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The Xperia ion has a 323ppi 720p display that really does look gorgeous. Colours have a lovely fullness to them; blacks are deep, though a little muddy; text is retina-sharp. Poor viewing angles, like the Xperia S, plague the ion, and outdoor visibility is not good. And, continuing on the road of frustration, the ion does not have an automatic brightness sensor, requiring you to adjust the visibility of the screen for every scenario. It’s one of the worst omissions a manufacturer can make for battery life and we hope this is the last Sony phone without this feature.
There are two major issues with the Xperia with battery such as Hp F4098A battery , Hp F4809A battery , Hp F4812A battery , compaq 319411-001 battery , Compaq Presario 2100 battery (compaq 2100 battery ), Compaq Presario 2500 battery (compaq 2500 battery ), Compaq Presario NX9010 battery , Compaq Presario NX9000 battery ion that, unfortunately, go hand in hand. One is admissible – the 1.5Ghz Snapdragon S3 processor is still fine — and the other a serious problem. Because the ion ships with Android 2.3 Gingerbread — at one time a powerful and capable OS, now a potential sales deterrent — it is at a huge disadvantage against other high-end Android devices. While Sony has done what it can with the software — as I said in the Xperia S review, this is about as fast as Gingerbread will ever get — it’s not enough against the sheer hardware-accelerated improvements made to Android 4.0+. Coming from a Galaxy Nexus running Android 4.1.1 Jelly Bean, the ion struggles to match it even in the most sedate of activities. As soon as Sony delivers ICS (or perhaps Jelly Bean) I have no doubt that ion will be a more competitive product.
As a smartphone, the Xperia ion is perfectly capable. The Snapdragon S3 processor is powerful enough to zip through menus, play 3D games, browse the web and quickly load apps. But that is no longer enough: both Rogers and Sony are positioning the ion as a premium handset, able to go toe-to-toe with the Galaxy S III and One X. But that just isn’t the case. It’s cheaper than both, in the case of the Galaxy S III by $110 on a 3-year term, but in both cases you’re paying for being ahead of the curve.
You’re getting Android 2.3.7 with Sony’s custom skin, which is admittedly attractive and easy to use. The company added some ICS-based features such as the ability to create folders by dragging home screen icons on top of one another. But many features are frustratingly missing, including swiping away notifications, Face Unlock, bandwidth usage controls and performance improvements. I’ve said it before: Android 4.0 was the most important update to the OS since its inception and its absence here, nearly a year after it was introduced, is not only a distraction but a concern.