MOBILE

Sony Xperia Tipo - Android Touch Phone

7/6/2013 3:26:40 PM

The Sony Xperia Tipo is the latest addition to the Xperia smartphone range, and it’s undoubtedly the baby of the family. It comes in at around $150, with an 800MHz single-core processor, 512MB of RAM, 2.5GB of storage, 3.2MP camera and a 3.2-inch 320 x 480 display.

Price: $160

Website: www..com

Ratings: 3/5

Sony Xperia Tipo

Sony Xperia Tipo

It runs Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich, which in terms of specifications is the standout feature. While its specs are mostly the same as its competitors or slightly weaker in some cases - it is one of very few handsets at around this price that runs Android 4.0.

The first thing that hits you with the Sony Xperia Tipo is just how chunky it is, at 13mm thick. Conversely, its height of 103mm and width of 57mm are both on the small side, as you’d expect from a low-end phone.

The build quality isn’t bad, though at 99.4g it’s pretty lightweight. Rather than sporting a plastic back like most of its rivals, the Sony Xperia Tipo comes with a premium rubber coating on the battery cover. This is designed to wipe clean with a wet cloth, keeping your phone looking new.

Android 4.0 works reasonably well on the Sony Xperia Tipo, is well laid out and looks good. Anyone coming from another Android handset will be right at home, but even those new to the OS should be able to pick it up quickly.

Android 4.0 works reasonably well on the Sony Xperia Tipo, is well laid out and looks good.

Android 4.0 works reasonably well on the Sony Xperia Tipo, is well laid out and looks good.

Scrolling between home screens is glitch less, and operating the phone in general is smooth and responsive. Android 4.0 isn’t quite the joy it is on some handsets, though. This is mostly down to the small screen size, leading home screens to feel cramped - particularly when widgets are added to the equation.

Given the limited 2.5GB of internal storage in the Sony Xperia Tipo, you might think that media wasn’t a big priority for it - and you’d be right.

More to store

Obviously the storage is expandable, but that requires an additional investment, and even then this is unlikely to be your media player of choice.

The tiny low-resolution screen is useless for watching videos on, and while photos look OK on it, they lack the crispness and depth of color that higher-end phones display.

Sony states the battery can manage up to five hours’ talk time, 30 hours of music, three hours of video and a whopping 470 hours of standby. With light use (about 90 minutes of talk time, 45 minutes of web browsing, sending a few texts and Wi-Fi always on), the battery was still at 17 per cent after 30 hours. Heavier use drained it a lot faster, but we think most users could easily get a day of use out of it before it needs a charge.

We were fairly impressed with the Sony Xperia Tipo. Barring the occasional judder, you wouldn’t know it had such modest specs. It’s responsive, has solid battery life, and is one of the only low-end handsets running Android 4.0. However, its screen is uncomfortably small for typing, it’s also poor for videos, and the contacts and messaging side of things could use work.

No room: The lack of internal storage is a distinct drawback

No room: The lack of internal storage is a distinct drawback

Pros

·         Cheap

·         Runs Ice Cream Sandwich

·         Good battery life

Cons

·         Chunky

·         Small low-res screen

·         Poor contacts and messaging

Dimensions

·         Height: 103mm

·         Width: 57mm

·         Depth: 13mm

·         Screen size: 3.2-inch

·         Weight: 99.4g

Specification

·         Supplier: www..com

·         OS: Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich)

·         Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 800MHz

·         RAM: 512MB

·         Storage: 2.5GB

·         Expansion: microSD

·         Rear camera: 3.2MP

·         Front camera: None

·         Screen type: TFT

·         Screen resolution: 480x320

 

Other  
 
Top 10
Review : Sigma 24mm f/1.4 DG HSM Art
Review : Canon EF11-24mm f/4L USM
Review : Creative Sound Blaster Roar 2
Review : Philips Fidelio M2L
Review : Alienware 17 - Dell's Alienware laptops
Review Smartwatch : Wellograph
Review : Xiaomi Redmi 2
Extending LINQ to Objects : Writing a Single Element Operator (part 2) - Building the RandomElement Operator
Extending LINQ to Objects : Writing a Single Element Operator (part 1) - Building Our Own Last Operator
3 Tips for Maintaining Your Cell Phone Battery (part 2) - Discharge Smart, Use Smart
REVIEW
- First look: Apple Watch

- 3 Tips for Maintaining Your Cell Phone Battery (part 1)

- 3 Tips for Maintaining Your Cell Phone Battery (part 2)
VIDEO TUTORIAL
- How to create your first Swimlane Diagram or Cross-Functional Flowchart Diagram by using Microsoft Visio 2010 (Part 1)

- How to create your first Swimlane Diagram or Cross-Functional Flowchart Diagram by using Microsoft Visio 2010 (Part 2)

- How to create your first Swimlane Diagram or Cross-Functional Flowchart Diagram by using Microsoft Visio 2010 (Part 3)
Popular Tags
Microsoft Access Microsoft Excel Microsoft OneNote Microsoft PowerPoint Microsoft Project Microsoft Visio Microsoft Word Active Directory Biztalk Exchange Server Microsoft LynC Server Microsoft Dynamic Sharepoint Sql Server Windows Server 2008 Windows Server 2012 Windows 7 Windows 8 Adobe Indesign Adobe Flash Professional Dreamweaver Adobe Illustrator Adobe After Effects Adobe Photoshop Adobe Fireworks Adobe Flash Catalyst Corel Painter X CorelDRAW X5 CorelDraw 10 QuarkXPress 8 windows Phone 7 windows Phone 8