Sony Ericsson XPERIA X1 review
Now that we’ve had some time to spend with the XPERIA X1, we’re going to break down the various features and give you our in-depth review. We’ll continue to update this post as we use the device more, but it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to understand what’s at hand — a brand new Sony Ericsson XPERIA X1! Full review is after the jump. Pictures will be added shortly.
Screen:
With a 800×480 VGA screen, you can’t really go wrong right? Right. We’ve got to say off the top that this is the best-looking screen we’ve ever seen on a Windows Mobile device. It puts all the others to shame. It’s not just that the screen has an amazing resolution, it’s that the screen is vibrant and clear as day. If your vision isn’t top notch you might have to increase the font size in settings because it gets a little small with that super high-res. Sunlight couldn’t phase it either as we had no problem using it on the go outside.
Audio quality
We didn’t put the speakers through our normal tests just yet to be honest. We tried a couple MP3s and they sounded good, not great. The speaker volume in general could have been a little louder and the sound could have sounded a little fuller. Speakerphone was the same. We’ll report back with more detailed findings.
Notification lights
If you’ve seen the Sidekick LX, you’ll know what we’re talking about. There are 4 independant notification lights on the four corners of the X1. These are LED lights that change through various colors. Unlike the Sidekick, you have complete control over the notification settings. Only want people to think you’ve got a UFO in your pocket when you’re getting a text message? No problem. There’s a lot to choose from to suit your own needs. The lights offer a nice touch and weren’t too over-powering and bright which we were afraid of. The kids will love it.
Call quality
Calls came in and out with crystal clear quality. The ear speaker was plently loud and the party on the other end said we sounded like we were on a land line.
Data Connectivity
Name something you’d like to see in a mobile device… HSDPA? Wi-Fi? GPS? The X1 has all of it. T-Mobile USA lovers will also be overjoyed at the fact that an AWS 1700MHz version is coming. Our unit had the 850MHz/1900MHz US 3G bands so we were rockin’ over HSDPA just fine. In fact, web browsing was abnormally fast. We didn’t find much of a difference between browsing over Wi-Fi or HSDPA. That’s probably due to the bottleneck of the phone in general, but it was a pleasant surprise.
Build quality
Another winner for Sony Ericsson. While the device isn’t the lightest phone on the market, we think it’s build quality is almost second-to-none. Maybe even iPhone status. It’s just so sturdy and well put together. We have to give HTC some mad props on this one. Could you please try and incorporate some of this newfound metal addition into some of your devices HTC? Please. The sliding mechanism was fantastic even though the device isn’t a normal “flat” slider. Major points for build quality.
Usability factor
This could be subjective depending on your view of Windows Mobile, but we found the X1 to be on par or better than any Windows Mobile device we’ve used. Baring the keyboard issue, (see below) there wasn’t anything that hindered us from taking full advantage of the device. When closed, the device gives you access to all necessary shortcuts on the bottom front of the unit. Slide it open and you’ve got access to everything you could want. People have wrote us and asked about how it is to use the phone when the QWERTY keyboard doesn’t have directional keys, but they’ve overlooked something — the optical joystick. This works wonderfully well and doesn’t have a learning curve. It’s a natural extension of what we’ve been forced to use in the past. There was a “cursor” menu in settings but no cursor showed up on the screen. You also have full control over the sensitivity of the optical joystick. Making phone calls was comfortable and we didn’t have any issues with people hearing us or us hearing them.
Keyboard
The keyboard is a sensitive area for many people. Anyone who follows us know we take it very seriously — we put them all through the ringer! So, it pains us to report, that at least with our particular unit, the keyboard wasn’t great. It didn’t take time to get used to it, it just didnt perform like the way we had hoped. The reason is because the keys almost are completely flush with the case and don’t give good tactile feedback when pressed. Odly enough, the spacebar was actually ok. It faired the best out of all of them. We understand why there really is no travel in the keys — there is a huge sliding mechanism right over them — but we would have liked to see a little more feedback when typing. They have this triangular pattern on top which does make it easy to feel them, but you don’t get a good response when actually pressing them down. The backlight on the QWERTY ‘board successfully helped us find the keys when it was nightime, but that still didn’t help when typing. We said this before, but if we had to compare the keyboard to anything, it would be Sony’s UX-series computers. It’s the same exact thing.
Tags: GPS, HSDPA, review, Sony Ericsson, UMTS, Wi-Fi, Windows Mobile, X1, xperia









BG, are you absolutely certain a NA1700 GSM model is real?
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Comparison pics would some other handsets would be much appreciated.
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Ditto on the request for more information on its responsiveness and the fluidity of things like panels and web site navigation. I’m looking forward to this phone but I’m not all that confident that the slow software response other reviews have mentioned will truly be fixed once this thing is out of beta.
Additionally, am I nuts for hoping there’s fluid touch screen control over the browser, ala the iPhone’s multi-touch? That’s such an important feature for me that it’s the only thing keeping me from definitely choosing this.
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it won’t have the pinch and pull zooming effect that the iPhone has but
Installing opera 9.5 when its released will probably be the closest you’ll get to desktop-like browsing…other than the iPhone
It has kinetic scrolling and double tap zoom like safari…so u shouldn’t have a problem with the browser
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BG
Is Windows Media Player the only media player that the X1 has?
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Thanks for the mini review man, I hope you will extend it soon.
Missing (except all those already mentioned in other comments):
- Exact details of hardware reported in Settings
- …along with versions
- Some performance tests (screen rotation, video playback, the panels never got a mention etc.)
- Package contents
- Seen a Diamond? Compared to it? (except keyboard of course)
and many more things you find in normal reviews. It was a nice quick article, but hope it gets much more detailed soon.
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Great review! Is the keyboard the only means to input text or can a stylus be used?
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was UMTS 1700mhz. really dropped??!??!
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@ JGF
yes the phone has a stylus and an optical joystick used for input on the device along with the touchscreen and keyboard
i dont know why BG didnt mention the stylus..thats very important to a lot of people
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how’s the browser?
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First a question I forgot:
Is the optical pad ALSO a five way pad? (i.e. except the touch properties it is also pushable?)
And about two of the questions I read from others (and for some reason both are at least twice posted):
- Why wouldn’t it have a stylus? How else would you control a WM Professional device? In any WM Pro, stylus is the primary means of control and all others secondary.
- I don’t get the question people ask about the browser. Xperia’s WM Internet Explorer is like the WM Internet Explorer every other VGA phone (only this will be even better with its 160 extra pixels wide) that has a high speed connection to internet (HSDPA or WiFi or even USB to host computer). So I don’t get the question. If people want a better browser, there are numerous third party extras, even Opera (that seems to get lot of publicity lately) or whatever you can run on any WM device.
OK, reading a bit about the site, I see it is not a WM dedicated site, so I suspect there are people here that don’t know what a WM Professional device is, thus making those questions. If people that haven’t used a WM want to make the move, better check out such a device first, because it is a love or hate relationship. Learn what it is (Google is your friend), play with one a bit, then make the right questions. (like battery life, some asked here, or RAM size etc.) No offense to anybody.
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What about battery life ? and how is the 3.2 MP camera compared to the new 5.0 MP from sony or other brands.
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i wonder if they will release a non-keyboard version of this…. i dont really want a keyboard and definitely dont want one if its as bad as BG says…..
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Any chance of a comparison with the Rafael?
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Hey BG don’t leave us hanging like this man >_<…
Oh and for those that keep asking, the panel UI was not included in the pre-production unit. At least that is what many sites are saying/suggesting.
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@NLS
Yes the optical pad is able to push…u can scroll over it kinda like a lap top mouse
Or u can press the joystick keys that surround it and navigate up,down, right and left
@frank
The battery is 1500mAh or so…that’s about 800 hours of standby time and about 6 1/2 hours of talk time
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/drool
i want this phone so badly.
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I glad they are supporting AWS bands. I’m definitely getting this phone for T-Mobile since I live in NYC.
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its not going to tmobile
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Why isnt it going to T-mobile didnt BG just say it might and it will support theyre frequencies?
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YES it is
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LOL no its not guy
Trust
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Yes it has the T-mo 1700 band. I’ will defenetly be getting this phone even if t-mo does not carry it. Will be nuying unlocked
!
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When is this coming out? I hope T-Mobile picks it up…
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Sony X1 comes out in September…
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