb 7, 2011
I’ve always admired Sony Ericsson mobile phones for their design. Sony is, after all, known for its excellent styling and features. The Sony Ericsson Xperia X8 smartphone subscribes to this ideal, with more of a Zen type styling that Sony Ericsson’s newer smartphones are known for.

The X8 is actually my first try at an Android phone (coming from an iPhone and a Symbian S60 phone) and I must admit there was a bit of adjustment, although the learning curve is not that steep. Sony Ericsson loaned me a review unit sometime back, and I spent a few weeks (months, actually) playing around with the phone. Android is highly customizable, although it will take a bit of getting used to if you’ve been using other smartphones previously.
What’s in the box

The Sony Ericsson X8 is a midrange mobile phone that runs on the now-popular Android operating system. It sports a scratch-resistant 3-inch capacitive touchscreen at 320×480 resolution. The phone is powered by a 600 MHz ARM processor, and has 128 MB internal storage, 168 MB RAM, and is bundled with a 2 GB microSD card. The box also comes with a user guide.
J. Angelo Racoma is a technology journalist and blogger. See more of his blog posts here at racoma.com.ph, commentaries at racoma.net, and Twitter feed at @jangelo.Sony Ericsson arc Announced at CES; Sony Ericsson’s Thin Xperia arc Smartphone runs Android 2.3 & Features Mobile BRAVIA Engine
Thursday
Jan 6, 2011
Sony Ericsson is known for its quality design and built. Last year’s Xperia X10 and X8 were formidable Android smartphones, and this year, Sony Ericsson is introducing the Xperia arc at CES 2011.

The SonyEricsson Xperia Experience – First Thoughts
Friday
Nov 7, 2008
I recently received a review unit of SonyEricsson’s latest Xperia X1 Smartphone. As a disclosure, SonyEricsson has actually given me the uniit gratis, meaning it’s a review model, but I don’t have to return it ever (like some other laptops, cars, planes and boats I’ve reviewed). Thanks to Buensalido & associates (SonyEricsson’s PR agent) and Mad Crowd Media, who selected the Xperia recipients–four from the blogosphere and about 10 from traditional media.
I know about the implications of reviewing stuff given for free, but let’s leave that to another discussion, like a post I started on Performancing.
First impressions
And so my first impression of the Xperia is, of course wow! It’s been a long time since I owned a SonyEricsson phone, and boy have they gone a long way. Sony has always been great at style, and they’ve styled this phone well. The phone comes in a brushed-metal (aluminum) casing, which is sure to be durable and stylish at the same time. One look at this phone and you would think it means business.
Hardware
The Xperia takes the form factor of a slider phone, but the sliding mechanism is not what you would normally see with phones like Nokia’s N-series, with a numeric keypad revealing when you slide the screen up vertically. The Xperia slides sideways (when the phone is standing right side up) and reveals a QWERTY keyboard. So the screen actually slides up when the phone is lying down on its side.
This form factor is common in the American market, I would think, with the popularity of email there, and with their preference for typing SMS through QWERTY rather than multitap or T9 (T9 being my preferred method). This makes the phone difficult, if not impossible, to use one-handed while typing on the QWERTY keypad.
Out of the box, the Xperia is designed to be as pleasant to use as possible. The package includes a USB cable, which doubles as the charger when plugged into the mains-to-USB adaptor, stereo earphones with mic, and an extra stylus.
What’s great with the earphone is that the mic attachment plugs into the Xperia using a special 3.5-inch plug. But the earphone extension comes with a regular 3.5-inch plug, which means you can plug in other, possibly better, earphones to listen to music.
The Xperia comes with a 1500 mAH battery pack, which usually lasts me a day of regular use–WiFi turned on all the time, some 3G use and web browsing and replying to emails. I wouldn’t trust these kinds of phones to last longer than a day and a half because of the high power requirements of the hardware. So don’t leave home without the charger or at least the USB cable, which can charge the phone when plugged into a computer.
The phone’s touch screen is a bit on the small side, at three inches. The iPhone, for instance, gives more screen real estate. But the Xperia has a resolution of 800×480, which is actually the resolution of my old seven-inch netbook (the Asus EeePC 701) so I think that’s sharp enoguh. This might cause those with less than perfect eyesight to have to strain from the small text.
The screen is really bright, though, and very usable even when under direct sunlinght. The phone also features adaptive lighting, which adjusts the brightness of the screen and the keypad to match ambient lighting.
Software
The Xperia’s main feature is its touch-screen interface. This is a highlight of Windows Mobile phones, and shares much of the interface features of its Windows Mobile-powered PDA brethren such as the HP iPAQ and the like. This can be an advantage for people who are used to Windows Mobile or Windows CE (wince?). But for those who are used to Symbian, there might be a bit of a learning curve. Do note that previously SonyEricsson used Symbian series 90 in its smartphones.
As for me, I come from the Symbian Series 60, but I’m not entirely alien to Windows Mobile. The main advantage of using Windows mobile is that it’s supposedly easier to sync with Windows-powered computers and over corporate servers that run Microsoft exchange. Email setup is a cinch, especially if you use Outlook. For folks like myself who run everything off Gmail, the phone’s built-in Internet Explorer browser is fine. Actually, the phones comes bundled with Opera Mobile, which is, in my opinion, a better mobile browser.
Connectivity
The Xperia has a plethora of connectivity options, including the now-common GPRS, but the phone features 3G and HSDPA (or 3.5G) and even HSUPA for higher-speed broadband access. You can also connect to your home or office network, or public hotspot using the built-in WiFi radio, which can help save money, in case your data plan is not unlimited. The Xperia X1 also has BlueTooth EDR and even Infrared, in case you plan to go old school and beam up contacts and files to other folks who still have Infrared.
There are some gripes, though, when it comes to the WiFi connection interface. With the Symbian Series 60, I’m able to tell the system to ask me where to connect each time it needs to connect. That way, my phone (a Nokia E51) does not needlessly connect to the cellular network when there are other options, or when I simply don’t want to connect. With Windows Mobile 6.1, apparently the system does the thinking for you and automatically connects to the Internet via the cellular network when no WiFi access points are detected. For instance, you have Skype for WM turned on, but you leave the hotspot you’re currently connected through. The phone will automatically log in via cellular, or whichever network is available.
This is actually a feature, as it guarantees uninterrupted Internet connection. But the software does not give you an option to do otherwise.
You can find yourself bleeding money from being logged in to your cellular provider’s 3G network even when you’re not actually using the phone’s Internet capabilities, and even when your phone’s just in your pocket. In contrast, Symbian will ask explicitly where to connect before it does any connecting.
More to come
There’s more to come, as I publish my experiences with the SonyEricsson Xperia X1 in the next few days.
J. Angelo Racoma is a technology journalist and blogger. See more of his blog posts here at racoma.com.ph, commentaries at racoma.net, and Twitter feed at @jangelo.

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