Sony Ericsson is one of the major names in the mobile phone industry. All over the world many mobile user swear by the brand name. The brand has recently won accolades with its Walkman series phones. The latest to join the series is the Sony Ericsson w580i. It has rose to the highest position in the popularity charts in a very short time period.
The Sony Ericsson V640i Black has got many accolades for its slider design and futuristic looks. The phone is also very good to touch as it has a tactile finish. This lens it some elegance. It has an integrated music player, that is really wonderful. The phone has various multimedia capabilities, that can impress even the harshest critics. The phone also has an easy to use fuzzy interface. Also the sound and picture quality of the phone is more than impressive.
Coming back to the music, it guarantee complete satisfactions for the music aficionados. The phone has some dedicated buttons to access the music player. It also has a graphic equalizer. The equalizer can fine tune the sound quality. This makes the sound suitable for all types of preferences. The phone also has wonderful in built speakers to take the experience on a new high altogether.
This has an advanced feature only found in the Sony Walkman series phones. It has advanced capabilities that help to recognize music. The recognization capabilities are a result of the TrackID software. An unknown song can be recorded and played for a few seconds. This way the handset would provide some information related to the song’s name, the name of the artist, the album’s name.
Last but not the least along with wonderful music player it also features an integrated 2 mega-pixel digital camera. The camera produces good pictures in favorable lighting conditions.
The Sony Ericsson V640i Black has everything what it takes to attract the youth. Therefore the Sony Ericsson V640i Black is perfect for every music loving youth who want to carry a smart sleek handset with all amazing features.
By: Faith Hill
Posts Tagged ‘Graphic Equalizer’
Sony Ericsson W580i White – The Designer Music Phone
March 18th, 2010
The Sony Ericsson W580i White is a member of the Walkman family. The handset was launched to carter to the younger audience with an active lifestyle. In a way, the model shares much with the Sony Ericsson W710i, and has roughly the same positioning and target demographic. However it differers in its styling and form factor. While the Sony Ericsson W710i is a clamshell device, the latest Sony Ericsson W580i sports a sleek sliding action. Apart from the white solution, other current offerings includes Urban Grey and Boulevard Black solutions.
Built wise, the Sony Ericsson W580i looks pretty much same as another new model of a different series – the Sony Ericsson S500i. However, the latter is primarily a fashion solution and features diminished capabilities – both music and otherwise, when compared to this latest addition to the Walkman series. Front fascia of the handset is dominated by its large TFT based screen that can produce more than 262k colours across 240 x 320 pixels. Sliding open the Sony Ericsson W580i White reveals four rows of numeric keys in iconic orange colour.
Being a music solution, media playback capabilities of the Sony Ericsson W580i White are immense. Powered by the latest Walkman media player v2.0, the device produces the best of sounds by current standards. All premium Walkman features like TrackID, TrueBass, Graphic Equalizer finds their respective places. The handset’s internal memory pool is mere 12 Mb which is far from sufficient for a music solution. The company therefore are shipping a 512 Mb external memory card free with a standard kit. Sound output could be through standard pair of headset supplied with the phone, wireless stereo Bluetooth headsets or even on the built in speakers.
Other major inclusion in the handset’s feature list is its 2.0 megapixel digital camera with video recording skills. Quad band GSM connectivity, HSCSD, GPRS, EDGE, WAP2.0/xHTML browser, Bluetooth, USB – the Sony Ericsson W580i White has many ways to connect that you ever thought was possible with such a petite device as this.
By: Samuel Herrick