Price at Rs. We will find in this review. It sports a 3. Just below the screen are the three standard Android touch buttons for back, home and menu. Sony Xperia U mobile was launched in May The phone comes with a 3. The Sony Xperia U runs Android 2. As far as the cameras are concerned, the Sony Xperia U on the rear packs 5-megapixel camera. It sports a 0. Sony Xperia U is based on Android 2.
The Sony Xperia U measures It was launched in Black and White colours. Display 3. Sony Xperia U Review. Read complete Sony Xperia U Review. Sony Xperia U Price in India. Out of Stock. Price too high? Subscribe to our price drop alert Notify When Available.
Error or missing information? Please let us know. Sony Xperia U Competitors. Shades are selected to match the hues of photos from the gallery or the album art of the music you're listening to.
So if you're viewing a snap of one of London's iconic red buses, expect the lights to blush a deep co-ordinated rouge.
Some people will find the U's festive mood lights tacky. Others will be mesmerised by their joyous, jewel-like colours.
You decide where you fit on this colour spectrum. Just don't expect to be able to turn the mood lights off -- there's no settings for them. So bad luck cinemagoers trying to surreptitiously use your phone during a film. The Xperia U's swappable plastic pants can add another splash of colour to the bottom of your black or white handset -- if mood lighting isn't quirky enough for you.
The bottom cap isn't always easy to pop off but at least that means the phone's trunks shouldn't fall down of their own accord. Like its big brother, the Xperia S , the U is entirely sheathed in plastic. I found its matte plastic back quite slippery to the touch.
The phone's dinky dimensions do mean you can easily wrap your mitts around it though, so only real butterfingers should have to worry about dropping it.
Being small, the U is relatively lightweight although it does have more heft g than you might expect for a phone of this diddy size. And while it's not the thinnest phone in smart phone town, it doesn't look or feel too chunky. Build quality is not super-premium -- it's more plasticky than classy. Squeeze the U around the middle and it will creak.
But since you can remove the backplate to get at the battery, that's not a huge surprise. If you're keen on the white model, be aware the plastic easily picks up dirt so it quickly starts looking grubby. Also on board are Sony's xLoud and 3D surround sound technologies.
The phone's rear speaker can pump out noise fairly loudly but audio quality isn't as rich as the Xperia P or S. To my ear it had a distinctly flat and tinny quality.
Internal memory is 8GB but only 4GB of that is up for grabs to house your photos and apps. There's no microSD card slot for expanding the U's digital shelves so if you want to load on lots of video and music, you'd be better off with a phone with more roomy storage. Ports wise, there's a 3. Crack off the back of the phone and you'll find a SIM slot in the side and, above that, a removable battery.
The Xperia U has three physical keys housed along its right-hand edge -- the power key, a volume rocker and a dedicated camera button. The latter is a nice addition on a phone of this price.
I found all these keys a little low lying and spongy, especially the camera key. You have to squeeze pretty hard to fire off a shot. Push down hard and the glass will flex to touch the surface of the display, producing an oily sheen and discoloured patches of pixels.
This sort of flex is unsightly but it's also typical of cheaper phone screens. The U's display is 3. Or Pink. Or yellow. Which is great, if you're a child. Removing the back is a rather hard and worrying experience.
You have to press it down and push it up, which means squeezing the phone quite tight and putting a lot of pressure on the display. We were quite worried we'd end up breaking the display from the pressure. But we didn't. We should probably stop worrying so much. That's a bit of a shame, but at least the battery is replaceable, which will earn the Sony Xperia U some brownie points in this age of sealed, non-accessible phones, such as the iPhone.
All of this comes together to give the Sony Xperia U a quality, well-made feel, that apes the design of the high-end Sony Xperia S well. It feels tough and durable, the display and buttons are sensitive, while the smaller 3.
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