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Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 Mini Pro review

in Smartphones

Verdict

Small and dumpy, with a cramped screen, but this phone is surprisingly pleasant to use

Review Date: 23 Jul 2010

Reviewed By: Jonathan Bray

Price when reviewed: Free, on a £20.00 per month, 24 months contract.

Buy it now for: £119
(see more store prices)

Overall Rating
4 stars out of 6

Features & Design
4 stars out of 6

Value for Money
4 stars out of 6

Performance
4 stars out of 6

So many manufacturers are joining the “me too” touch-phone brigade it can be hard to see the wood for the trees. Sony Ericsson is one of the few offering something different and, with its dinky Xperia X10 Mini Pro, appears to be setting out to create a completely new genre.

Despite running Android 1.6, this is definitely not what you’d call standard smartphone fare. The size is the most noticeable thing. It’s small and chubby – a Wee Jimmy Krankie of a phone – and has a tiny 2.6in TFT screen, but there’s something likeable about it nonetheless. It’s very pocketable, for a start, and the resolution of 240 x 320 plus a sensitive capacitive front means using it is actually quite a pleasant experience.

Part of the reason for this is that Sony Ericsson has made the most of the restricted screen size. Instead of a widget and icon view, the main home screen consists of a clock and four finger-sized touch areas in the four corners of the screen. These lead to contacts, music, the dialler and text messaging screens.

Swipe up from the bottom and the application grid sweeps into view, and the notification area is still there at the top, ready to be pulled into play. The X10 Mini Pro also features Sony Ericsson’s TimeScape social networking tool, which displays texts, missed calls, Facebook updates and tweets in a chronological list.

Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 Mini Pro

The X10 is chunky (it measures 18mm at its thickest point) because there’s a Qwerty keyboard stuffed under that diminutive screen. It’s surprisingly usable, with four rows of well-spaced, clicky keys – perfect for quick texts and emails – and the way the screen thunks solidly up and down on its sliding mechanism is mighty satisfying.

There’s a surprisingly full complement of features too, with a 5-megapixel camera, LED flash, and VGA video shooting at 30fps. The quality of stills was good, with reliable autofocus and quick operation, but we weren't so keen on the video, which was a little murky and soft for our liking. Wireless networking, meanwhile, encompasses 802.11g, Bluetooth and 3G, plus you get an FM radio tuner, accelerometer and proximity sensor.

The 600MHz processor ensures snappy performance and in our Wi-Fi test it rendered the PC Pro homepage in an average of 16 seconds. The SunSpider JavaScript benchmark was dispatched in 46 seconds – quicker than the A-Listed HTC Wildfire, and one that translates into snappy scrolling and responsive panning and zooming around web pages.

Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 Mini Pro keyboard view

So far, so good, but where it comes unstuck is battery life. Perhaps unsurprisingly, given the size, the battery is only 930mAh in size and in our tests it didn’t fare well, retaining only 30% capacity after our 24-hour test. And while Sony Ericsson has done its best to maximise the potential of the small screen, there are inevitably occasions upon which it frustrates. Selecting links from tightly spaced lists can be fiddly, and some games and apps just don’t work well on the small screen.

Those issues mean the Xperia X10 Mini Pro won’t appeal to everyone, and they prevent it from gaining top marks. But it isn’t expensive and for the core tasks of email, messaging and social network interaction it isn’t a bad device at all. If you prefer a physical keyboard to an onscreen one, take a look; you might just be surprised.

Author: Jonathan Bray

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User comments

Review??????

You state that this is a review and yet in the gallery section you fail, probably on purpose, to show an image of the qwerty keyboard and proudly display a text with the iphone being mentioned.

Just how whipped are you boys over there at your offices? Is Jobsie Wobsie reading ever word you guys write?

The phone has a physical keyboard and it deserves an image of it in your unbiased review.

By vikarmo on 26 Jul 2010

Blind??????

Hark! is that a keyboard picture I see before me?
Are you blindie Wlindie you dummie wummie?
Grow up!

By thefarhad on 26 Jul 2010

@thefarhad

You grow up you fool. When the review was first posted JB hadn't published a photo of the keyboard, this came later and after my comment, so you grow up!! Ask questions or think to yourself before posting offensive comments you idiot. I guess I'm doing you a favour by calling you an idiot.

By vikarmo on 26 Jul 2010

Fair review

I've had an Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 Mini Pro (why can't it have a shorter name?) for 3 weeks now, and the review sums up everything nicely. Great little phone, but poor battery life.

By jedi_kite1 on 29 Jul 2010

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