Sony Ericsson’s X10

Posted on January 25, 2010

There is no doubt that the release of Sony Ericsson’s third Xperia handset is one of the year’s most awaited launches.

After the successes that the company has enjoyed because of the first two Xperia mobile phones and last year’s Satio, Sony Ericsson n promises “to deliver a consistent user experience where communication truly becomes entertainment.

The X10 is perhaps one of the sleekest and most pleasing-to-the-eye handsets we have seen but this is not only why its much- awaited. The X10 is the company’s first Android smartphone.

The Android, when referring to phones, is not a robot designed to fetch water or coffee or perform simple accounting (as I had foolishly thought until two months ago) but simply an operating system first developed by Android Inc but bought by Google and later by the Open Handset Alliance. Its updates are named after pastries and sweets. For instance, the 1.5 is called Cupcake the 1.6 Donut the 2.0 Eclair and the 2.1 Flan but it is still considered apart of Eclair.  Subsequent updates will be catted FroYo and Gingerbread.

Sony Ericsson gave selected members of the Asian media a touch and interact with the X10 in Singapore.

The launch dubbed “evolve.engage.excite” introduced a number of new generation phones, including the celebrated X10 and two mini versions and two handsets with high-definition video.

Hirokazu Ishizuka, corporate vice president head of Asia Pacific region, Sony Ericsson Mobile Communications, calls the X10 the company’s “flagship phone.”

The X10 is not a light and small handset It is not for people with small hands (i.e. many Mans) but its a sleek and very elegant looking phone that comes in the colors black and white. The device has a 4-inch display so it’s only understandable that it’s not the thinnest phone on the planet but its rounded edges give the illusion of extra-thinness.

The Xperia X10 is the second Android handset sporting a resolution of 854 x 480 pixels called FWVGA which is short for Full Wide VGA. This means that it’s got pure 16:9 aspect ratio. That FWVGA resolution is actually quite common among widescreen multimedia projectors.