Thursday, May 06th, 2010 | Author: pluc | Views: 259

Alright so it’s been a week since I’ve switched from my beloved iPhone to Sony Ericsson’s Xperia X10a and Android. So far, I have to say I’m impressed with it. It’s a really good, fast and responsive device that covers most of the features the iPhone has and even improves some. Keep in mind though that my iPhone was jailbroken about a month after I bought it, so some features, such as StatusNotifier, are somewhat taken as “default” for me. That being said, here’s what I have to say about the Xperia X10 after a week of usage:

Even if Android is an open platform, distributors (Sony Ericsson) and carriers (Rogers) will do everything they can to lock you in and make your device feel as proprietary as possible. In my mind, an open platform like Android means I can happily hack away ANYTHING I want. One of the first question I asked the Rogers’ representative who was selling me the Xperia X10 was “So, be honest here and tell me how Sony Ericsson and Rogers have crippled this phone?” and obviously he couldn’t answer. Well, you heard it here first, this phone is crippled. For one, the Xperia ships with Android 1.6. As a little progress indication Android 1.6 was released in September 2009. 2.1, which is the current version, was released a month later, on October 26th 2009 – although we’ll give Sony a bone here and say that the 2.1 SDK was only released on January 12th 2010. Sony’s explanation for using 1.6? None. Supposedly, their Timescape and Mediascape softwares are incompatible with the latest Android version. In other words, the two shittiest proprietary force-bundled apps on your device make that same device unable to be up to date. Fun isn’t it? They’ve announced a 2.1 upgrade available in Q4 of 2010… which means half a year at a minimum. By that time, my guess is I’ll already be running 2.1.

I’ve found some cool applications that I’ll blog about soon, customized some things but nothing as intense as jailbreaking an iPhone. I’m still relatively in the ‘acceptable usage’ realm for now, and the interesting thing is that I don’t feel I need more. The Android Market really has all you need – although some applications are not in it (like Helix for example). The hard part is really just to figure out which app is worth it and which isn’t. The Android Market is open, which means everything is on there… which, I’ve come to realize, is not always a good thing.

All in all though, the Xperia is a great device. Its hardware is pretty impressive and the device itself is built very well. My grudge against Sony Ericsson lies with the sub-par applications they’re forcing their users to use. However, like any mobile device, the X10a requires a bit of tinkering before it does and looks the way you want it to. For example, the default keyboards are… well, ordinary. The HTC keyboard on the other hand works amazingly well for me, I can type as fast as I used to with my iPhone without having to learn a new keyboard/finger-positioning layout.

Another thing I have against Sony Ericsson is the completely useless support documentation they provide. This device is recent, there aren’t that much HOWTOs and tutorials available to do this and that on the ‘net so far… so figuring out simple stuff like how to add your own custom ringtones/notification sounds is extremely annoying (yeah, I’ll make a post about that). I haven’t found a need to debrand the X10a so far… but I’m not done playing with it.

Overall, I’m happy with my switch.

While we’re here… here are two very useful resources for your X10a:

XDA Developers forum

Xperia X10 Blog

Sony Ericsson’s support site (remember how I said two very useful resources? Yeah. This is number 3. Draw your own conclusions)


Category: Mobile
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2 Comments

  1. Why did you buy a Sony instead of an HTC. Seems that their Sense UI is better implemented

  2. Fair question and yes, you’re right, HTC does have better UI. The Xperia has potential. Its design is much better than the HTC I’ve seen – I believe either 2.1 will bring a lot of changes or I will hack a lot of changes into it. The best HTC design I’ve seen so far was the HTC Incredible… and was just shipping out when I bought the X10a. In other words, I just took a gamble with the Xperia because a trusted friend had briefly reviewed it.

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