Menu, basic functions
On the inside we get just as we would expect. The phone has almost every feature that C905 had, there is one thing missing, and unfortunately this is WLAN support. Otherwise we have a well-equipped Sony Ericsson with the usual menu system and features. The main menu has 12 icons, we can use themes to customize it and we can change the icons as well, we can opt for a list, a grid or a spinning layout. The standby screen is nicely animated and the key below the dial buttons pops up the list of favorites.
The phonebook can store 1000 contacts, a total of 7000 entries (an average of 7 additional infos per contact). The layout is the usual, we have a tabbed view for additional contact data, it’s easy to use and also very perspicuous. Contacts can have lots of details, like mailing and email addresses, business information, phone numbers, birthday, note, image and a ringtone.
The messaging is based on the usual scheme. SMS, MMS and email are supported, messages can be placed in different directories or we can even store them on the memory card. The email account can be set up with a wizard, we can use large attachments (it had no problem with a couple of megabytes large pictures) and it supports authenticated SMTP servers as well.
The organizer has no new things either. The calendar has month and week views, it’s easy to use, there is an alarm clock supporting multiple alarm times and repletion, we have the classical calculator with the square buttons and code memory is here as well. The flashlight menu activates the light source from near the camera, and the list of applications includes AccuWeather (web-based weather forecast), Walk Mate (primitive step counter), Music Quiz (guess which track is being played) and Standby World (freaking large world clock). We have Google Maps too, but since there’s no GPS, it can only rely on cell info.
A cikk még nem ért véget, kérlek, lapozz!