Sony Ericsson Xperia Pureness X5 review
21.01.10
A flexible that's guaranteed to make people gawp, the Sony Ericsson Xperia Pureness X5 delivers anticyclone-impact wow factor with a see-through screen that's transparently designed to strike.
The Pureness has a premium price tag to go with it, too, and some excepting touches in the package, including a concierge military talents. Unlike other Xperia models, however, the Pureness may be sharp-looking but it's no smartphone. As its name suggests, on the features front the Pureness keeps it direct, offering most of the essential phone functionality one would wish from a mid-range handset in a classic, effective package.
Although expensive - it's initially deliberate at around the £600-£650 register SIM-free - the Sony Ericsson Xperia Pureness doesn't do touchscreen tricks or run on smartphone operating systems like the Windows Expressive Xperia X1 and X2 or the Android-powered Xperia X10.
As contrasted with, it's a compact candybar-style handset with HSDPA violent-speed 3G connectivity, typical Sony Ericsson media gambler functionality and a largely unceremonious Sony Ericsson user interface underpinning it. It lacks a camera of any breed, which is unusual for any mobile nowadays, and is compact also on Wi-Fi or GPS satellite location-finding gadgetry.
Source: Know Your Mobile