Sony Ericsson Vivaz Review part 3: Symbian OS and AppsMarch 18, 2010 at 11:18 am by Dan | In Mobile News, Mobile Phone Reviews, New Mobile Phones
Sony Ericsson have dabbled with Symbian devices in the pas, stretching way back to the P-Series which used Symbian UIQ. The current range however relies on Symbian S60 5th edition which is currently doing the rounds in the Sony Ericsson Satio and a number of touchscreen Nokia phones. For those of you who remember the software problems found on the Satio (which was later resolved with a software update), the Vivaz is sporting version 2.0 of Sony Ericsson’s implementation of Symbian and so the bugs that plagued the Satio’s launch are a distant memory. Sony Ericsson really couldn’t afford to drop the ball when it comes to quality and with the positive moves made in the build and design, these also appear to have been mirrored in the software. Powering up the Vivaz for the first time will present users with a home screen that is characterised by two blocks of icons; one at the top and one at the bottom of the screen. At the bottom is a large box that occupies the bottom third of the screen. Within it you’ll find four shortcut icons; one to bring up the dialler, a multimedia shortcut, messaging and a search tool which lets you search on the phone or online. Above these icons are your current profile (Silent, Meeting etc.), the time and date and your network provider. In the top right corner of the box is an arrow to maximise the box, revealing a music shortcut key. The Vivaz is of course a capable smartphone, multitasking with aplomb, so playing music in the background is a piece of cake with the track info and music player buttons added to the box at the bottom of the screen. This acts as a nice way of controlling your music player whilst still having an overview of all the other areas of the phone. Back to the tabs, the pre-set tabs on our Vivaz were, from left to right, favourite contacts, Twitter, the home screen tab, a quick view of your media player and lastly yet another shortcut area. This shortcut area hosts up to 8 shortcuts which are all user customisable. The shortcuts can be populated with pretty much anything on the phone, from Bluetooth to the pre-installed GPS software. Customising is a fairly simple affair; clicking on the shortcuts tab with reveal a settings icon and tapping on this will reveal the numbered shortcuts 1 through 8 and the applications currently occupying them. Tap on the shortcut you wish to change, choose the new shortcut and voila. The combination of tabs, the shortcuts within one of the tabs and the shortcut box at the bottom of the As a smartphone, the question everyone will be asking about the Vivaz is “what about the apps?” We have the iPhone to thank for this of course with its 100,000 + app store. Well, the Sony Ericsson Vivaz is supported by Sony Ericsson’s app store, known as PlayNow. Hitting the PlayNow icon in the main menu will open a web page to take you to the store. Here you can search for specific apps, sort by type (games, apps, music etc.) and check out the latest and most popular additions. There are a good range of apps on offer and the fact that Sony Ericsson include music make this feel more like a revamped iTunes than the app only experience you get with the Android Market. There is one minor drawback though; if you’re after free apps you’re not exactly spoilt for choice. Music tracks come in at £1 per track, games average around the £5 mark and even useless apps that would cost you nothing on an iPhone or Android phone will cost you big bucks here (£3.50 for a fart app, seriously!?). There are some free apps on, good ones at that such as Spotify, but we definitely need more of these to compete with the big names in the app world. The phone does also include some pre-installed apps such as Facebook, YouTube, the aforementioned Twitter client and a SatNav application called Wisepilot. Wisepilot offers users features such as route planning and general mapping and can also be upgraded to full voice guided navigation on a subscription basis. YouTube is a fairly straight forward app that takes you to a web portal of the popular video sharing site. A search bar lets you find exactly what you’re looking for whilst top rated, most viewed and latest tabs also ease navigation. Click on a video and it nicely zooms to full screen and loads almost instantly. The Facebook app is equally impressive letting you check profiles, upload photos and comment on friends photos. Navigation is quick and easy and the overall user interface is very similar to that found on the full site. Symbian on the Vivaz is impressive. The user interface is clean and easy to navigate and there are endless customisation options thanks to tabs and shortcuts on the home screen. If you’re new to Symbian you should pick it up fairly quickly and find yourself navigating like a pro. On the apps front, the preinstalled applications on offer are great and the app store is nicely populated, it would just be good to see more free apps coming through. Time will tell how the app community develops but the onus is on Sony Ericsson to make it work. Join us tomorrow for the final instalment of our review as we check out the web browser and multimedia and give our final thoughts on the Sony Ericsson Vivaz. Bookmark at:StumbleUpon | Digg | Del.icio.us | Dzone | Newsvine | Spurl | Simpy | Furl | Reddit | Yahoo! MyWeb Sony Ericsson Vivaz Review Part 2: HD Video!March 17, 2010 at 2:30 pm by Dan | In Mobile News, Mobile Phone Reviews, New Mobile Phones
Sony Ericsson are clearly very excited about the camera on the Vivaz. It is, after all, the company’s first phone to capture video in 720p HD and accordingly, the Vivaz has been given a dedicated video key. One press of the video button will automatically launch the video camera (though you can also fire it up from the main menu) and from here you’re presented with the viewfinder and the familiar column of options on either side of the frame. Starting on the left we have Night mode and Microphone which can be toggled on or off, Focus which can be switched from Auto to Infinite, Exposure rating which can be altered to various values and lastly an Auto mode which does exactly what it says on the tin, switching the phone to Sony Ericsson’s pre-set settings. On the right, we have three non-selectable icons which remind you of which settings you have in place (where videos are being saved to, video size and a video camera icon reminding you you’re recording video). Next to this is the exit key and below this is a quick play icon and a more settings button where you can set a timer, switch the video size, turn on the video light, alter the white balance Once you’ve got the camera settings to your liking, it’s simply a case of hitting the video button again to start recording. When set to 720p, video capture on the Vivaz is nothing short of stunning. Captured videos are smooth and free from choppy transitions, even when capturing moving objects. Video is great on the phone’s 3.2 inch display but all the more impressive when using the TV-Out feature; plug your Vivaz into your TV and watch back video clips worthy of a dedicated video camera. Sound quality is equally high making the whole playback experience a joy (something that the world’s first HD Video phone, the Samsung i8910 HD, struggled with). For most, selecting Auto for the camera settings will more than suffice but for those who love to tinker, you really can get some great results out of the Vivaz. The feature that you might of heard mentioned in relation to the Vivaz’s HD video capture is continuous auto focus. Selecting auto will simply set the lens in a fixed focus which is perfect for shooting video on stationary or still objects. If however you’re filming a moving object, select continuous autofocus (infinite) and the phone will continue to re-focus on whatever is in shot on the viewfinder, e Once you’ve recorded a clip and saved it (preferably to the memory card as 720p HD videos aren’t small!), it will automatically be added to your gallery. From here you can send via MMS (though good luck sending 720p HD clips as they’ll be far too large), Bluetooth or send to the web by posting on YouTube. To do this you’ll need to have a YouTube account set up (which is free and takes a matter of minutes) but once you’ve done this you’re just a few short taps away from posting your masterpiece online. Viewing your videos on the phone itself is nice as the video player app is stylish and easy to use. The only drawback to the whole video experience on the Vivaz is that there’s no way to edit your videos. There’s no cropping feature as seen on the iPhone 3GS or Palm Pre and no option to add or remove audio once a clip has been recorded. A minor gripe, and something that could easily be remedied by a software update in the future. On to the still camera and Sony Ericsson deliver excellent performance without springing too many surprises. The Vivaz boasts an 8.1 Megapixel camera that is bolstered by the likes of Smile and Face detection, an image stabiliser, autofocus and geo-tagging. The resulting photos are of excellent quality with little in the way of noise and bright, but more importantly, natural colours captured. The layout of the camera interface is a carbon copy of that found in the video app with the left side housing different scene, shot, focus and exposure settings as well as an auto mode for quick point and shoot photography. The right side again shows your current settings, a an exit and gallery icon and a more settings button that lets you play around with white balance, activate the image stabiliser and change image size. The camera on the Vivaz is one of the best 8 Megapixel camera’s we’ve used on a mobile phone, both in usability and the resulting images. There’s also options a plenty once you’ve captured that precious moment with the ability to upload, geo-tag, send, edit, set as a wallpaper or assign to a contact and much more. The only slight let down on the camera front becomes noticeable when taking photo’s in low light conditions. To compliment the HD Video camera, Sony Ericsson have included an LED Flash instead of the more powerful Xenon flash (LED can be used as a video light, Xenon can’t). Whilst this is great news for capturing video at night, it leads to some disappointing results when trying to take a photo. We’ve seen phones include both an LED and a Xenon Flash before (or at least include a dual –LED flash) so this shouldn’t have been beyond the realms of possibility with the Vivaz. Despite a few minor discrepancies though, the camera on the Vivaz is still superb. 720p HD Video is simply stunning and something we’ll definitely be seeing more of in 2010. The Vivaz could easily revolutionise mobile video sharing and we’ll put our money where our mouth is and bet that a large number of Vivaz users will be taking advantage of the YouTube upload feature. Check back on the blog tomorrow for part three of our review as we take a look at the Symbian operating system, Apps and customization. Bookmark at:StumbleUpon | Digg | Del.icio.us | Dzone | Newsvine | Spurl | Simpy | Furl | Reddit | Yahoo! MyWeb Sony Ericsson Vivaz Review Part 1: Design, Build & TouchscreenMarch 16, 2010 at 1:47 pm by Dan | In Mobile News, Mobile Phone Reviews, New Mobile Phones
The Vivaz, like so many other Sony Ericsson phones before it, started life with a rather kooky codename; Kurara. As the Kurara, the phone was outed in various leaks and sneak previews so by the time the phone was officially unveiled as the Vivaz we already felt we knew all there was to know about the phone before we’d even seen it in the flesh. We were very wrong though, as the design and build quality of the Vivaz is one of its strongest features. Employing Sony Ericsson’s new ‘Human Curvature’ design philosophy, the Vivaz is itching to be picked up The front of the phone is dominated by the 3.2 inch touchscreen display which does well to use most of the real estate on offer which is why the Vivaz is able to be so compact. Above the display, we find the earpiece and below is a curved strip of three hardware keys; call answer, end and menu. On the top of the phone we find the power button and on the right side, from top to bottom you’ve got a volume/ zoom rocker, video key and camera key. On the opposite side sits a Micro USB port which is used for both data connectivity and charging the phone (yay!) and puzzlingly a 3.5 mm audio jack. This is our only gripe with the design of the Vivaz. Whilst it’s good that Sony Ericsson have seen sense and added a 3.5 mm audio jack (rather than their own proprietary port), it seems an odd choice to put it on the side where the The Vivaz boasts a 3.2 inch resistive touchscreen capable of displaying 16 Million colours on screen. Visually the display on the Vivaz is excellent with bright vivid colours and sharp textures making the phone incredibly easy to use. This is also the case when using the phone outside as the Vivaz doesn’t seem to suffer at all in direct sunlight. Watching video, browsing the web and the phone’s many menus is a real feast for the eyes. The touchscreen also includes an accelerometer that not only handles rotating the screen in certain applications but also boasts intuitive features such as turn to mute calls and alarms. Usability of the touchscreen is competent though it does seem a shame that Sony Ericsson opted for a resistive unit rather than a capacitive touchscreen. Opting for the former rules out multi-touch and in turn nice features such as pinch-to-zoom. It also has an impact on the responsiveness and overall usability as you do need to be quite deliberate with your pokes and prods; simple swipes simply won’t cut it. Despite the disadvantages, using a resistive touchscreen does have its advantages most notably in the fact First impressions of the Vivaz are promising. The design and build quality of the Vivaz is second to none and Sony Ericsson’s Human Curvature ethos is something we hope will continue for many more phones to come. Join us tomorrow on the blog as we take a look at the all important HD video capture to see if it’s all it’s cracked up to be and also take a look at the still camera as well. Bookmark at:StumbleUpon | Digg | Del.icio.us | Dzone | Newsvine | Spurl | Simpy | Furl | Reddit | Yahoo! MyWeb Acer Liquid in stock now at Mobiles.co.uk!March 15, 2010 at 4:09 pm by Dan | In Mobile News, New Mobile Phones
The Liquid boasts a sumptuous 3.5 inch touchscreen display, capacitive so you can rest assured it will be ultra responsive to your various pokes and prods. Not only is it good to use, it’s also some what of a looker with bright vivid colours and sharp, clean lines. In addition to the gorgeous touchscreen display, the Liquid has an ace up its sleeve in the form of an LED notification panel on the top of the device. Aimed at keeping you up to date when the phone is in your pocket, small LED indicators instantly notify you of any incoming or missed calls, messages and battery levels without having to look at the main display. Not exactly revolutionary, just a nice touch that improves the overall usability of the Liquid. Inside, the phone is running Google’s Android operating system (in its version 1.6 guise) meaning you get a On the hardware front, the Liquid sports an impressive 5.0 Megapixel camera complete with autofocus, video capture and geo-tagging. GPS enables the aforementioned geo-tagging as well as mapping and satellite navigation apps (with Google maps ready out of the box and more available in the Android Market) and HSDPA and Wi-Fi connectivity keeps everything ticking along nicely when you take the Liquid online. On the multimedia side of things, the Liquid’s 3.5 inch display is perfect for watching videos and movies on the move whilst the addition of a 3.5mm audio jack and expandable memory up to 32GB also boost the phones music player credentials. The Acer Liquid is also given a generous helping of style with the cool LED notification panel on the top, classy touch sensitive shortcut keys and smooth clean lines meeting curved rounded edges making for a device that feels great in the hands and is incredibly light weight at just 135 g. In stock now and available on T-Mobile, the Acer Liquid is an exciting addition to the Android family. Click here to check out our range of fantastic offers on the Acer Liquid. Bookmark at:StumbleUpon | Digg | Del.icio.us | Dzone | Newsvine | Spurl | Simpy | Furl | Reddit | Yahoo! MyWeb Samsung explain Super AMOLED technology!March 11, 2010 at 12:51 pm by Dan | In Coming Soon Handsets, New Mobile PhonesOne of the stars of last months Mobile World Congress was undoubtedly the Samsung Wave, the super slim touchscreen phone that looks destined to bring smartphones to the masses. And without doubt, the standout feature was of course the amazing Super AMOLED display which was hands down the best screen we’ve ever seen on a mobile phone. But just what is it that makes this new Super AMOLED technology so super? Well, Samsung are on hand to educate us, kindly releasing the following video explaining the virtues of Super AMOLED over traditional AMOLED and TFT displays. Check it out for yourselves below and take our word for it that the Samsung Wave looks even better in the flesh. Samsung’s first SUPER AMOLED phone is set to launch in April which is only a matter of weeks away. Click here to register for updates and keep an eye on the blog for more information as soon as we get it. Bookmark at:StumbleUpon | Digg | Del.icio.us | Dzone | Newsvine | Spurl | Simpy | Furl | Reddit | Yahoo! MyWeb Sony Ericsson Vivaz - In Stock Now!March 10, 2010 at 12:47 pm by Mark | In Mobile News, Mobile Phones, New Mobile Phones
As mentioned in earlier posts, the Vivaz is built with Human Curvature in mind, meaning that it is not only one of the best looking handsets available today, but also one of the most comfortable to hold and use. Sporting a resistive touchscreen means the Vivaz will react to your swipes, pokes and prods whether it be with your finger or a make-shift stylus. Navigating the phone is simple, thanks to the Symbian OS which will be familiar to most that have used a Nokia or previous Sony Ericsson Symbian handset. The Vivaz’s party piece and it’s reason for being, is it’s camera, which it isn’t any ordinary unit. It’s an 8.1 megapixel unit, sporting an LED flash and face recognition. But what’s so special about that, i hear you ask? Well, we’ve neglected to mention until now, that the Vivaz is capable of recording videos in High Definition. As you’ve probably guessed, the Vivaz is the natural successor to the Satio and as far as we can tell, beats the Satio hands down in every respect unless you’re counting megapixels (which, as you probably know, doesn’t actually dictate how good a quality picture can be expected from a camera.) The Vivaz is a much better looking phone, easier to use, more responsive, offers more functionality and ultimately is perhaps everything the Satio should have been when it was originally released. Interested? Well, Click Here to see all of our best deals and to see the full specification and feature list you can expect from this phone. Bookmark at:StumbleUpon | Digg | Del.icio.us | Dzone | Newsvine | Spurl | Simpy | Furl | Reddit | Yahoo! MyWeb Nokia officially announce the C5!March 5, 2010 at 9:23 am by Dan | In Coming Soon Handsets, Mobile News, New Mobile Phones
Aesthetically, the C5 bears a striking resemblance to the 6300, one of Nokia’s most popular and successful launches in the companies history. Sporting a candybar form factor, the C5 boasts a large finger-friendly keypad and sharp 2.2 inch display. So on the outside, the C5 could easily be mistaken for yet another Nokia candy-bar feature phone but on the inside it’s a totally different story. The C5 runs Symbian series 60 pitching it as a fully functional smartphone only with a feature phone design, size and, most important of all, price. Download apps from Ovi Store, pull in Facebook status updates to your contacts list and launch instant messaging conversations from your home screen. As a Symbian smartphone, the C5 also benefits from Nokia’s free SatNav initiative with Ovi Maps pre-installed, offering free voice guided in-car and on foot navigation. The premium features don’t stop there. The C5 includes HSDPA connectivity ensuring the aforementioned app downloads and web browsing are lightening quick. Nokia have also found room for a 3.15 Megapixel camera with Flickr support, MP3 music player and FM radio, a 3.5mm audio jack, Bluetooth and expandable memory. Throw in up to 12 hours talk time and a staggering 26 days of standby and it’s obvious Nokia are on to a winner with the C5. Expected to launch in the second quarter of 2010, click here to register for updates and keep an eye on the blog for more information as soon as we know more. Bookmark at:StumbleUpon | Digg | Del.icio.us | Dzone | Newsvine | Spurl | Simpy | Furl | Reddit | Yahoo! MyWeb Nokia E63 In Stock Now!March 2, 2010 at 11:28 am by Mark | In Mobile News, Mobile Phones, New Mobile Phones
The E63 bears a striking resemblance to the handsets produced by the aforementioned fruity named manufacturer and joins the Nokia’s E72 as a QWERTY touting text-a-holics phone. The E63 is to the E72 what the 8520 Curve is to the Bold 9700, a simple, low-cost means of enjoying what has become one of the fastest growing markets out there, but none-the-less, a trully praise worthy phone within it’s own right; primarily because this handset offers so much for so little. Already mentioned is the QWERTY keypad, which is a four-row affair headed by answer/end call keys, a directional pad, selection key, two menu keys and shortcut keys for Home, Calendar/organiser, Contacts and Messaging. In addition to this the E63 has a 2.0 megapixel camera (With Flash) capable of capturing both images and videos, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and an ARM 11 369 MHz processor to make sure that the E63 can keep up with even the most die-hard of typers. Fancy having the functionality of the Blackberry Bold series, but don’t want the premium price tag associated with it? Well, then you’ll be happy to hear that you can have the Nokia E63, absolutely free, starting from £15 a month on an Orange Contract, which better yet, has unlimited texts included meaning you can fire off texts until your hearts content. Click here to see our deals and more information. Bookmark at:StumbleUpon | Digg | Del.icio.us | Dzone | Newsvine | Spurl | Simpy | Furl | Reddit | Yahoo! MyWeb HTC Desire available to pre-order at Mobiles.co.uk!February 26, 2010 at 1:14 pm by Dan | In Coming Soon Handsets, Mobile News, Mobile Phones, New Mobile Phones
The Desire is HTC’s in-house version of the Google Nexus One meaning what we get here is a stunning smartphone running the very latest version of Google’s Android operating system (v2.1 or Éclair for those still keeping count). In addition to the updated OS, the Desire (formerly known as the Bravo) also boasts HTC’s own Sense user interface which pulls in updates from Facebook and Twitter, updates your friends status in your contacts list, lets you upload photos to Flickr and offers seven customisable home screens. Add shortcuts, live web feeds and more to one of the home screens and flick between them or pinch on the screen to see all 7 screens at a glance. Powering the phone is a 1GHz Snapdragon processor which ensures flicking between home screens, launching apps and opening web pages is ultra smooth not to mention great looking on the stunning 3.7 inch AMOLED touchscreen. Capacitive technology allows for multi-touch which enables such features as pinch to zoom in the web browser and maps and also makes for one of the most fluid, responsive Throw in a 5.0 Megapixel camera, HSDPA and Wi-Fi connectivity, GPS and expandable memory up to 32GB and it’s easy to see why the phone is an early contender for phone of the year. Available to pre-order now on Vodafone and T-Mobile, click here to check out some of our fantastic tariffs. With first stock expected in the last week of March, pre-order yours now to be one of the first to get your hands on the incredible new HTC Desire. Bookmark at:StumbleUpon | Digg | Del.icio.us | Dzone | Newsvine | Spurl | Simpy | Furl | Reddit | Yahoo! MyWeb Sony Ericsson Vivaz available to pre-order!February 23, 2010 at 11:53 am by Hannah | In Coming Soon Handsets, Mobile News, Mobile Phones, New Mobile Phones
Running on the Symbian operating System, customise the phone to suit your personal needs. Download and install a range of different apps and create interactive shortcuts on the homepage to give you one touch access to all of your favourite and most relevant content, whether its your music player, photo gallery or social networking sites. The 8.0 megapixel camera with auto-focus, face detection and a powerful flash takes very impressive photos. Share your pics with your friends by email or upload them online onto blogs. The biggest and most impressive feature of the Vivaz however is the HD video capture. Record your special moments in brilliant high definition with 720p HD video recording. This video recording is simple to use, too. Give the dedicated video capture key one press and the camera will roll with continuous auto-focus, giving you absolute clarity in your results. With outstanding results you will not want to keep them to yourself on the Vivaz; share your work on YouTube and other sites online to boast to others! Also sporting a 3.2 inch touchscreen, built in Wi-Fi- HSDPA and GPS, the Vivaz looks as though it benefits from an overall package of great features. Available in both black and silver variants, stock is expected towards the end of next week. With great deals StumbleUpon | Digg | Del.icio.us | Dzone | Newsvine | Spurl | Simpy | Furl | Reddit | Yahoo! MyWeb |
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