Sony Ericsson Xperia Play (commercial)
- February 4th, 2011
Archive for the ‘ Sony Ericsson ’ Category
The Sony Ericsson Xperia Arc features a 1GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon processor, a 4.2-inch (854 x 480) touchscreen display, an 8-megapixel camera with flash and HD video capture, the Android 2.3 (Gingerbread) OS and a slim contoured body measuring 8.7mm at its thinnest point.
SOURCE gagadgetvideo
Sony Ericsson Yendo has a 2.6-inch touchscreen (240 x 320 pixels) and the same user interface found on the X8 and X10 mini. Still, the Yendo will bring along all that you love about Sony Ericsson’s Walkman phones, including the Walkman player, TrackID and PlayNow, as well as features like a 2MP camera and 156MHz processor.
Below the screen there’s only a back key, while on the left side you’ll find a microUSB port. On the upper right is the volume rocker, while on the top are the power/lock key and 3.5mm headset jack.
SOURCE http://www.youtube.com/user/secommunity
The PlayStation Phone is sporting a 1GHz Qualcomm MSM8655, 512MB of RAM, 1GB of ROM, and the screen is in the range of 3.7 to 4.1 inches.

The device is being built by Sony Ericsson.
SOURCE engadget.com
The Sony Ericsson Vivaz is a Symbian OS touchscreen phone with an 8-megapixel camera and has its focus spread to multiple functions, photography, HD video recording, music playback and internet connectivity. The camera is located on the back, together with the LED flashlight. It is not covered by any special slider. The resistive touchscreen has 3.2-inch with a 360×640 resolution and below the touchscreen are three buttons.
SOURCE phonedog
The Sony Ericsson Xperia X8 looks to be similar to the Xperia X10 and will run Android with Sony Ericsson’s customizations, primarily the excellent Mediascape and Timescape apps. This brand new phone will be powered by a 600 MHz processor. It will also be coming with a 3.0-inches TFT capacitive touch screen (320 x 480 pixels) with 16 Million colors support, a scratch-resistant surface that will protect the touch screen, a 3.2 -megapixel camera and an accelerometer sensor for UI auto-rotate. Other features it will have are HSDPA and Wi-Fi connectivity, 128 MB RAM and a microSD card that will be supporting up to 16GB.
SOURCE SonyEricssonDev
The Sony Reader Pocket Edition PRS-350SC with 5.7 x 4.1 x 0.33-inch is quite the cutie compared to the 7.5 x 4.8 x 0.33-inch Kindle.
After you get over the petiteness of the device, the impressive feel is the second thing you’ll notice. The aluminum clad reader feels incredibly solid, and its plastic edges seem to give it a bit of protection. Ports-wise, Sony’s kept the Reader fairly bare – there’s a mini USB jack on the bottom edge, a power switch along the top and a stylus ejects from the right side. You have to step up to Sony’s Touch or Daily Editions to get the SD card, MemoryStick and 3.5mm headphone jacks.
There’s really no surprises when it comes to the performance of the 5-inch 800 x 600-resolution, 16-level gray scale E Ink Pearl display. The page turns are faster than the previous generation, but in our side-by-side comparison with the new Kindle, Amazon’s solution was a hair faster to turn pages in most cases. In all honesty, the difference is really minimal, and not enough of a reason to pick one over the other. Still there’s a short flicker when you turn pages, and as expected, the display is quite crisp and readable indoors and out.
Sony Corporation announced the commercialization of two new “Exmor R” back-illuminated CMOS image sensors with dramatically improved photographic performance including significantly high sensitivity and low noise. In addition, Sony will launch two new lens modules equipped with these image sensors, which also include the smallest and thinnest model for mobile phones. This is also the first time that “Exmor R” is commercialized for the use in mobile phones.

IMX081PQ is world’s first type 1/2.8 back-illuminated CMOS image sensor which realizes 16.41 effective megapixel resolution, and adopts the industry’s smallest unit pixel size of 1.12μm
SOURCE sony.net