Phonebook has no changes
The phonebook has space for 1000 contacts and 7000 numbers. You can  choose to view contacts in the phone memory or on SIM, but not both.  Either way you can set up the phone to autosave to SIM all contacts that  are being saved to the phone memory. You can also back up the entire  contact list on the memory card and restore it from there.
 
 
 
 
The Sony Ericsson Aino phonebook
Editing a contact employs a tabbed interface that's been heavily used  on Sony Ericsson handsets in the past couple of years. There are five  tabs that group related contact details. The first tab is for names and  numbers, next up is web addresses such as e-mails and URLs. The third  tab is for storing a picture, a custom ringtone, group, message tone and  voice command, the fourth is for postal details and - finally - the  fifth has fields for a note and a birthday (which you can add to the  Calendar too).
 
 
 
 
Tabs keep things in order
The name of the contact is written in only one field, but you still  have the option to order contacts by first or last name. The phone  guesses which is which and it does it quite well. Naturally, you can  search the contacts by gradual typing.
Wireless telephony is a nice option
Handling of calls is excellent and we didn't experience any voice  quality or reception problems with the Sony Ericsson Aino. Call clarity  is great in both the earpiece and speakerphone.
If you prefer to use the Bluetooth headset, you might have some  trouble finding the right place to clip it. The microphone placement on  the Bluetooth remote is not perfect and it may not always pick up your  voice right. But once you discover the best position you'll have no  further problems. The reception is good, you can go up to four or five  meters away from the handset without signal loss. The voice quality is  very good, so nothing to worry here either.
Sony Ericsson Aino offers video calling, but since there is no  front-facing videocall camera, it's more like video sharing - meaning  that you can see the other party on your display but you can only share  what your rear-facing primary camera "sees".
Smart dialing or "Smart Search" as Sony Ericsson call it, is a great  boost to usability. It looks up contacts whose numbers contain the  digits you have typed or whose names begin with the corresponding  letters.
 
 
 
Smart dialing makes life easier • Call log •  Making a call
The tabbed Call Log application should be familiar too if you've used  a fairly recent Sony Ericsson handset. It displays in four tabs,  including All, Answered (Received), Dialed and Missed. When there are  several calls made to or from a single contact, only the last one gets  displayed.
We did our traditional speakerphone test with Sony Ericsson Aino. The  maximum volume was a bit disappointing and the device scored barely  made it past the good mark.
Usually a Good mark in our test guarantees OK ringing volume levels.  However we noticed that the music player playback volume is subjectively  lower than the one from the ringer on incoming calls. So just bear that  in mind if you'd like to use the Aino as a portable jukebox - it will  barely cut it.
Here is how it compares to some of the other handsets we have tested.  You can find information on the actual testing process, along with the  full list of tested devices here.
   
Speakerphone test Voice,  dB Ringing   Overall score    
Sony Ericsson C905 65.7 66.1 73.8 Average    Sony Ericsson W995 66.1 66.6 75.7 Average       
Sony Ericsson Aino 66.5 66.2 75.9 Good       
Samsung S8300 UltraTOUCH 70.1 66.7 75.8 Good       
LG GD900 Crystal 73.2 71.6 73.5 Good       
Samsung M8910 Pixon12 75.7 72.8 77.3 Very  Good      
  HTC Touch HD 77,7 73,7 76,7 Excellent    Perfect messaging
Typical of the latest Sony Ericsson phones, the Aino sports the  threaded message view. SMS to and from a certain contact is organized in  speech bubbles much like in an instant messenger.
Switching between the conversation-style layout and the regular Inbox  is only a matter of toggling a tab.
Another interesting fact is that if you get a reply while you're  still in the thread, it will be automatically added to the conversation,  instead of appearing as an alert on the home screen.
 
 
 
The the messaging department
Along with the standard messaging functionality, Sony Ericsson Aino  offers the proprietary Manage Messages feature, plenty of settings for  accounts and the option to assign categories to messages.
The Manage Messages application enhances message handling. Messages  can be moved to memory card or phone memory, arranged by categories,  date, size, and contact. Categories also allow quick and comfortable  sorting of messages with separate folders.
There is also a rich T9 dictionary. The SMS and MMS messages share an  editor; when typing SMS you can easily convert it into an MMS via the  options menu or using the attach-stuff toolbar below the text box to  insert images, animations, videos or sounds.
 
 
 
Converting an SMS into a MMS is just as easy  as it gets
The phone automatically downloaded the settings for our Gmail  account. The options to view messages full screen and change font size  really helped get a lot of text on the screen. Even at the smallest font  setting text remained legible.
 
 
 
 
The comfortable e-mail client with some of  the options
For email you get the Manage Email feature, which has the same  functionality as the one for text messages. Saving attachments is  problem-free, even if the phone doesn't recognize the file type.
Unfortunately, the Sony Ericsson Aino (much like all other Sony  Ericsson feature phones) can't preview any documents including the ones  attached to emails (such as .xls, .doc, or .pdf files for example) due  to the lack of any document reader.
Sony Ericsson Aino review: I know fun - Phonebook, telephony, messaging
Posted
quangtao
Tuesday, February 2, 2010


 
 
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