The Perfect Phone for Apple? And music lovers, business users, photo buffs, bluetooth junkies.
Here's the phone I mentioned in my Apple MVNO post earlier today that Apple should consider for its entry into the Wireless market with full support for MP3s (and with a little DRM firmware upgrade maybe iTunes' AAC format?). The Sony Ericsson K750i is also known as T-Mobile UK's D750i. The iTunes-enabled Motorola E790 maybe OK, but this one is better!
Check out the most detailed cell-phone review I have ever read at MobileBurn.com. Michael Oryl goes into detail of the user experience -- not just data. I wish I could get this level of detail for all my gadget purchases. Info junkie I am. I'm going to highlight a few spec's (see Sony Ericsson's site) and some of the phone's short-comings --- you can decide if this US$400-$500 phone is right for you
The Register and Pocket-Lint can be quoted to say "The K750i is fantastic!" with a 9/10 rating in the review.
The basics of the phone:
- GSM (900/1800/1900), GPRS, email, T9 SMS/MMS, bluetooth, Infrared, WAP, USB
- Dimensions 100 x 46 x 21 mm, Weight 99 grams
- LCD display 256K colors, 176 x 220 pixels
- Ringtones: Polyphonic (40 channels), MP3, FM Radio (RDS)
- MP3 Player supports playlists, shuffle and graphic equalizer
- Vibration alert, Photo caller ID, Voice caller ID, voice calling
- PIM, Java Games (3 incl. + downloadable), voice recorder
- 34 MB shared internal plus 64MB Memory Stick Duo card incl.
- Camera 2 MP (1632x1224), auto-focus, video-recorder, dual LED flash
- Video player (supports streaming), Music DJ & Composer, Picture Editor
- Built-in speakerphone plus includes stereo handsfree earbuds
- two Li-Pol batteries included (900 mAh): Stand-by= upto 400hrs/Talktime= upto 9hrs
Shortcomings of the SE K750i:
- fat fingers may find the keypad cramped (especially the "2" key which is recessed very close to the mini joystick above it)
- firmware seems to have a bug (twice when sending a file via bluetooth to my iMac it locked up and I had to reboot the phone)
- handset volume and built-in speaker should be louder
- very slow camera shutter release
- needs a 1 megapixel camera mode (not just 2MP, VGA and quarter VGA)
- No EDGE for high-speed data
A couple of other points worth noting. While other online reviews don't mention this and the slow shutter lag above maybe throwing me off; I found the picture images hit or miss. My experience with image shake (with digital zoom off) forces me to be careful or take a few pictures, hoping a I get one stable one.
I have never been a fan Sony Ericsson's peripheral/power sockets. They seem pretty big given how delicate the connectors looks. The K750i's FastPort socket (for power adapter, handsfree, USB optional external flash) carries on in this tradition, but again, others don't seem to mind.
Lastly, a problem that all single colour backlight LCD screen cellphones have is that after the predefined time the screen basically goes dark. With all the Rogers/Fido network integration activities underway; I'm always pressing a button on the phone to check my signal strength or to see if a message is waiting. The same thing on my Blackberry 7100. Vendors need to solve this, maybe a small b+w LCD panel on the back could provide status information (like clamshell phones).
The K750i is still a great phone, and a joy to use. I think the annoyances above deserve to knock another point off the reviews mentioned. I would give the phone a 8 or 8.5 out of 10.
I picked mine up from Bongo Wireless north of Toronto. Of course they knocked $100 off the price (US$480 no contract and unlocked) the week after I shopped. Kevin Heffenden at Bongo says the firmware of the K750i can be flashed to the Sony Ericsson 800W in the near future, no idea what the cost will be.
The 800W is basically the a rebadged version of the K750i twin, the D750i, with orange highlights, Walkman branding and the ability to turn off the cellphone (for airline travel) and use the unit for music exclusively. Personally, other than a couple of design advantages of the D750i/800W design (the joystick and "2" key are better separated; the lens cover is auto-released, not a manual slider); I think the K750i's business-like styling will probably age better.
I still plan on keeping my Blackberry 7100 for those days when I'm stuck in meetings, airport lounges and when I don't feel like lugging my laptop to a short conference --- everywhere else I'll use the SE K750i. Now my friends won't laugh at me for talking into a calculator!
Any suggestions for similar top-end cellphones to look at? What about my next gadget purchase?
This information is very helpful where can i buy this. Keep posting.
vee
Posted by: cellphone philippines | February 09, 2010 at 22:06