Sony Ericsson Yendo Walkman Mobile

Sony Ericsson has announced its first full touch Walkman phone that is called the Yendo that combines music, social networking and communication in one colourful phone. The phone includes the four-corner touch UI found on the Xperia X10 and X10 mini pro and comes with the Touch Walkman player, Touch TrackID and PlayNow functions.

The Yendo features a 2.6-inch 320×240 touchscreen display, a 2 Megapixel camera, Bleuetooth and 3.5mm audio jack. It is pre-loaded with facebook, orkut and twitter applications. The handset supports GSM/EDGE 850/1900 and 900/1800 networks. It will be released in Q3 in Black, Blue, Green, Orange, Pink, Purple, Red, Silver, White and Yellow colors.Samsung Galaxy Beam i8520 

Samsung has announced its Galaxy Beam i8520 Android smartphone with built-in pico projector. The Galaxy Beam is a smartphone running Android OS 2.1 with TouchWiz 3.0 UI.

It features a 3.7-inch 800×480 AMOELD touchscreen and built-in pico projector based on TI’s DLP technology. It gets a 8 Megapixel camera with auto focus and LED flash, a VGA front camera, 16GB internal memory, AGPS, Bluetooth and WiFi.

Sony finalizes divorce with Ericsson, renames itself Sony Mobile Communications

More than half of America‘s married couples will tell you, breaking up is hard. Hard and expensive. After living in denial, dodging rumors and eventually coming to terms with the inevitable, Sony has finally taken over Telefonaktiebolaget LM Ericsson‘s 50-percent stake in the pair’s former joint venture, a move that was earlier reported to have cost €1.05 billion ($1.37 billion) to complete. The now fully Sony owned Sony Ericsson will be renamed Sony Mobile Communications, though a few of the outfit’s already announced children are keeping their papa’s name. Hit the break for Sony’s small press release.

keep up with the newest technologies and contemplate about how these will be used in the future. On this blog I’ll share my thoughts about the future of technology, based on the high Tech Road Show Blog inventions of today.

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Sony Ericsson ‘Super Phone’ Has a 13-Megapixel Camera and LTE

According to a new entry on the official Bluetooth Special Interest Group (SIG) site, Sony Ericsson is getting ready to release the LT28at, a high-end smartphone which the company refers to as “super phone.”

The details on the Bluetooth SIG site are scarce, but LT28at will come with a 13-megapixel camera, LTE support and a 4.55-inch 720p “Reality Display,” all of which puts it somewhere at the top of the company’s current smartphone lineup.

Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, LED Flash and front-facing camera are also on board, of course, but the release date is missing. It’s not too far-fetched to assume we might see SE’s definition of “super phone” in January, at next year’s CES.

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Sony Ericsson Xperia Play

The PlayStation Phone we’ve all been waiting for finally arrives courtesy of Sony Ericsson

http://www.sonyericsson.com

With a 1GHz processor, an Android underbelly and a full compliment of official PlayStation controls the Xperia Play is what the PSP Go should have been. It launches the Android PlayStation Suite – a one-stop shop for games bordering between PSOne and PS2 quality. Android 2.3 out of the box means it’s one of the most advanced Google phones yet.

Sony Ericsson Xperia Play

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Sony Ericsson Xperia arc

Sony Ericsson Xperia Arc
Sony Ericsson Xperia Arc (Photo credit: John.Karakatsanis)
The smartphone more illuminated than most

Price: £430 | http://www.sonyericsson.co.uk

With a curved design to fit your face better, and a body that’s just 8.7mm thin, the arc is the sexiest thing to come out of Sony Ericsson in a long time.
Android 2.3 looks stunning on the huge 4.2-inch screen, and Exmor R tech lets more light reach the CMOS chip in the camera part, resulting in more illuminated lowlight shots.
Sony Ericsson Xperia arc video
Source: T3 Tech Videos
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Sony Ericsson Xperia mini pro 360-degree spin

The Xperia mini pro has almost the same size as its predecessor; it’s barely a couple of millimeters in each direction. At 92 x 53 x 18 mm, this is still among the smallest QWERTY messengers. It seems the upgrades have added a bit of weight though. The new model weighs 136 g, up from 120, but no big deal compared to what you get.

Design and constructionClose window

The Sony Ericsson Xperia mini pro has the look and feel of its Xperia X10 predecessor: a small, pocket-friendly messenger that offers a lot for its size and price. Some clever use of space and there’s suddenly room for a 3″ screen in what’s virtually the same package.
We’re having the pleasure of a white Xperia mini pro. It’s entirely made of plastic: the battery cover has glossy finish that usually gets all smudged up in no time, but fingerprints are nearly invisible on the white paint. Those are inevitable on the screen of course.
There’s little in the way of embellishments, which the white body seems to do well without. Two silver strips on both sides of the Xperia mini pro are the most conspicuous accents. The Home key up front and the QWERTY deck have the same trimming. The phone looks good in a simple, fresh way.
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Sony Ericsson Xperia mini pro
The Sony Ericsson Xperia mini pro has a 3” HVGA touchscreen – a scaled-down version of the so-called Reality display in the Arc and Neo. It’s been scaled down both in size and resolution, but still a notable improvement from the original 2.55″ QVGA display.
The LED-backlit LCD unit is enhanced by Sony’s proprietary Bravia Mobile Engine. The display produces really nice colors, has decent contrast but the viewing angles are limited. There’s considerable loss of color when viewing at an angle. What we were impressed with is the excellent sunlight legibility.
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The small Reality display is excellent
The capacitive screen has excellent sensitivity. The slightest of touches will do for user input to be registered.
Below the display is the usual trio of hardware controls. The difference to the last year’s model is the Menu and Back keys are capacitive, with a single hardware control in the Home key. Quite surprisingly, the new Xperia mini pro has managed to both increase screen size and get better controls. The Home button has good press, while the capacitive controls are well-defined, nicely backlit and haptic enabled. All are very comfortable to use.
Sony Ericsson Xperia mini pro
There are three keys at the bottom of the front panel
Above the display, we find a status LED, the earpiece, the proximity and the ambient light sensors plus the video-call camera. The proximity sensor disables the display during calls.
There’s both manual and auto display brightness setting and the ambient light sensor is doing a good job of adjusting to the available lighting.
Sony Ericsson Xperia mini pro
The earpiece is flanked by the status led, two sensors and the video-call camera
The left side of the Sony Ericsson Xperia mini pro is completely bare. The only thing to notice here is a small slit to use and pull the battery cover open.
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The empty left side
On the right-hand side, things have stayed the same as before: the volume rocker on top and a shutter key at the bottom. The volume rocker is reasonably comfortable, the up and down keys are prominent and solid to press. The shutter key is super soft, with very deep half press. We liked it. .
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The camera key and the volume rocker are on the right
On top of the handset is the power/lock key. It’s a bit small but easy to reach and press. The other things to find there are a microUSB port, the 3.5mm audio jack and the secondary microphone used for noise cancelation.
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The screen lock key is right next to the Xperia mini pro peculiar audio jack
The bottom of the Xperia mini pro features the lanyard eyelet only. The microphone pinhole is on the QWERTY keyboard near the bottom of the phone.
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The lanyard eyelet is at the bottom • the microphone pinhole is on the kyeboard
No more teasing, let’s slide the Xperia mini pro open and reveal its key feature: the four-row QWERTY keyboard. Just like its predecessor, the mini pro’s keyboard is reasonably sized and does a wonderful job unless you have really big fingers.
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The keyboard is awesome if your fingers aren’t too big
There is enough space between the keys and the press feedback is good. There’s something about this keyboard we liked better than the original X10 mini pro. Maybe the keys are a bit more prominent, or the finish is different – making them more tactile. Anyway, there’s nothing in this keyboard to complain about. Of course, the size is something to consider – you’d do well to try this messenger to make sure it’s a fit.
The back of the Xperia mini pro features the 5 megapixel camera lens and the LED flash. The loudspeaker also goes in here, slightly to the right.
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The 5 megapixel camera is joined by the LED flash and the loudspeaker at the back
Removing the battery cover reveals the hot-swappable microSD card slot and the SIM compartment.
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Taking a peek under the cover
The 1200mAh battery is said to ideally last 340 hours of standby and 5 hours and 25 minutes of talk time in a 3G network. In reality, the Xperia mini pro managed over 3 days in stand-by, connected to a Wi-Fi network most of the time. When we really put it under pressure though, the phone barely lasted a day. It was always connected to both the 3G and Wi-Fi networks, we did heavy browsing, music and video playback, and the usual benchmarks.
The Sony Ericsson Xperia mini pro is comfortable to handle and fits every pocket. There isn’t a more compact messenger currently on the market. The Xperia mini pro is a well-built handset, with high quality, albeit plastic, finish. The slider runs sharp and even, no wobbles and such. The mini pro lives up to its name, efficient and a pleasure to use.
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Handling the Xperia mini pro

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