1/10/2024 0 Comments Multitouch xperia x10The home screen has a drag and drop application shortcut functionality, with 3 screen spans available by scrolling left or right. and I only had to recharge once every 2 days on average. An average day of using the Xperia consisted of phone calls, messaging, tweeting, constant Gmail access, Internet browsing and capturing photo and video. I took a lot of photos and video and didn’t experience storage problems. Internal memory is 1GB with an 8GB memory card and expandable memory is up to 16GB. Images and photos captured are easily shared and explored with options of Gmail, Picasa, messaging and Facebook etc. Switching from photo to video mode is easy and just takes one press of the video or image icon. Other features include geo-tagging and a self-timer. I liked the easy and fast pick up of the smile detector. Although it doesn’t have a flash it does have a photo light option which is as vivid as a led flash but a little bit cumbersome to enable and disable via a menu system. It has image stability, which came in handy at fast-paced events. I was impressed with the 8.1 megapixel camera and used it at a variety of media events (for example, see this CeBIT photo gallery). Auto-rotate was responsive and had a higher response rate on media than it on other applications like Gmail and messaging. The absence of multi-touch is not missed - the touch screen is highly responsive and reduces multi-touch to a moot point. The Xperia handled a high number of enemies and weaponry effects on the screen superbly. I tested a few games, but the game I spent the most time on was a tower defence game called Robo Wars. Viewing video captured by the phone or on YouTube is a relief to the eyes compared to viewing video on other handsets.The combination of the large display and the 1GHz Snapdragon CPU makes for a great portable gaming device. While the display is large, it is still easy to hold and type one-handed without it being unwieldy. The 4″ display is 480×854 pixels (Wide Video Graphics Array or SVGA) and is flushed to the handset casing with a thin transparent overlay. Holding the device, it is far lighter than what is expected with a device that sports a large display, weighing only 135 grams. The dimensions are 119圆3mm and the thickness is a slender 13mm. Shades available in the handset are ‘Sensuous Black’ (review phone shade) and ‘Luster White’. It is slim, sleek, sexy and the overall finish of the model we reviewed is a high gloss black. I guess that settles that once and for all.Sony Ericsson has pulled out no stops with the design of the Android-based handset. The operation and user experience of the phone will be further improved and Sony Ericsson will come with her own intuitive way of, for example, zooming in and out.” “Multi-touch will not be a feature in future updates for the Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 because the device does not support multi-touch due to her software and hardware configuration. : In response to the speculation as to whether or not the X10 will ever receive multi-touch, Eric de Kort of Sony Ericsson gave this succinct statement: Any X10 users who can shed some light on this video? Skip to around 6:50 if you don’t want to watch this guy play with his X10 in eery silence for six minutes: ![]() I almost want to say he is just pretending to use multi-touch as Google Maps looks like it zooms in for him with a single finger swipe as well. Yesterday we learned that updates planned for the X10 may provide a workaround that will enable multi-touch-like features without actually being multi-touch, but the below video seems to indicate that somehow this is already possible. It is widely believe that it just plain isn’t possible using the X10’s combination of software and hardware. The Sony Ericsson Xperia X10 has received a lot of heat for its lack of multi-touch support.
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