OTHER CONFIGURATIONS ▼ Sony Ericsson P1Sony Ericsson P1iSony Ericsson P1cDiscontinued | OTHER CONFIGURATIONS ▼ Sony Ericsson K800Discontinued | |
|---|---|---|
Construction | ||
| Height | 106mm (4.17") | 105mm (4.13") |
| Width | 55mm (2.17") | 47mm (1.85") |
| Depth | 17mm (0.67") | 22mm (0.87") |
| Dimension | 106x55x17mm (4.17x2.17x0.67") | 105x47x22mm (4.13x1.85x0.87") |
| 3D SIZE | ||
| Weight | 124gr (4.37oz) | 115gr (4.06oz) |
| Form Factor | Candy Bar | Candy Bar |
| Material | ||
| Colors | ||
Usability | ||
| Display Resolution | 240x320px | 240x320px |
| Display Size | 40x53mm (1.57x2.09") ~154PPI | 31x41mm (1.22x1.61") ~200PPI |
| Display Diagonal | 2.6" | 2.0" |
| Display Type | 256K TFT | 256K TFT |
| Secondary Display Resolution | ||
| Input | QWERTY Keyboard Capacitive Touchscreen | Navigation Joystick / Button Numeric Keypad |
| Talk Time | 10 hours - 2G 3 hours, 30 minutes - 3G | 7 hours - 2G 2 hours, 30 minutes - 3G |
| Standby Time | 18 days, 8 hours - 2G 14 days, 14 hours - 3G | 14 days, 14 hours |
| OS | Symbian v9.1 | |
| Java | MIDP 2.0 | MIDP 2.0 |
| Vibration | Available | Available |
| Ringtone | Polyphonic | Polyphonic |
Hardware | ||
| Chipset | ||
| Processor | 208MHz | |
| GPU | ||
| Ram | 128MB | |
| Internal Memory | 160MB | 64MB |
| External Memory | Memory Stick Micro (M2) | Memory Stick Micro (M2) |
| Camera Resolution | 3.15 Megapixel | 3.15 Megapixel |
| Camera Flash | LED | Xenon |
| Camera Lens | ||
| Optical Zoom | ||
| Front Camera | 0.3 Megapixel | 0.3 Megapixel |
| Second Front Camera | ||
| Front Camera Flash | ||
| Other Functionalities | ||
| Speaker | Mono | Mono |
| Battery Capacity | 950mAh | 900mAh |
| Battery Type | ||
Connectivity | ||
| WIMAX | ||
| WiFi | ||
| UPnP | ||
| NFC | ||
| USB | v2.0 | v2.0 |
| Bluetooth | v2.0 | v2.0 |
| Positioning System | ||
| TV Receiver | ||
| TV Out | ||
| Audio Output | ||
| Radio | FM RDS | FM RDS |
| Ethernet | ||
| Infrared | Infrared | Infrared |
Cellular Network | ||
| Network Compatibility | GSM 1800, 1900, 900 UMTS 2100 | GSM 1800, 1900, 900 UMTS 2100 |
| SIM Cards | Mini | Mini |
| PTT | ||
| HSCSD | HSCSD | |
| GPRS | Class 10 | Class 10 |
| EDGE | ||
| AMPS | ||
| CDMA2000 1xEV-DO | ||
Operators | ||
| World Compatibility NO ACCESS 2G (GSM) 3G (UMTS) 3.5G (HSDPA) 4G (LTE) | ![]() | ![]() |
| Everything Everywhere | GSM 1800 / UMTS 2100 | GSM 1800 / UMTS 2100 |
| O2 | GSM 1800 / GSM 900 / UMTS 2100 | GSM 1800 / GSM 900 / UMTS 2100 |
| Vodafone | GSM 1800 / GSM 900 / UMTS 2100 | GSM 1800 / GSM 900 / UMTS 2100 |
| Three | UMTS 2100 | UMTS 2100 |
VARIOUS | ||
| Images | ||
| ReviewsDisplay Verdicts | 85 out of 100 Phone Arena We like the P1! Compared to the M600, the new P-series smartphone offers the desired high-quality camera and Wireless LAN (WiFi) which is a must in such style device. ... read more 80 out of 100 CNET Asia The P series is now slim and compact but still remains feature-packed for business users. Those considering one will just have to get used to the uncommon space-saving keyboard layout. read more 75 out of 100 Good Gear Guide The P1i is packed to the brim with features, and its only real downside is the unconventional keyboard, as well as an interface that will take some time to grasp. If you can get your head around each of them you're left with an excellent device on the whole. read more 70 out of 100 CNET The Sony Ericsson P1i is a nice upgrade to its predecessor and offers an alternative to today's Windows Mobile and Palm smartphones, but we're ultimately disappointed by the kludgey interface and lack of 3G. read more 50 out of 100 TechRadar A few usability niggles, but will the P1i's features make up for it? read more N/A out of 100 GSMArena The Sony Ericsson P1 is an exciting new smartphone that is to be included in Sony Ericsson portfolio. Powered by Symbian OS and featuring a QWERTY keyboard, a touchscreen TFT display with QVGA resolution and a 3.2 megapixel camera with auto focus, it represents the next level of the development of UIQ smartphones. As such, it seems that the Sony Ericsson P1 will be the flagship of Sony Ericsson smartphone line overrunning even the Sony Ericsson P990 and we were more than curious to find out how it performed in real life. read more N/A out of 100 Softpedia I wanted to like Sony Ericsson's P1i smartphone, and up to the point of actually working with it, I was in love. Unfortunately, there are simply too many downsides and bugs that shouldn't be there, since the smartphone has been launched on the market. There's no secret that the smartphone's launch was a little bit hurried to meet the iPhone's launch, but thats no reason/excuse to launch a handset with so many important flaws or downsides. Still, there's a good part about P1i: it's better than its predecessors and looks much better. read more N/A out of 100 MobileBurn The Sony Ericsson P1 has tortured me. I wanted to like it. I expected to like it. It has a great spec sheet, it is good looking, and it fits ever so easily into even the smallest of pockets. Yet, I do not like the P1. I've had too many problems with the device. WiFi has been a constant issue and the lack of EDGE support makes that all the worse. The disappearing inboxes are vexing, and the Exchange ActiveSync support is not quite up to snuff. Worst for me, perhaps, is that the menus and applications are simply too difficult to navigate without using a stylus. The scroll-wheel has proven itself inadequate, and the deep set on-screen softkeys are inconvenient - at best. read more | 90 out of 100 The Register There's a lot to like in the K800i, and I'd not feel I was taking too much of a risk proclaiming it the best 3G handset on the market at the present time. If it has a weakness it's that its frame is a little statuesque and its keypad is a little cramped, both of which could only really be overcome by switching to a clam-shell or slider format. read more 90 out of 100 TrustedReviews Sony Ericsson seems to have thought quite carefully about what people want from a cameraphone and done its best to oblige both in terms of hardware controls and software extras. It is the imaging extras as much as the raw megapixels that should justify the purchase of this handset. Even without those this is a neat, tidy and very impressive 3G handset. read more 83 out of 100 CNET With an amazing selection of features and great performance, the Sony Ericsson K7800i joins the company's K790a as a superior camera phone. read more 80 out of 100 Good Gear Guide The K800i is definitely the cream of the crop if you are after a camera phone. Its still not good enough to replace a stand alone digital camera, but this handset has enough in other areas to ensure it is an attractive proposition. read more 77 out of 100 CNET Asia The Sony Ericsson K800i is a competent camera and phone rolled into a sleek form factor. read more 75 out of 100 Phone Arena The K800 strives to combine multimedia functionality in a candybar-designed device with solid built quality and acceptable dimensions. But only its camera manages to perform at a high ... read more 75 out of 100 DigiCamReview Overall the Sony Ericsson Cybershot K800i offers a lot, it provides a fully functioning mobile phone (with Internet, Email, RSS, 3G, MP3 etc), and an adequately functioning 3 megapixel digital camera. The camera can take mostly decent shots outdoors (assuming lens flare doesn't rear it's ugly head), and takes average to poor indoor photos. read more N/A out of 100 GSMArena Sony Ericsson K800 is one of the handsets we were so anxious to test that we could hardly wait for the phone to be brought in the office. Its highly advertised Cyber-shot camera made us as restless as kids on Christmas morning. Once we got it and before we started working on this review we spent a good deal of time experimenting with the exciting 3.2 megapixel camera. Not that we haven't seen a better camera, no! The thing is that this good camera just happens to be a good mobile phone, too. read more N/A out of 100 lordpercy Sony Ericsson K800i is a fantastic camera phone worthy of your full attention. (source page not available anymore) |
| Price Range | ||
| Published On | April 2007 | September 2006 |


