The Sony Xperia J is
another smartphone in the Japanese firm's new series of handsets which
carry on the design ethos of the late Sony Ericsson Xperia Arc and Xperia Arc S.
Sony
is pitching the Xperia J as a smartphone which offers "a stand-out
screen size for consumers looking to combine great style with
affordability".
We reckon Sony has got it right in terms of
design, with the curved, rubberised back of the Xperia J fitting snugly
into our hand, and the body feel solid and well built. It looks very similar to its bigger brother, the Sony Xperia T,
which sports the same design, however the Xperia J allows you to whip
off the back cover, allowing you to access the full-sized SIM port,
micro SD card slot and the huge 1,750mAh battery – which should keep you
going all day long. The
Xperia J sports a 1GHz single-core processor, 512MB of RAM and a
4-inch, 480 x 854 TFT display, which sees it fit in between the Xperia P and Xperia U from Sony's NXT range.
The bright, clear 4-inch screen displays Android 4.0.4 Ice Cream Sandwich well, with the Xperia UI slapped over the top, and text and images appear sharp and easy to see.
The
Xperia J runs Ice Cream Sandwich smoothly and although it may not be as
quick as the higher powered Xperia T, it is by no means a slouch, and
we didn't encounter any unexpected lag or slow down. There
is around a second wait when opening apps, but this isn't long enough
to cause concern or irritation, however we did find the camera app did
take two to three seconds to load up.
The Sony Xperia J offers you
the stock Android keyboard, which is relatively easy to type on thanks
to the 4-inch display giving us enough room to hit the right keys, and
although it's not perfect, we could happily tap out emails and messages
on it. To
help you snap photos with the 5MP rear camera there's a single LED
flash on the back of the Xperia J, and within the app you also get
auto-focus, a handful of scene modes and exposure adjusments – all of
which are easy to access and understand.
The auto-focus does take a
little time to settle, and if you are quick on the shutter button there
can be around a three second delay as the focus sorts itself out,
meaning you won't be able to snap in quick succession. There's
also a front facing, VGA quality camera on the Xperia J which can be
used for video calls, or the odd vanity check, but with the low quality
we'd recommend sticking with the 5MP offering on the back for taking
photos with.
Unlike the Xperia T there's no physical camera button
on the side of the Sony Xperia J, but you do get a power/lock key and
volume rocker switch located at the top of the right side, which are
easy to hit when the phone is held in one hand. Video
playback was acceptable for a mid- to low-end smartphone, although we
did feel colours were a little washed out, but you could still quite
easily watch a movie on the Sony Xperia J, with the lightweight (124g)
body and its rubber back making it comfortable to hold for extended
periods.
Music lovers will be pleased to learn that Sony has
included its Walkman player app on the Xperia J, which we found to be an
intuitive and attractive way of managing all your tunes, and with
Sony's xLoud technology on board audio played through the rear speaker
is louder and less distorted than on other, similarly priced handsets –
meaning you can really annoy people on bus. There's
no word on pricing other than "affordable", but we hope the Xperia J
will land at around the £200 (around $310) mark, putting it head to head
with the HTC One V and slightly beefier Orange San Diego.
The
Sony Xperia J release date is currently unconfirmed, but we've been
told it will make its way into stores during the final quarter of 2012.
Early Verdict
The
Xperia J is certainly a good looking handset, but we can't help but
feel it's going to be outclassed by the Orange San Diego in the price
bracket we expect Sony to put it in.
To say you're offering an
affordable smartphone with a good screen and then pricing it the same as
a handset with not only a beefier processor and camera, but also a
higher-res screen, seems like a strange way to go.
That said the
Sony Xperia J is still a decent handset and if you're taken by the
design, choice of four colours (black, gold, white and silver), and Ice
Cream Sandwich out the box then you can't go too wrong with this mid- to
low-range smartphone.
This Experia Full specifications :
GENERAL
Network
GSM 850 / 900 /
1800 / 1900 HSDPA 900 / 2100
LAYAR
Tipe
TFT
capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
Ukuran
480
x 854 pixels, 4.0 inches (~245 ppi pixel density), Multitouch up to 2
fingers, Corning Gorilla Glass, Timescape UI, Sony Mobile BRAVIA Engine
via
Java MIDP emulator, Fitur tambahan: Stereo FM radio with RDS, - SNS
integration - 50 GB of Cloud storage (time limited offer) - Active noise
cancellation with dedicated mic- Document viewer - Voice memo/dial -
Predictive text input
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