Data transfer, battery
Enumeration follows: GPRS, EDGE, UMTS, HSDPA. Who wants more? These are the mobile networks supported by W760i, which is a really impressive list. The built-in browser can be familiar from K850i or K660i, it’s a bit unkemptly, but it can be used quite well in landscape view. It’s interesting that there is no camera on the front, so video calls are only one-way.
At local level we have version 2.0 stereo Bluetooth and 2.0 USB; there were no problems with the first one, but – and now a confession follows – I couldn’t try the latter one, as I had no cable, but no other Sony Ericsson model has caused any headache before. There is no WLAN, as W760i is no smartphone.
Having an objective opinion about the battery under the cover is hard, but not because I didn’t have enough time to take a look at it; usually a week is enough. But the poor phone has almost always been on HSDPA, I had Google Maps and Wayfinder turned on wherever I went, so I had a traffic of 35 MB, I listened to music and of course talked on the phone (6 hours in total), consequently I don’t consider the two day charging cycle as a bad result.
Conclusion? It convinced me. It has everything Sony Ericsson is capable of in this segment and has GPS as a bonus, it looks good and it’s assembled in a professional way. We don’t know any price yet, but this is not the reason for not getting the Highly Recommended award, but because of the deficiencies of the camera and the somewhat weak internal GPS receiver.
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Sony Ericsson W760i |
Bog
Translated by Szaszati
A cikk még nem ért véget, kérlek, lapozz!