Friday, November 8, 2013

LG G Flex price revealed for Korea, coming to Europe in December

LG G Flex Korea
LG announced the G Flex, the company’s latest phone in the G series last month. Earlier this week it announced that the phone would go on sale in Korea on November 12th, now it has finally announced the price of the device. The LG G Flex packs a 6-inch (1280 x 720 pixels) HD Curved Curved Plastic OLED display that vertically concave from top to bottom with a radius of 700mm, powered by a 2.26 GHz quad-core Snapdragon 800 processor and runs on Android 4.2.2 (Jelly Bean). It has a 13-megapixel rear camera with LED flash and a 2.1-megapixel front-facing camera. It packs a 3500 mAh curved battery.
LG G Flex
LG G Flex specifications 
  • 6-inch (1280 x 720 pixels) HD Curved Plastic OLED display
  • 2.26 GHz quad-core Snapdragon 800 (MSM8974) processor with 450 MHz Adreno 330 GPU
  • Android 4.2.2 Jelly Bean
  • Dimensions – 160.5 x 81.6 x 7.9 x 8.7, weight: 177g
  • 13MP rear camera with LED Flash, 1080p video recording at 30 fps
  • 2.1 MP front-facing camera
  • 2GB DDR3 RAM, 32GB of internal memory
  • LTE-A / 3G HSPA, WiFi 802.11 ac/a/b/g/n, Bluetooth 4.0 with A2DP, GPS / aGPS, NFC
  • 3500 mAh battery
LG G Flex Korea
The LG G Flex is priced at 999,900 South Korean Won (~US$940). It is available for pre-order from the Korean carriers SK Telecom (SKT), Korea Telecom (KT)  and LG U+ and would release on November 12th. As an introductory offer LG would provide a QuickWindow Case, Vest Case and a USB OTG Pen Drive (LG MU1 16GB) free of charge. LG has also announced that it would release the phone in France through the local operator Orange next month.

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Google Nexus 5 Benchmarks

Google Nexus 5 Benchmarks
Google launched the Nexus 5, the company’s latest flagship smartphone last month. We brought you theunboxing of the device earlier this week, here we have the benchmarks of the device. It is manufactured by LG and is powered by a 2.2 GHz quad-core Snapdragon 800 (MSM8974) 28nm HPm quad-core Krait 400 CPU clocked with Adreno 330 GPU. We brought you the benchmarks of the Snapdragon 800 on a reference smartphone few months back. Here we have also compared it in these benchmarks to show you the difference. Since Google has optimized the processor to use the minimal use of CPU cores when the phone is idle, some benchmarks such as Quadrant, AnTuTu and Linpack shows low scores. GPU-based benchmarks doesn’t get affected.
Quadrant Benchmark
Google Nexus 5 Quadrant
The Nexus 5 manages to score 8379 points in the Quadrant benchmark, since the CPU use is minimal when the benchmark runs.
AnTuTu Benchmark 3.3
Google Nexus 5 AnTuTu 3.3
The nexus 5 scores 22876 points in the AnTuTu Benchmark 3.3, again due to the CPU optimization in the device.
Vellamo 2.0 HTML5
Google Nexus 5 Vellamo 2 HTML5
Again the phone manages to score 1403 points in the Vellamo 2 HTML5 browser benchmark.
Vellamo 2.0 Metal
Google Nexus 5 Vellamo 2 Metal
It manages to score 1088 points in the Vellamo 2 Metal CPU subsystem performance test.
Linpack Single Thread
Google Nexus 5 Linpack Single Thread
It clocks around 120 MFLOPS in the Linpack single thread benchmark.
Linpack Multi-Thread
Google Nexus 5 Linpack Multi-Thread
It manages to clock 316 fps in the Linpack multi-thread benchmark.
SunSpider JavaScript benchmark
Google Nexus 5 SunSpider
It clocked 778.1 ms in the SunSpider JavaScript Benchmark. We tested it in the default Chrome browser, since it doesn’t have a separate browser.
NenaMark 2
Google Nexus 5 NenaMark 2
It clocked 59.1 fps in the Nenamark 2 GPU benchmark.
GFXBench 2.7 T-Rex (On screen)
Google Nexus 5 GFXBench 2.7 T-Rex OnScreen
It clocked 24 fps in the GFXBench 2.7 T-Rex (On screen) benchmark, similar to the Xperia Z1 and the Z Ultra.
GFXBench 2.5 Egypt HD (On screen)
Google Nexus 5 GFXBench 2.5 Egypt OnScreen
It clocked 50fps in the GFXBench 2.5 Egypt HD (On screen) benchmark.
Basemark X HD (Onscreen)
Google Nexus 5 Basemark X OnScreen
The Nexus 5 tops the Basemark X OnScreen GPU benchmark and lies just behind the Qualcomm Snapdragon development phone.
Basemark X HD (Offscreen)
Google Nexus 5 Basemark X OffScreen
The Google Nexus 5 clocks around 13.7 fps better than most of the devices.
Changes in the scores are due to the CPU optimization from Google, and not due to the Android 4.4 KitKat. We brought you the in-depth overview of the Android 4.4 KiKat on the Nexus 4 recently. We also tested the benchmarks scores of the phone running KitKat, which were almost similar to the Android 4.3 

Samsung’s Roadmap reveals 560ppi and 4K phones coming in 2014 and 2015 respectively

Samsung’s Roadmap reveals 560ppi and 4K phones coming in 2014 and 2015 respectively

Samsung held their second Analyst Day yesterday and the outcome of the event is that we now have an idea regarding what Samsung is planning for the smartphone market in the next couple of years. Among the various important revelations in event, certain highlights were that Samsung will be producing their custom ARM core CPUs and are planning to introduce 560ppi display smartphones in 2014 and 4K phones in the year after.
samsung-galaxy-note-3-review-7
Through the various slides revealed during the event, Samsung have officially confirmed that they are indeed working on their own application processor. Until now, Samsung had licensed Cortex processors from ARM and used them in their Exynos chipsets. Henceforth, Samsung will be developing their own processors very much like how Apple and Qualcomm are doing it. The slides indicates that Samsung will be going to the land of 64bit processors where Apple are already sitting pretty.
Samsung 64-bit Chip
Some of the other important milestones for the future include 560ppi SuperAMOLED displays for next year and 4K displays for the year after. One can argue that 4K TVs are yet to make their way to the mass consumer, how will the smartphones appeal – we may never know.
Samsung 560ppi display
Samsung were the first company to unveil a smartphone with a curved display – Samsung Galaxy Round. According to slides at the event, Samsung own nearly one third of patents related to the flexible products and hence they are expected to be the company that leads the flexible device market if in case it prospers. All of this information was made public because the investors were slightly nervous as the high-end smartphone market was almost reaching a saturation point. Yes, they were right – What more do you want other than a smartphone with a battery life lasting more than a day, with an excellent Full HD display, an excellent 13MP and a powerful Quad-core/Octa-core processor to power it. But it seems Samsung is thinking that there is a lot more to be achieved in the industry and hence the roadmap.
Samsung Bendable display

Android 4.4 KitKat In-depth Review

android-4-4kitkat-overview-walkthrough
Google announced the Nexus 5 a while back, and with it came the latest iteration of Android – 4.4 KitKat. Within a day, Nexus 5 made its way into the hands of talented developers and Google too helped along, with the AOSP builds instantly going live. We then rapidly saw ports and AOSP builds popping up, with one for the Nexus 4 claiming to be a direct port of the Nexus 5 ROM. That was intriguing enough for a flashing opportunity, and so we jumped on it, right away. It turned out to be exactly that, with the complete feature set, rather than the lacking AOSP builds. We used it long enough to discover and use all the user-facing features of Android 4.4 KitKat and hence, presenting you an in-depth overview of the same in a 26-minute video -
Read past the break for a walkthrough in text and photos.
Changes to the User Interface
The first thing you will notice when you power on your KitKat phone is the lockscreen. While the lockscreen has always been clean, gone is the bold hour clock and in comes the light font for the whole clock. More notably, there are two extra icons at the bottom of the screen, one an upward arrow and the other a camera icon. The upward arrow replaces the dotted circle, but has the same function of opening Google Now. The camera icon on the other is an indicator for the side swipe lockscreen widget, as there is no indication of widgets when you power the phone on. So, it’s upto you to drag the icon to the left to open up the camera shortcut widget on the lockscreen. Another interesting implementation is that the lockscreen now supports fullscreen album art for music playback.
android-kitkat-4-4-lockscreen
Upon opening the lockscreen you have the new launcher. This launcher is intertwined with Google Now and is called the “Google Search Launcher” or just “Launcher” in the settings, depending on where you see it. The new launcher has several new interface elements and is much changed from the stock one that used to be on Android 4.3. The icons are bigger, the wallpaper and widget pickers are different and the app list is now just an app list. Google usually dictates a 48px size, but with its own apps like Google search and Google+ having different sizes, the overall icon size is now 60px, to making it much better for the super high resolution 1080p screen on the Nexus 5. The whole launcher now features the Roboto condensed font which makes is slicker than ever.
android-4-4-google-launcher-1
One other major user interface change is that the neon blue accents that were introduced all over the interface in Android 4.0 ICS as a part of “Holo” have been turned white. The icons too have been slightly modified to suit the new design language of whiter apps and overall a much cleaner experience than before. Talking of icons, we have entirely new icons for the camera and the settings while there is a slightly modified icon for the new dialer.
android-4-4-kitkat-tooltip
Other minor but aesthetically pleasant user interface changes include more rounded tooltips with Roboto Condensed font, which was rectangular and with older font before. Gotta say, we really dig this new font that is all over the launcher.
android-4-4-kitkat-white-accents-1
The translucent UI has been talked about, a lot, and it doesn’t apply to the launcher alone. There is no “glass” or gaussian blur effect from Google here, just a plain opacity change for the nav bars, the status bar, the app list and even the notification center. Touchwiz did this already with 4.3, which was unexpectedly nice, so it’s good to see Google follow through, with a similar approach. Also, as we mentioned earlier, Google is now going for a cleaner white-based UI here, so it was illogical to have the dark pop ups everywhere.
android-4-4-kitkat-sharing-menu-list
In an effort to clean that up, the company has gone for a cleaner and whiter pop up UI in several places, like the sharing menu, which now has a list instead of icons. This is well known as Holo Light, and is now less jarring when in a completely white app-interface. Talking of app-interfaces, we have all new or some apps modified to fit with the new design, lets take a look at them then.
New Apps
android-4-4-kitkat-dialer
First and most major new app in Android 4.4 KitKat is the awesome dialer. Why we think it is awesome? Plainly because it is now integrated with Google Map’s local business listings, letting you instantly search local business like a restaurant, a pizza place or anything. It is well known that Google’s database of listings is one of the best, in this online age, and having that right into your dialer is something amazing. For example, if you search for “pizza” you will get all the listings of the pizza places near you. We have always had to resort to third party apps for this, but since it is built in to the dialer now, the need for an app or any difficulty in finding a local number for a business is gone. We highly rate this, and probably is our no.1 feature in Android 4.4 Kitkat.
android-4-4-kitkat-google-hangouts-sms
Next up, we have the new Hangouts app, which adds support for GIFs and is now integrated with SMS functionality in KitKat. This is certainly the biggest feature in the latest update, because KitKat totally does away with the default messaging app, leaving you with only Hangouts out of the box for all of your SMSes. But, with KitKat, any one can build a messaging app that can directly take advantage of the notifications, essentially becoming the default app, if the user chooses so. The setting for changing the default app is now available inside Android’s settings under “more”. Here’s a walkthrough of all the SMS related features of Android 4.4 and hangouts.
android-4-4-new-downloads-quick-office-app
Some other basic apps have now seen visual facelifts, like for example – Downloads. It used to be archaic, with a pre-Gingerbread UI and icon. While the icon remains the same, the app now gains the Holo Light styled white and clean user interface, inspired from QuickOffice. In fact, thanks to the new Storage framework, you can access the downloads app directly from Quickoffice which has a very similar UI. The same storage access framework lets you access files from your Google Drive or even box, dropbox accounts, all this from inside the Quickoffice app. Neat integration, that.
android-4-4-kitkat-people-app copy
Another app that has received the new visual treatment is “People”. It used to have a bright blue bar for the shortcuts, but now it’s gone and is exactly like all the other Google apps. There is a pattern going on here, a revolution of whiter and cleaner app design, and that’s only doing good for Android, or rather Google, as a whole.
android-4-4-kitkat-google-now-integration
Finally, we have the new Google Now app, or.. lets call it the Google Now launcher. Well, because it integrates right into your homescreen and is always just a swipe away from your default screen. Swipe to the right and you are inside Google now. Even opening the Google search app or activating any shortcut to it takes you to the homescreen page of Google Now, which is an app in itself, but also a full screen widget. Confused? You have to watch the video to see how it actually works. The new app also adds options for customization and reminders right from the main page, and of course, you have a lot of new cards as a part of this update. Another important feature of this new app, or launcher is the always listening voice commands. Anytime while in the launcher, you can say “Ok Google” and it will pick up your voice command and display the listening screen of Google Now. It works great.
New Features
Apart from all the user interface and the features, we also have some new features in Android 4.4 KitKat that adds or enhances the functionality of existing hardware.
1. Tap and Pay – new NFC feature
The Tap and Pay feature is a new extension of the already robust NFC support in Android. As explained in the developer portal -
With HCE, any app on an Android device can emulate an NFC smart card, letting users tap to initiate transactions with an app of their choice — no provisioned secure element (SE) in the device is needed. Apps can also use a new Reader Mode to act as readers for HCE cards and other NFC-based transactions.
android-4-4-kitkat-tap-and-pay-printing
2. Printing options baked into the OS
Android now natively supports printing of documents. Yes, it used to be able to print directly already, but now we have robust support for choosing the formatting options and so on.
3. Better memory optimizations for lower end devices, and better multi-tasking(no visible changes)
4. Subtitles and closed captioning in video player
android-4-4-closed-caption-subtitles
Hidden beneath the accessibility settings, we have support for closed captions in the native video player. Also known as subtitles, this should be immensely useful for impaired Android users, or even just watching foreign language movies. A welcome addition to Android 4.4 KitKat.
5. New Google keyboard now has native Emoji support
android-4-4-emoji-keyboard-kitkat
Google hangouts saw the introduction of the Android Emoji, but now it is available throughout the OS thanks to the additional dictionary options as well as the option in the Google Keyboard. Third party apps too now display the colourful Emoji in the text. Another highly requested feature now baked into the OS. We particularly liked how it showed Emoji as suggestions for certain expressions in the keyboard, nicely integrated.
6. Switch between launchers with Home setting
android-4-4-kitkat-home-switcher-settings
Google finally comes to terms with customization freaks, by offering a native switcher for the Home settings. It is right on top of the second set of items in the settings page, and lets you easily manage the launchers, with options for even deleting them with a single touch.
7. Pro-level native photo editing
Finally, we have another great feature baked in to the OS, and that is the native photo editing inside the Gallery app. The editor is much improved from before and provides pro-level options for editing your photos, right from adding basic instagram-like filters to editing the colour curves of your photos. We are guessing all the Google+ features will eventually be baked into the Google Photos app, but it is clear that Snapseed have done a great deal of work for the native photo editor. It works great, and there are tons of options to manipulate your photo. Best of all? It’s non-destructive, so all your photos stay intact, with the new one being saved in a copy, and you can always go back to the original if needed. We haven’t seen any OS to come with this amount of functionality for the photo editor out of the box, and we are now kinda thankful that Google acquired Snapseed.
So that concludes our in-depth walkthrough of each and every change or new feature that has been introduced in Android 4.4 KiKat. We think this is really a huge deal for Google. The design direction is fresh and inviting, but it still has some more strides to make before it gets totally streamlined. The new dialer is a revelation and is easily our pick of all the new features in KitKat, the native photo editor comes in close second. We hope you liked this article, and we hope it was deep enough in terms of user facing features. There are a lot more when it comes to developer features but we have cautiously avoided them, as they already know their way around the documentation.
Anyway, let us know what you think, in the comments section below. Have we missed anything? What would you like to know more?
Talk about usage and general opinions on Nexus 4. State it’s an early Nexus 5 port and the official update should be actually better. Battery life is great on WiFi+3G combination = 17 hours

Sony Xperia C : Review

Sony launched the Xperia C, the company’s first smartphone to feature a MediaTek chip last this month. We brought you the unboxing and the benchmarks of the device last month, here we have the complete review of the device. It has a 5-inch qHD screen and packs a quad-core MediaTek MT6589 chip, similar to most of the smartphones from local OEMs. Is the Sony Xperia C worth the price ? Let us dive into the review to find out. Unboxing
We unboxed the smartphone last month. Here is the unboxing video
Box Contents
  • Sony Xperia C
  • micro USB cable
  • Travel charger
  • Free Sony headphones and 1 year free insurance for damage protection
  • Sony headset with mic
  • User manual and other booklets
Hardware
Sony Xperia C-4
The Xperia C has a 5-inch (960 x 540 pixels) capacitive touch screen display at 220 PPI pixel density, which is decent but the viewing angles are not impressive. The display is protected by a Scratch-resistant touch panel cover glass (Schott 2nd source), which is definitely is good thing. Sunlight legibility is not the best. Since it is glossy and is prone to fingerprints. The phone has a solid build quality even though the back cover is made of plastic.
Sony Xperia C-5
There is an earpiece above the display and a 0.3-megapixel camera next to it. You also have the usual set of proximity and ambient light sensors next to it. These are hardly visible since the phone has a black bezel.
Sony Xperia C-6
You don’t have the capacitive touch buttons below the display since there are on-screen buttons for back, home and multi-tasking, but there is a LED notification light below the display. It glows in Blue or Red colors based on notifications.
Sony Xperia C-7
There is a chrome colored power button on the right side, below the power/lock button there is a volume rocker. The phone also has a dedicated camera key. You can see the large microphone grill present on the bezel, below the display. The phone is 8.88 mm thick and weighs about 153 grams.
Sony Xperia C-8
There micro USB slot on the left side.
Sony Xperia C-13
The 3.5mm audio jack is present on the top.
Sony Xperia C-14
There is a lanyard hole on the bottom.
Sony Xperia C-10
On the back there is a 8-megapixel camera with LED flash. There is a chrome ring around the camera. You see a large Sony branding on the center of the back cover.
Sony Xperia C-11
There is a large loudspeaker grill below the Sony branding. You can also see the Xperia branding above the loudspeaker.
Sony Xperia C-9
The back cover has smooth finish and also covers the sides of the phone. Even though the back is smooth, it is not shiny, so the phone doesn’t slip out of your hand while holding it. The back cover is prone to fingerprints and smudges, which requires frequent cleaning.
Sony Xperia C-2
The back cover is a bit hard to remove. You need to pull the cover from the bottom. Even though the phone has a removable back cover, the 2390 mAh battery is not removable.
Sony Xperia C-1
It has two micro SIM card slots below the camera module. The SIM 1 slot supports both 3G (WCDMA) and 2G (GSM), but the SIM 2 supports only 2G (GSM). The micro SD card slot is present next to the SIM card slots, which accepts cards up to 32GB.
Camera
Sony Xperia C-15
The 8-megapixel camera is good and the colors are vibrant in the images. It uses Sony’s Exmor R mobile sensor that was first introduced in the Xperia arc back in 2011. You have several focus modes including, single autofocus, face detection and touch focus. Focus is good, but the touch focus is not accurate, while the single focus takes a bit of time. Since the phone has a dedicated camera key, you can press it once to focus and object and click it to take an image. You can tap the left corner to switch to video camera mode, picture effect, sweep panorama, choose different scenes and switch to the VGA front camera to capture images or record a video. Camera options include, HDR, self-timer, portrait retouch, smile shutter, voice guided self portrait  and more. You can also adjust the white balance, ISO  (100 to 1600),
Check out some camera samples below
It can record videos at 1080p resolution. Some features are similar to the camera. You can enable night mode, change the exposure, white balance and metering . There is also a software image stabilizer. You can also enable LED video light and also take images at 2-megapixel resolution while capturing a video.
Here is a 1080p full HD video sample
Check out the camera review for a detailed overview of the Xperia C’s camera
Software
Sony Xperia C Homescreen Settings and Themes
Coming to the software part, the Xperia C runs on Android 4.2.2 (Jelly Bean), so you get a similar UI present on the Xperia Z including the home screen, cascading lockscreen UI and themes. You can pinch the homescreen to add widgets, change the wallpaper and themes. It supports up to 7 home screens.
Sony Xperia C Small Apps
The multi-tasking menu has small apps such as browser, notes, recorder and more. You can replace it with more small apps including Chrome bookmarks, Calendar and also turn widgets into small apps. You also have an option to install small apps from the Play Store. You can add only on small app at a time, which is disappointing. The Xperia Z Ultra got an update recently that brought option to add more than one mini apps to the screen from the multi-tasking menu. Hope Sony would bring this feature to the Xperia C too.
Sony Xperia C Lockscreen and Notifications
You can swipe up or down to unlock, swipe to the right to open the camera or swipe to left to go to lockscreen widgets. You have a standard notification screen with a quick toggle bar on the top. If you are using two SIM cards, the top left toggle can be used to switch between the SIM cards for primary calling or SMS, otherwise this would be used to enable or display data connectivity. Even though the phone runs on Android 4.2, you don’t have quick settings available in the stock Android. It is not possible to customize these toggles.
Sony Xperia C Memory, RAM, App 2 SD
You get 1.20GB of user memory out of 4GB of internal memory and 0.98GB for Apps. You get  973 MB of usable RAM out of 1GB. You can move the apps to the micro SD card, once you insert one and also select the SD card as the default storage option.
Apps
Sony Xperia C-12
The phone has a lot of pre-loaded apps. Other than the usual set of Google apps, you have range of utility apps such as Alarm & clock, Album, Calculator, Calendar, Email, File Commander (file manager), Movies, Movie Stdio (to edit videos), News and Weather, Notes, OfficeSuite, Photos and Sketch. You also have some pre-loaded apps the include, BIGFlix, LINE messenger, LinkedIn and McAfee Security.
Music Player and FM Radio
Sony Xperia C Music Player and FM
The phone has the standard Walkman app similar to other Xperia phones for playing music, which can play range or audio formats such as MP3, AAC, AMR, MID, OGG and WAV. You can enable ClearAudio+ option form the settings that enhanced the audio clarity and also enable equalizer to set different presets. The phone also has FM Radio with auto scan feature to search for channels, but you don’t get the recording feature. TrackID option lets you search for a song currently playing. The Clear Phase option in the sound settings automatically adjusts the sound quality of the loudspeaker, and the xLOUD option improves the loudness of the internal speaker. You don’t feel much of a different after enabling these. Audio through the loudspeakers it decent. Audio output over the bundled earphones could be better. The phone can play full HD videos in range of formats using the movies app.
Sony Xperia C Sony Music Jive and LIV
You get Sony Liv and Sony Music Jive apps, which are targeted at Indian users. The Sony Live offers free TV shows from the Sony TV Channels and the Sony Music Jive powered by Infibeam digital entertainment offers free music streaming.
Calls and Messaging
Sony Xperia C Calls and Messaging
You can switch between the SIM cards from the toggles in the notification bar before making calls or sending an SMS and also set the default SIM for calls and messaging from the SIM settings. The Sony Xperia keyboard offers word suggestions and auto complete.
Dual SIM
Sony Xperia C Dual SIM
The Dual SIM settings have option to customize the SIM card name, set default SIM for calls & messaging and data traffic. There are also options to auto switch calls & messaging and Data traffic. The Dual SIM reachbility is just like the Smart Dual SIM feature on Samsung Dual SIM smartphones that automatically forwards calls from the phone number on SIM 2, even if a user is on the phone with SIM 1’s number. It doesn’t work on all the service providers since some of them don’t allow call forwarding when busy. Call waiting is free but operators charge for call forwarding.
Connectivity
Sony Xperia C Connectivity
The connectivity features include, 3G (HSPA+:  42Mbps, HSUPA: 11.5Mbps), Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, WiFi Direct, Bluetooth v 4.0 with A2DP and GPS. It has DLNA support to stream content to near by DLNA supported devices. You can enable the Xperia Link to connect to the Sony PC Companion app on your PC if you are connected to same WiFi network. It also has USB On-the-go (OTG) support, but lacks NFC.
Performance and Benchmarks
The phone is powered by a 1.2 GHz quad-core MediaTek 6589 processor with PowerVR SGX 544MP2 GPU. The performance is good and it did not lag. Check out the benchmarks below.
Quadrant Benchmark
Sony Xperia C Quadrant
The Sony Xperia C tops the Quadrant benchmark with 4989 points.
AnTuTu Benchmark 3.3
Sony Xperia C AnTuTu 3.3
In the AnTuTu Benchmark 3.3, it scores 13116 points. We also tested the latest AnTuTu 4, in which it scored 13817 points.
Vellamo 2 HTML5
Sony Xperia C Vellamo 2 HTML5
It scored 1567 points in the Vellamo 2 HTML5 browser benchmark, ahead of most of the MediaTek powered smartphones. Check out the complete set of Xperia C Benchmarks here.
We also played some games on the phone, check out the Modern Combat 4 Gameplay on the Xperia C below. We tried the game by connecting a PS3 controller using the USB OTG cable.
Here is the RipTide 2 Gameplay
Here is the gaming review that also shows off the gameplay of DeadTrigger, Asphalt 7, Modern Combat 4 and Gangstar Vegas. Overall the gaming performance is decent in most of the games, but the graphics is just average.
Battery life
Sony Xperia C Battery
The 2390 mAh battery lasts a whole day on a single charge, even with both the SIM cards enabled. Sony offers STAMINA mode in the battery settings that enhances the battery life by turning the WiFi OFF when the screen is locked. The Low battery mode disables several functions to increase the battery, when it’s low.
Conclusion
Overall, the Xperia C is a decent mid-range smartphone from Sony. It has good build, camera and offers good battery life. It also has a LED notification light. At a market price of Rs. 20,490, it is a bit costly compared other phones with similar features. If you are looking for a phone around 20k with good build and camera, go for it.
Pros
  • Good build
  • Good Camera with a dedicated Camera Key
  • Good Battery life
Cons
  • Average performance
  • Battery is not removable
  • Slightly on the expensive side