Sony
Xperia SP
The Sony Xperia SP is a phone that's flown a little under
the radar in recent months: a phone with a decent spec list that can be had for
a fair few quid under £300.
One of the main draws is the camera, where the range of
settings and the quality of the images it produces were well beyond what we
would expect from a smartphone at this price.
It's become an indispensable tool of any modern handset, and
Sony has concentrated its efforts to make sure this part of the Sony Xperia SP
really punches above its weight.
There are other things we really dig
on the SP too: the inclusion of a microSD slot is always welcome, and the
Walkman app makes a mid-range handset really shine for the music lover.
It's also packing 4G connectivity
for speedy data on the go, which again is really rather nice for the price - in
short, it's a handset that outperforms its price tag.
Quick verdict
The excellent camera and range of
connectivity that includes NFC and 4Ggo hand-in-hand with a great design
and a screen size that will be just right for someone that doesn't want a
high-end 5-inch monster.
If you're on a budget, we'd consider it ahead of last year's
high-flyers, and it's certainly better than a lot of other phones available at
this hotly contested mid-range price point.
Heavy users could struggle with the moderate battery and
mediocre processor, but if you want to save a bit of money and still own a
smartphone that you can show off at parties or around the office, you could do
a lot worse than picking up the Xperia SP.
The market for mid-level handsets is
exploding, and manufacturers are hurrying to offer even more choice for those
on a stricter budget, so the Xperia SP brings a mid-range price with a lot of
technology borrowed from its bigger, Xperia Z, brother.
Sony has been busy since the split from Ericsson and has put
out an ever-increasing number of Xperia models to try and capture customers at
every conceivable price point and specs sheet. The latest is the Sony Xperia
SP, a mid-level Android smartphone that sits below the flagship Xperia Z and
above the budget Xperia E.
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Sony is taking on lesser-known Android
handsets such as the Acer Liquid
E2, ZTE Blade 3 or LG Optimus G Prowith the Sony Xperia
SP's £350/US$490 price point. But one look at the box is enough to tell you
that the Japanese company still means business - even though this isn't the
flag bearer for the Xperia line.
All of Sony's considerable tech expertise is being brought
to bear on the Xperia SP. The packaging proudly bears the logos for Bravia
Engine (screen), Exmor RS (camera) and PlayStation (gaming), all of which have
found their way into the Sony Xperia SP's 131 x 67 x 10mm (5.14 x 2.64 x 0.39
inch) frame.
The phone itself is a step down from the
5-inch models that have dominated 2013's headlines. The 1280 x 720 pixel screen
measures a pocket-friendly 4.6 inches, and the 10mm thin casing is blackened
aluminium rather than the glass-slab Sony Xperia Z chassis.
Unfortunately, while other phones such as the HTC One have pushed the screen right to the edge of
the case, there's still a noticeable bezel around the Sony Xperia SP's Gorilla
Glass display.
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Designers Jessie Zhao
and Toshihide Umedan apparently started with a simple paper mockup when they
began work on the Sony Xperia SP.
To us, it looks similar to last year's Sony
Xperia S handset thanks in no small part to the transparent antenna running
along the base of the handset.
It's functional as much as aesthetic, lighting
up with notifications and incoming calls, as well as pulsating to music and
getting stronger when you push up the volume.
While the curved frame is moulded aluminium,
the removable back is a black speckled plastic polycarbonate that's smooth to
touch and features the Xperia logo right in the centre. It's a more subdued
design than the glittering back of the Google Nexus 4 and helps to give the Sony Xperia SP an air of
premium quality beyond its price tag.
Our review unit came in black but there's also
a choice of red or white to be had. However, the one rather obvious flaw with
the build is that the back of the Sony Xperia SP does flex ever so slightly
when pushed.
In keeping with Android Jelly Bean's soft key UI, there's no physical home key
on the front of the Sony Xperia SP, unlike the Samsung Galaxy S4. The right-hand side of the phone is where
you'll find all the physical buttons in the form of a volume rocker, power
on/off switch and physical shutter button for the camera.
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Forget, for a moment,
the praise heaped on the camera-crafting skills of HTC or Samsung. Because the
snappers that Sony has been loading onto its Xperia phones in the last couple
of years have been some of the best in the market. Honestly, the Japanese company
really knows its stuff when it comes to taking pictures.
The 8MP rear-facing camera on the Sony Xperia SP is understandably a few rungs below the Sony
Xperia Z or the HTC One, but still manages to be an excellent substitute for an
everyday compact camera. Sony uses the newly developed Exmor RS sensor to give
the Sony Xperia SP some kick, and there's also a front-facing VGA lens for
video chat and the occasional self portrait.
The removable back of the Sony Xperia SP
reveals the microSD slot that enables you to swell the memory from the rather
pathetic 8GB of native storage up to 32GB with a card. You'll need to as well,
because only about 5.5GB of that is actually available to use.
The Sony Xperia SP uses the Android Jelly Bean
OS, but Sony has overlaid this with its own TimeScape skin. It's being run by a
dual-core 1.7GHz processor with 1GB of RAM and an Adreno 320 graphics chip.
There's obviously a
lot of sparkling Japanese technology inside because, well, the Sony Xperia SP
is a bit on the heavy side. Not too heavy that you'll worry about holding it to
your ear for any length of time, but it doesn't have the lighter-than-it-looks
reaction that the iPhone 5 andBlackBerry Z10 both enjoy.
Of course, there are different schools of
thought when it comes to smartphone weight, and you might feel that the 155g
(5.47oz) Sony Xperia SP actually feels better for having a bit of heft. The
smaller chassis does mean the weight is more concentrated than on the larger
5-inch handsets.
Sony's Xperia SP doesn't reinvent the wheel when it comes to
smartphone design. It's still a black, rectangular slab and the introduction of
a translucent bar doesn't really change that, but it's really not a bad-looking
handset. The smaller size means your fingers will curl protectively around it,
and the all-black, unblemished front brings it into the BlackBerry Z10 realm of
business dress.
Then there's always the price to consider.
It's available SIM-free from Sony for £349/US$489.99, and UK customers can pick
it up for free on a £21 monthly contract which, all things considered, is
pretty damn reasonable.
Of course, you'll want to know how the thing
performs - so read on, and be enlightened.
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