Sony Xperia 10 III Review - Amazing Features By Hankx World

By Hankx World
Aug 14, 2021
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Sony Xperia 10 III Review - Amazing Features

Sony mobile reported its first profit in years back in April, and that's a solid indicator that the company is on the right track. Last year, I was pleasantly surprised with the Xperia 10 2. This phone quickly found its way to the list of the top best phones under 400 and for a good reason. It had a flagship-like features for such a crazy price. This year's model, the Xperia 10 3, bears a heavy burden of expectations upon itself and it sort of lives up to these expectations. The design remains the same with a couple of refinements here and there the phone is a tad more compact.

The display is still very good and a joy to look at the battery capacity has grown by a whopping 25, making this phone a stamina monster and the price is still good, 429 euros per 399 pounds. The 3.5 millimeters audio jack lives on to see another day, and so does the micro SD card slot. On the other hand, there are some glaring omissions that can hamper the success of the Xperia x3. The biggest one is the lack of a high display, refresh rate mode hr. The phone caps at 60, hertz hr displays are the latest trend in mobile and many mid-range phones can already do 90, hertz or higher.

The other big disappointment is the bundled charger. It's a joke. I guess a tiny 7.5 w charger is better than no charger at all, but three plus hours for a full charge is just not practical. At the end of the day, though, the Xperia x3 is still a good phone and still an evolution. Will it be a success? Only time will tell now talking about the design.

The glass sandwich, design looks pretty and works well and there's not much. You can do when your smartphone is 90 display, and yet, if I put a Xperia phone in the aforementioned experiment, you'll spot it right away the wide 21 to 9 screen aspect ratios coupled with the symmetrical top and bottom bezels make. Xperia phones stand out without straying too far from the canonical smartphone design and that's a feat in itself. But let's get back to the Xperia x3. The mark iii is very similar to the mark ii design-wise, but there are some minor differences for starters.

The Xperia 10-3 is slightly smaller than its predecessor, three millimeters shorter and a millimeter narrower the speakerphone grille design has been tweaked and now both the loudspeaker and the speakerphone are stylish crevices between the frame and the front glass. The camera bump on the back retains its elongated pill shape, but the design has been toned down a bit and looks cleaner. The front and back are gorilla glass, 6, hugging, a plastic frame between them. There's a volume rocker on the right and a capacitive fingerprint sensor just below it doubling as a power button. Further down, we find the dedicated Google Assistant button, that's flushed with the frame and quite tiny, I'm not sure.

If anyone actually uses a physical camera, shutter button would have been so much nicer, but it is what it is. The 3.5 millimeters audio jack has survived for yet another generation and is placed on the top. The sim tray is located on the left side of the frame, and you can use your fingernail to open the flap and take out the card. No pointy tools required. It's a hybrid dual sim slot.

You can use a micro SD card in place of the second sim there's a fluorescent green rubber seal around the flap x. The Xperia 3 boasts an ip6568s rating, which means it's protected for up to 1.5 meters of immersion for up to 30 minutes, including splashing, from a shower or an accidental and brief dunking. When it comes to the display. The Xperia 10 3 features a 6-inch OLED HDR panel, with a resolution of 1080 by 2520 and 479 PPI pixel density. The resulting image is quite sharp and clear, and during testing we measured 581 nits of peak brightness in auto mode.

The color accuracy of the panel is also fairly good. The average delta e number we were able to get was 2.75 in original mode. Speaking of display modes, there's two concerning color calibration, the aforementioned original and a standard mode, the latter being the default one. If you want the most faithful, color reproduction and enjoy a warmer screen, you should stick to original there's a video optimization option available when you're in standard mode, which is supposed to enhance video quality. Turning it on results in videos with a cooler, color palette and slightly improved contrast at the expense of color accuracy.

One thing the Sony Xperia 10 3 is missing is a higher display, refresh rate the OLED panel caps at 60 hertz, so no buttery, smooth scrolling here, I'm afraid it's a painful omission, especially when many mid-range phones can now go up to 90 hertz and some high-tier models like the Samsung a525g can even do 120 hertz with that being said, I find the display of the Xperia x3, quite good. Overall, it's almost like you have a shrunken bra via TV in your palm watching a movie on this clean and wide display is a totally different experience. What do you think of the Xperia 10 3? Please? Let us know in the comments and don't forget to like and subscribe for more videos every day.


Source : Hankx World

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