Sony Ericsson Xperia Arc review
in Tablets
Verdict
A lovely smartphone with a glorious screen and excellent battery life, but there are some serious flaws
Review Date: 19 Apr 2011
Reviewed By: Jonathan Bray
Price when reviewed: £350 (£420 inc VAT)
Features & Design
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Value for Money
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Performance
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The last time Sony Ericsson attempted a big-screen Android phone, we weren’t very impressed. The Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 boasted a large, bright, and high-resolution 4in display, but it had major flaws. The Arc is the successor to that handset, and it makes a stunning first impression.
As with the X10, that’s mainly down to the screen, which completely steals the show. It’s larger than the X10’s at 4.2in, and matches its resolution at 480 x 854, but it’s much brighter and punchier than before.
In fact, at maximum brightness, and with the help of Sony’s Bravia Engine picture enhancement technology, the Arc’s LED backlit screen looks as stunning as any phone screen we’ve seen, including the iPhone 4’s Retina display.
It’s a fabulous screen on which to watch movies and also to browse photos; if you fancy watching on a bigger screen, the HDMI output lets you go large too.
The looks are also worth dwelling on: at its thinnest, the Arc measures just 8.9mm from front to back and it weighs only 116g. The rear panel curves in slightly, too, so it sits comfortably in your hand. That curvature means it doesn’t scratch and scuff as much as others when you lay it on a flat surface.
The touchscreen is more responsive than it was on the X10, with scarcely a hint of delay or shudder as you sweep from one Android desktop to another, pan around web pages and zoom in and out. That’s despite a healthy selection of Sony Ericsson’s own widgets, apps and OS customisations.
Of these, we have the same mixed opinion as we did before. We like the tweaks Sony Ericsson has made to folders – they pop up in an attractive transparent overlay window – and when you create folders you’re given the option to name them there and then, instead of having to edit later. The toolbar that runs along the bottom of the screen is useful, too, and you can customise it with either shortcuts or folders.
We like the idea of TimeScape, which amalgamates not just Facebook and Twitter feeds, but also recent phone and text activity, displaying items as cards in a 3D rolodex-style view. We don’t, however, like the fact you can fit only six cards onscreen at any one time; give us a less fancy 2D list view any day of the week.
Performance
Under the hood, the Arc is powered by the same single-core 1GHz Scorpion processor and Adreno GPU (backed up with 512MB of RAM) found in the Xperia Play, HTC Incredible S and the HTC Desire HD. Games are dispatched with aplomb, and it’s a darned sight slicker in general use than its predecessor too.
From around the web
Sony Ericsson Xperia Arc review
I really cant agree with this review. I have this phone for three weeks now and I have no problems at all. The fact that there are only five screens on the phone at any one time is not a problem. Yes the headphone jack would have being better placed on the top of the phone, but that is not a deal breaker.This is a great phone as you said yourself the battery is great, so is the camera, its quick and smooth, great speaker phone and good call quality. What more do you want.Bottom line is if the battery sucks then the phone sucks too but not with this phone.
By magroves on 21 Apr 2011 ![]()
GPS problems
Where your GPS problems related to the Quick GPS data failing to update? I had this on my TouchPro 2, when the auto-update settings failed to take effect for some reason. Once the settings were reset, the GPS worked faultlessly.
Two minutes to get a fix, implies that the receiver is downloading the ephemeris from the satellites rather than the internet.
By tirons1 on 23 Apr 2011 ![]()
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