One on one interview with Sony - read about the Xperia X and more
Sony invited us for a one on one interview and we jumped at the
chance to ask them questions about the Xperia X, Sony's other phones and
the company's strategy in general.
Will the Xperia X Performance be available in Europe? What about its performance? What about Xperia Z5 Premium's 4K display?
The answers to those questions and more can be found here in our full intervew below
Will the Xperia X Performance be available in Europe? What about its performance? What about Xperia Z5 Premium's 4K display?
The answers to those questions and more can be found here in our full intervew below
At the MWC 2016 we had a one-on-one chat with Sony representatives and had a chance to ask them the hard questions.
We started with the new Xperia X family that Sony unveiled yesterday. We - and plenty of our readers - were disheartened with the reveal that the Xperia X Performance won't launch in the US and Europe.
Sony Xperia X Performance
Except that turns out to not be true - it's heading to the
Netherlands at least. Sony says that the Performance is definitely
launching in Asia first, but there will be units sold in Europe at the
same time. It's just that the decision which countries get it hasn't
been made yet.
We asked about benchmarks of the new Snapdragon 820 chipset, but Sony said "no" and clarified they are interested in real life performance rather than synthetic benchmarks.
From the top dog, we moved to the Sony Xperia XA. Yesterday it impressed us with its narrow bezels. Apparently, the other two Xs have thicker bezels because of the metal frame and because the side-mounted fingerprint reader needs extra room.
Sony Xperia X Performance
And the XA has neither of these things. Sony was adamant that the
best place for a fingerprint reader is on the side, at least without it
the engineers could slim down the bezels.
The improvements to the Xperia X and X Performance camera are mainly in the speed and accuracy of the tracking autofocus. So don't expect better quality in static shots, but there will be fewer shots (and videos) ruined by people moving around.
We also asked why is it that other manufacturers sometimes achieve better image quality by using Sony IMX sensors than Sony itself does.
Sony Xperia X Performance
The official answer is that Sony cameras are optimized for
"performance." Performance meaning how photos and videos from the camera
look great both on the phone's screen and on a computer screen. The
selfie camera, in particular, has been tuned to view on large screens.
We're not terribly satisfied with this canned response - how else would you view a digital photo except on a screen (small or large)!?
Finally, we got a chance to ask questions about the 4K screen on the Sony Xperia Z5 Premium. Sony is happy with how it performs and says it gets the job done for people who need 4K resolution. There are no plans to add 4K support to more of the Z5 Premium interface and app package.
The questions & answers portion was over, but before we left we got to fondle a few cases for the X-series (these particular cases we handled were for the Xperia X Performance).
The transparent case is the most interesting one - it covers the screen, but still allows you to operate the phone without opening it. Unfortunately, this case didn't work but not because of a hardware issue.
The translucent case
No, the issue turned out to be a software one - the app needed to
make the case work wasn't available. That's right, cases need apps now.
The case has built-in NFC to automatically trigger the app, so we think
it's just an issue of disabling pocket mode (not unlocking the phone if
the proximity sensor detects something) and turning on glove mode.
The translucent case
Anyway, the other cases are standard flip cases without all the magic of the translucent one (but with all the protection).
The regular cases
.We started with the new Xperia X family that Sony unveiled yesterday. We - and plenty of our readers - were disheartened with the reveal that the Xperia X Performance won't launch in the US and Europe.
Sony Xperia X Performance
We asked about benchmarks of the new Snapdragon 820 chipset, but Sony said "no" and clarified they are interested in real life performance rather than synthetic benchmarks.
From the top dog, we moved to the Sony Xperia XA. Yesterday it impressed us with its narrow bezels. Apparently, the other two Xs have thicker bezels because of the metal frame and because the side-mounted fingerprint reader needs extra room.
Sony Xperia X Performance
The improvements to the Xperia X and X Performance camera are mainly in the speed and accuracy of the tracking autofocus. So don't expect better quality in static shots, but there will be fewer shots (and videos) ruined by people moving around.
We also asked why is it that other manufacturers sometimes achieve better image quality by using Sony IMX sensors than Sony itself does.
Sony Xperia X Performance
We're not terribly satisfied with this canned response - how else would you view a digital photo except on a screen (small or large)!?
Finally, we got a chance to ask questions about the 4K screen on the Sony Xperia Z5 Premium. Sony is happy with how it performs and says it gets the job done for people who need 4K resolution. There are no plans to add 4K support to more of the Z5 Premium interface and app package.
The questions & answers portion was over, but before we left we got to fondle a few cases for the X-series (these particular cases we handled were for the Xperia X Performance).
The transparent case is the most interesting one - it covers the screen, but still allows you to operate the phone without opening it. Unfortunately, this case didn't work but not because of a hardware issue.
The translucent case
The translucent case
The regular cases
Comments
Post a Comment
Kindly Comment Only related to Post