Review of Sony Ericsson Xperia Pro Android Smartphone

Sony Ericsson as a company undergoes a small change, one would expect their devices to do it well. Unfortunately this is not the case, but never really a general concern for users to take issue with much of the SE equipment with the functionality and style. The same can be said about the recently launched Xperia Pro. Here is a look.

Form Factor
Available in three colors - silver, black and red with a chrome rim and a beautifully smooth slide-out QWERTY keyboard, Xperia Pro receives high scores in the design segment. It has a 3.7-inch LED backlit LCD with capacitive touchscreen (480 x 854 pixels) Mobile Sony Bravia Engine to improve the color, brightness and contrast. All in all, it makes for crystal clear viewing in all lighting conditions. The scratch resistant screen was much more adamant about keeping away scratches compared to the Xperia Arc. Android's return home and menu buttons at the bottom of the screen in the form of three physical buttons that are still soft to the touch for activation.


Have had the ability to handle all three colors, it seems that SE has made a slight faux pas in light and shadows of the keyboard fuse model. Stripped of a sensor to adjust the backlighting of the keys to activate and leave them on when the keyboard is out because of light staining of the handset keys are not clearly visible in bright light. This is not the case with dark designs. If you are versatile enough with QWERTY-style, it does not matter a bit like the keyboard, with some space keys are soft, well distributed, provide quick and comfortable typing.

The lack of a hot swap slot for microSD cards is a bit of a problem, but because SE bundles an 8GB card to find a reason to ever remove the card will be difficult. The USB port is square at the top of the handset (a good thing) with a micro-HDMI port on the right above the camera button (bottom) and the volume rocker. The 3.5 mm handsfree connector on the left side above the power / screen lock key


Xperia Pro is designed for both style statement and a simple but effective use to be and do it with a sense of elegance and class.

Features and Performance
Interface

Runs under the hood of the Xperia Pro is a 1 GHz Snapdragon processor that SE has managed to make very effective use. The UI is super literally fought with apps that will directly open to the slightest touch of a finger or gesture. Screen rotation was calm and was free and so was based gesture control of parts of the UI and Anroid 2.3 aka Gingerbread. It scored well in benchmarks and with a score of 37.5 in a single thread running Linpak and 33.8 in multithreaded run.


Sony Ericsson's custom Android UI, but apparently not well designed to smooth on a wide range of smartphones we've tested. But it was not the case with Xperia Pro. The course as an alternative UI Launcher Pro worked so much better in terms of usability. Timescape is also part of the package, and a new UI widget name, type and send you exactly what it says and even make your post to social networks or e-mail is very convenient. Áðáó File Manager also for folders.

Media
Audio options include EQ presets and an option called xLOUD designed to stimulate production through the internal speakers. But the sound quality is top notch, and the rather comfortable hands-free devices that were identified included the advantage. The tone quality is very well balanced and distortion at maximum volume is vanishingly small but non-existent with a higher end quality earphones. An FM radio is also subject, and while it may not be the best reception in some areas, overall it was a non-issue. Unfortunately, the Xperia Pro codec does not support AVI files, so you need a third player or Mobo Rock Player. This 720p files in almost any video format can be played seamlessly.


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