Sony Ericsson Cell Phone
Sony Ericsson market share slipping
Apr 24th
Sony Ericsson’s net income dipped a whopping 48% to $212 million, while revenue was down 7% to about $4.3 billion. Average selling prices declined sharply to $192, from $213 a year-ago. The company said it held 8% global market share in the first quarter, down more than a point from the full year in 2007. This is a disappointment because everything is pointing to a double digit growth for the quarter which would indicate Sony Ericsson isn’t keeping pace with the market.
Many analysts are pointing to the fact that Sony Ericsson’s high end models have smaller screens time when larger displays are in great demand. Nokia is also falling into this same trap with few models that seem to be what the high end user is looking for.
Sony Ericsson’s XPERIA X1 launch date confirmed
Mar 5th
The unofficial Sony Ericsson Blog heard from Aldo Liguori, Corporate Vice President of the Global Communications and PR department at Sony Ericsson, who announced ‘that we will be launching the X1 product in 2nd Half of 2008, as per our announcement of 10th February that we made in Barcelona.’
This is good news as rumors were abound that the device would delayed until 1Q ‘09. Windows still hasn’t announced what operating system upgrades this device will be getting so stayed tuned.
SonyEricsson C902
Feb 29th
Sony Ericsson is stepping up to the plate with a thier new MVP camera phone, the C902 is a global GSM phone with Media player, TV out, FM radio with RDS, TrackID. 262K-color TFT display of QVGA resolution. The camera is 5 MP with auto focus, image stabilizer, video, flash. However it is lacking the Xenon flash system and that is a bit of a disappointment.
Specs
GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
3G Network HSDPA 2100
Exp. release 2008, Q2
Dimensions 108 x 49 x 10.5 mm
Weight 107 g
Display TFT, 256K colors
Size 240 x 320 pixels, 2 inches
Ringtones Type Polyphonic, MP3
Customization Download
Vibration Yes
Memory Phonebook 1000 x 20 fields, Photo call
Call records 30 received, dialed and missed calls
Card slot Memory Stick Micro (M2)
160 MB internal memory
Data GPRS Class 10 (4+1/3+2 slots), 32 - 48 kbps
HSCSD No
EDGE Class 10, 236.8 kbps
3G HSDPA, 3.6 Mbps
WLAN No
Bluetooth Yes, v2.0 with A2DP
Infrared port No
USB Yes, v2.0
Features Messaging SMS, MMS, Email, Instant Messaging
Browser WAP 2.0/HTML (NetFront), RSS reader
Games Yes + downloadable
Colors Swift Black, Luscious Red
Camera 5 MP, 2592Ñ…1944 pixels, autofocus, image stabiliser, video, flash; secondary videocall camera
8 illuminated camera touch keys
- Java MIDP 2.0
- FM radio with RDS
- MP3/AAC/MPEG4 player
- TrackID music recognition
- Picture editor/blogging
- Organiser
- Built-in handsfree
- Voice memo/dial
SonyEricsson’s Xperia X1 - A new era has just begun
Feb 13th
SonyEricsson has just rocked the mobile phone world with the announcement of the stunningly gorgeous Xperia X1 Smartphone that is set to launch in the 3rd Quarter of 2008. Without a doubt this has to be one of the best looking phones ever produced and with its unbelievably slick slide out QWERTY keyboard one of the best designed as well. The all metal case will keep fingerprints from showing in addition to giving it added strength and security. All this with a wide screen display and Windows Mobile 6 and you have what can only be described as the next big thing in the mobile industry.
There have been whispers that SonyEricsson is taking Nokia head on this year and if this is any indication of what is in the pipeline then Nokia might be looking over it’s shoulders more than at any time in their past. Competition breeds innovation and this can only be seen as a good thing in the mobile phone world.
SonyEricsson has launched a mini site for the Xperia X1 and be advised that drooling on your keyboard is virtually guaranteed as this phone could grace the cover of the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit cover and you wouldn’t hear many complaints… its that beautiful! That sound you heard was Steve Jobs vomiting in his mouth as he just realized SonyEricsson just made Apple its bitch. If you don’t believe me just check the specs below:
- 3″ 65K WVGA Screen with 480 x 800 Resolution
- 3.2 MP Camera: Flash / 3X Zoom / Auto-Focus / Video Recorder / Video Calling
- AOL, ICQ, Windows Live and Yahoo! IM
- GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 / UMTS 850 / 900 / 1700 / 1900 / 2100
- HSDPA, HSUPA, and UMTS
- A full slide-out QWERTY keyboard
- High Quality metal-finish
- Windows Mobile 6
- Optical joystick navigation
- 400.0 MB internal memory with Memory Stick input
- POP3 / IMAP4 / SMTP / Outlook Mobile / Push Email
- Handwriting recognition
- aGPS
- Bluetoothâ„¢ stereo (A2DP)
- WLAN
- USB mass storage
- Modem
- Java w/ J2ME / Mascot Capsule 3D Games Platform
- Radio - FM radio RDS
- Speaker phone
- Flight Mode
- MP3 Player: MP3 / AAC / AAC+ / eAAC+ / m4a / PlayNow
- Push To Talk
- Video Conferencing
I want one now please, seriously if anyone has a test unit and is in the need of a kidney drop me an email cause this phone will be mine.
Symbian, the open operating system
Jan 30th
Symbian OS is an advanced, open operating system licensed by the world’s leading mobile phone manufacturers including: Nokia, Samsung, Sony Ericsson, Panasonic, Motorola and LG. A total of 165 million Symbian smartphones have shipped as of Q3 2007. This is in large part due to their developer support and ease of customization.
Nokia is the #1 mobile phone manufacturer in the world and have been the dominant force for some time now, this is no small part due to them being dedicated to the Symbian operating system. This partnership has paid off with a record sales year and in particular with the launch of the Nokia N82, which some believe is the finest mobile phone ever produced. Their entire N and E series product lines make great use of this software which totals 22 models, not even including the tablet series.
Recently at CES Symbian was all over the place most notably in soon to be launched Motorola’s Z10 which has HSDPA, Symbian UIQ and 3.5G technology 3.2 megapixel camera, Superfast burst mode delivers 3 shots per second 2.2†, a QVGA display for 30 frames per second video playback, Storyboard editing allows for combination of multiple videos and the addition of soundtrack,commentary and visual effects.
Symbian defines what is cutting edge in the mobile phone industry and with the likes of the Nokia N77 TV phone just around the corner they don’t seem to be slowing down anytime soon.
2007 4Q Financial Reports
Jan 25th
In a stunning announcement AT&T Mobile added a U.S. Wireless Company record of 2.7 million new activations in the 4th quarter of 2007, this contributed to them eclipsing the 70 million subscriber mark. Profits soared to $3.14 billion, a 62% increase from 2006, ARPU went over $50, and data revenues increased over 50%. Of course the iPhone was the main reason for these results but still these numbers have to be putting the fear into the other wireless companies as all will be feeling the effects of the economic downturn in the upcoming quarter.
In related news Sprint Nextel lost a staggering 683,000 subscribers while losing over 200,000 prepaid as well. As can be expected with this type of devastating financial news the company has announced the firing of CFO Paul Saleh, CMO Tim Kelly and president of sales and distribution Mark Angelino,. This seemed inevitable after last weeks stock sell off that saw them lose some 25% of their company’s value. A shakeup was in order but I cant imagine how this will help a company that was already in turmoil.
In handset news Nokia increased its market share to 40% while increasing its profit by over 44%, while Motorola took a tumble in market share back to 2001 levels with 12.3% market share in the fourth quarter which is down from 22.4% in the fourth quarter of 2006. This has to be alarming for a company that had worked so hard to cut into Nokia’s dominance. I guess the plethora of RAZR’s and ROKR’s weren’t the innovations customers were looking for in 2007. This news of course was applauded by Samsung who took advantage of the situation by jumping into the #2 position.
The 3 Best Camera Phones of 2007
Jan 24th
Mobile phone cameras have increased in quality to the point where the photos don’t look they were taken in a dark dungeon by a guy with Parkinson’s. That might not be the bench mark the phone manufacturers are after but for the rest of us its important that the camera actually functions like one and the photos can actually be printed.
Thankfully the European market continues to push innovation in the mobile industry and this includes superior integration of high quality lenses and optics in a mobile device. Due to this, its not unheard of to read about a 5 megapixel mobile phone with a 4x optical zoom being announced, a far cry from the VGA cameras of just a couple years back. And yet some manufactures seem determined to make the 3 megapixel option far superior in picture quality instead of pushing megapixels and feature sets.
With that in mind lets take a look at the three best camera phones available:
LG Viewty KU990 
A 5 megapixel camera with the ability to upload videos straight to YouTube. Very impressive 120fps Video Recording feature, includes both auto and manual focusing, ISO 800 for great low light pictures. An impressive device for a company people associate with washing machines and TV’s. Immersion in the market place is starting to happen and 2008 could be big year for the electronics giant.
Sony Ericsson CyberShot K850i 
With autofocus, dual flash (Xenon and LED) variable ISO, white balance, metering modes and a multiple of scene modes this is the cream of the mobile phone crop. With the CyberShot name you would expect great photo quality and you are not disappointed. Sony should remain out in front in regards to image quality and ease of use based on the integration of its own products. Massive resources along with their research and development team should ensure continued innovation.
Nokia N82 
Carl Zeiss Optics and a Tessar lens are included in Nokia’s multimedia monster. Exposure compensation, 8 scene modes, a macro focus distance of 10 to 50 cm and a focus range 10 cm to infinity makes for impressive specs. Add to this its video conferencing ability, video stabilization, and both image and video software this device gives the Sony a run for its money. Nokia continues to dominate the market place except here in the U.S. where the GSM providers (AT&T and T-Mobile) do not seem to carry their high end products for some odd reason and until that changes we will have to continue to admire from afar or bite the bullet and drop upwards of $700 for their unlocked versions.
Overall these advancements are a great sign that the mobile industry is listening to their customers, now if we can only get all mobile phones to include Skype and GPS as standard features we just might have something.
The American Dream…in Europe
Aug 9th
Many recent developments in the mobile phone industry have had one thing in common and that is Europe, a place we left some 300 years ago and have largely forgot about except when they need help stopping Germany from from taking over and making everyone wear really tight leather pants.
Case in point the BlackBerry 8830 World Edition SmartPhone that has recently been gracing our televisions sets in Verizon adverts featuring the ‘can you hear me now guy’ speaking French and handing off the phone to some actor at a fake airport. The odd thing about the ad is that it is essentially advertising the companies massive flaw and that is their phones only work in the U.S. Why is this the case? Well gather around the campfire kids and let me spin ya a story about telecommunications in the good old USA.
You see in the late 80’s when U.S. cellular companies were starting to build out their networks they realized that analog networks (AMPS) had the potential to provide greater coverage area with less towers due to the basic technology involved. But as with everything in the US no one could agree on a single technology and each individual company developed their own version of the cellular network. The thinking behind this was that the individual companies thought they would dominate the market and then the other companies would have to eventually abandon their own technology and pay them for the use of theirs.
Of course this never happened as all these companies were too stubborn to consider what was best for the consumer and that is why we ended up with CDMA (Verizon) TDMA (Sprint) AMPS (McCaw Cellular). At this same time the European Union was having the same problem so they decided that they needed one standard and mandated that efforts would be put into a system that would be universal in all countries. This led to the GSM technology being implemented along side the old analog system and the two worked seamlessly together. They could travel virtually anywhere and their phones would work as well as when they switched carriers.
This certainly wasnt the case for any Americans traveling overseas when their only options was to rent a phone at their destination. This continued into the late 90’s until Voicestream Wireless used Hawaii as a test market for the first US GSM service and after that success, launched in a few western states promoting features and prices that were unheard of elsewhere in the country. The technology used data stored in a SIM card that could be moved from phone to phone and with it allowed a virtual phone book of personal numbers to be moved as well. The company grew rapidly and now for the first time Americans could take a phone from stateside and use it in Europe and Asia.
The others companies grew nervous of this development and it even caused AT&T to convert, at considerable cost, to the GSM technology. This caused a ripple effect and soon all these companies were gobbling up smaller ones, merging with larger ones, and even terminating roaming contracts that made it easier for customers to piggyback onto other networks. It seemed the battle had just escalated and with Nextel’s success another technology was thrown into the mix. All the while Europe was developing high speed data networks that would be years away in the U.S. all because they had focused on one technology and advancements benefited all the companies, not just one.
This is why technology developed in North America is now launching in Europe, simply for the reason that the U.S. market is just too slow to develop a high speed GSM data network that actually is available in more than a handful of cities. Case in point is T-Mobile whom was ahead of the curve on WAP, BlackBerry Server implementation, and data tethering. But for reasons that defied logic simply stopped developing anything after their GPRS network was launched and as a result fell behind in virtually every aspect of the industry. They are now paying for their mistake with a massive outlay of cash to build a UMTS network that if ever launched will be so late in the coming that it will nearly obsolete when it does.
And all this is why we see the perfect Blackberry 8820 being launched in the U.K. and the 8310 showing up in those oh so tight leather pants in Germany. So while we might have the iPhone before the rest of the world, we still have to settle for dial up speeds unless we want a phone that will only work if you never leave the cozy confines of a large metropolitan area and if you ever decide to leave that company for another you will have a very expensive paperweight mocking you for not having been born in London, Barcelona or even Tokyo.
Nokia must be butter cause they are on a roll
Aug 3rd
Nokia is leading the way in the mobile phone industry with innovation and massive profitability and its paying off huge for their stock holders. Lets break the recently announced numbers down and yes there is math involved so get out that number 2 pencil folks…just kidding.
Net Sales of 12.6 Billion (That’s Billion with a B people) which is an increase of 2.7 Billion over Q2 ‘o6 earnings. A Gross profit of 3.9 Billion (Thats nearly 4 Billion in 3 months) which amounts to an increase of 700 million over Q2 ‘06 earnings. Nokia now has an estimated 38% market share which dominates the mobile industry.
This news caused Motorola to fall to its knees and start weeping uncontrollably like the dude that Jessica Alba just kicked to the curb. They pondered aloud that they have really really thin phones and that it is all customers want so what was the problem? I sent them a text message advising that direct sales and unlocked mobile phones are really what people want but they didn’t respond, which is really bad texting etiquette. Perhaps they were just really engrossed in TRL due to all of its cutting edge interviewing and just forgot to respond or maybe they were just using the T-Mobile network and it was one of the 25% of the messages that never reach their intended destination.
Whatever the reasons lets hope that not only they but the rest of the mobile phone manufacturers start to adopt the ways of Nokia. However with Apple and AT&T taking such steps to make sure that no one can unlock the iPhone its doubtful that a change in the industry will be coming anytime soon. One can understand the reason why AT&T would take the steps it did to ensure only its network would work with the Jesus Phone but Apple really shouldn’t care as sales is what they want and need. One can imagine what kind of sales that T-Mobile and every other GSM provider in the world rack up if they were able to sell the iPhone.
Why Sony Ericsson, HTC, Motorola, Palm, Samsung or even Research in Motion would allow other companies to unlock their products and sell them at a markup is beyond me. Nokia has proven the market exists for direct sales and as proof they shipped 9 million Nokia N-Series Phones and almost 2 million Nokia E-Series devices during the second quarter of 2007 alone. The focus on high end devices, like the Nokia N-95, allowed the company to gain an additional 4% of the handset market share. This has completely caught analysts off guard and they continue to be amazed at Nokia’s huge profits and sales.
This all points to the fact that Nokia’s dominance will continue as they take the chances that keep them ahead of the curve, CTO Tero Ojanper predicts when the features of the N95 are common place around the world in 2-3 years the mobile entertainment business will explode and Nokia will be there ahead of the pack once again. Few could argue with this assessment as focusing on the European and Asian markets have helped them stay on the cutting edge and that is exactly where the competition wishes they were.
[Source]
Launch news: The Sony Ericsson P1i
Jul 27th
Sony Ericsson has launched their 5th generation P-Series that has become synonymous with high end business users. This particular model has virtually everything you could want in a cell phone, with a 3.2 megapixel camera, WiFi, Integrated WLAN and VoIP, a business card scanner, Microsoft Exchange, BlackBerry Connect, Video Calling, and even a VPN client.
Full Feature Set:
Dual function keyboard - full alpha-numeric (e.g. QWERTY)
Exchange ActiveSyncâ„¢ and BlackBerry® Connectâ„¢
Integrated WLAN and VoIP enabled
Business card scanner
2.6†touchscreen with 262,144 colors and a 240×320 display
3.2 megapixel camera with Auto focus
Video recording/streaming/viewing
Mobile TV — H.264 playback
Bluetooth stereo (A2DP)
Media player
512 MB Memory Stick Micro
160 MB User Memory (internal)
FM radio
RSS Feeds
Picture Blogging
Microsoft - Exchange ActiveSyncâ„¢
Research In Motion- BlackBerry Connect
POP3, IMAP4, including IMAP IDLE
Operaâ„¢ Web Browser 8.0
VPN client from Certicom
Bluetooth 2.0
USB 2.0 mass storage
Speakerphone
Sound recorder
Java
Networks: P1c/i: UMTS 2100-GSM/GPRS 900/1800/1900
Talk time GSM/UMTS: Up to 10 hrs/3 hrs 30 min
Standby time GSM/UMTS: Up to 440 hrs/350 hrs
Video call time: Up to 2 hrs
Predictive text input
Handwriting recognition
Transflective Display for bright light conditions
Document editors and readers
VoIP support
WLAN (Wi-Fi 802.11b)
Video Calling
At this time no US wireless carriers are selling this phone, what a shock , but it is available in a couple of different places that will leave you with options as it will be unlocked and have a direct manufacturer warranty. These high end do everything cell phones are still absent in the US and will continue to be that way until we start demanding their availability.
With every launch of a UMTS or 3G handset it will continue to highlight the shortcomings of the GSM providers and their lack of foresight into building out their high speed networks. For once it would be nice to see the US catch up and perhaps even surpass the Europeans in this technologically driven business. Perhaps when speeds reach that of DSL the carriers will learn that many customers could use this service and drop their Internet providers allowing huge revenues to be generated. With everything going wireless these days it sure would make it easier for not only individuals but also businesses that depend on their services to be integrated in a seamless manner.
Buy it now at CtiNyc
Sony Ericsson Press Release


















