The 4.2-inch screen is bright and lucid, though we'd warn against expecting too much from the Bravia Reality Display marketing. As we've mentioned before, the display enhancements only kick in when you're consuming multimedia. Still, general performance looks more than satisfactory. Hard buttons around the body are well arranged and designed, a contrast from the fiddly keys we found on the Xperia Pro. What was consistent with the rest of Sony Ericsson's Xperia crew, however, was the Arc's inability to execute its pinch-to-zoom widget summary screen. It's an ambitious function -- gathering all your widgets from each screen into one cohesive overview -- but, basically, it's laggy as hell. Aside from that, general UI responsiveness could also stand some improvement, but we like where Sony Ericsson is going with the whole thing. If it keeps up its promise to repent from last year's sins with relation to Android updates, the company has a very good chance of striking it rich with the Xperia Arc. It's a phone that can truly get by on its looks alone. Video after the break!
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Monday, February 14, 2011
Sony Ericsson Xperia Arc preview
The 4.2-inch screen is bright and lucid, though we'd warn against expecting too much from the Bravia Reality Display marketing. As we've mentioned before, the display enhancements only kick in when you're consuming multimedia. Still, general performance looks more than satisfactory. Hard buttons around the body are well arranged and designed, a contrast from the fiddly keys we found on the Xperia Pro. What was consistent with the rest of Sony Ericsson's Xperia crew, however, was the Arc's inability to execute its pinch-to-zoom widget summary screen. It's an ambitious function -- gathering all your widgets from each screen into one cohesive overview -- but, basically, it's laggy as hell. Aside from that, general UI responsiveness could also stand some improvement, but we like where Sony Ericsson is going with the whole thing. If it keeps up its promise to repent from last year's sins with relation to Android updates, the company has a very good chance of striking it rich with the Xperia Arc. It's a phone that can truly get by on its looks alone. Video after the break!
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The UI looks very laggy, unlike HTC's Sense. I doubt it'll be faster on March.
ReplyDeleteseekwolf 16 minutes ago
ReplyDelete"can it go down to 3 or 2 home screens?" "uhhh no but look it has pinch to zoom"
IceBeam 21 minutes ago
ReplyDeleteHm, the one who is supposed to get Honeycomb.
Sony must have some REALLY impressive products here, even Engadget is running almost as many stories on them as the iPhone coming to Verizon (which was 14 on the day of the announcement)!
ReplyDeleteIs it me or are these phones completely ugly
ReplyDeleteStop me if I'm speaking nonsense, but I notice a lot of heavy criticism lately for the new SE phone models.
ReplyDeleteI think we're all a little spoiled and expect year 2021 designs these days. Hopefully the higher-ups see these comments and raise the bar a bit more. I'm sorry. :P
So many people complaining about lag on Sony phones? Yes TimeScape and MediaScape are a bit slow but you don't have to use them. EVERY Android phone I have used including a stock Nexus One running 2.2 eventually becomes laggy. HTC Sense is not that fast. I tried a Galaxy tab and it was laggy. A 1 GHz CPU should be more than enough to make a phone OS run fast so I guess it is just a problem with Android.
ReplyDeleteWhy SE have only 3 buttons vs everyone else has 4 buttons?
ReplyDeleteI like how everyone is probably basing their laggy observations off of when she pulled all the widgets together on one page. Which is a function that would come in handy pretty much never. General use seems fine enough to me
ReplyDeleteIn a perfect world, we would have this sexy outfit wrapping the internals of the Moto Atrix...but we don't live in a perfect world...so I'll take ugly but fast...I'll take the Atrix. I'm sorry bro, you can convince yourself all you want, but this phone is just too ---- lagy.
ReplyDelete