Untuklayar, terdapat perbedaan ukuran yang cukup besar antara Xperia XA1 dengan Xperia XA1 Ultra, di mana Xperia XA1 hadir dengan layar 5″ dengan resolusi HD (1280 x 720 piksel), sedangkan Xperia XA1 Ultra hadir dengan layar 6″ dengan resolumê say Full HD (19đôi mươi x 1080 piksel). Layar di kedua smartphone itu menggunakan desain edge-to-edge.
SonyXperia XA1 review A low price and ultra-high megapixel count By Andrew Williams published 29 January 18 (opens in new tab) (opens in new tab) (opens in new tab) (opens in new tab)
SonyXperia XA1 - Specifications. Width Height Thickness Weight Write a review. Specifications Display Camera CPU Battery SAR. Dimensions: 67 x 145 x 8 mm. Weight: 143 g. SoC: MediaTek Helio P20 (MT6757) CPU: 4x 2.3 GHz ARM Cortex-A53, 4x 1.6 GHz ARM Cortex-A53, Cores: 8. GPU: ARM Mali-T880 MP2, 900 MHz, Cores: 2. RAM: 3 GB, 1600 MHz.
SonyXperia XA1 Ultra Leather Grey - Telefoonhoesje sticker voor je Sony Xperia XA1 Ultra - Leer grijs cover folie Als een reviewer door een andere partij is vergoed, staat dit in de review zelf. 14 95. Op voorraad Voor 18:00 uur besteld, dinsdag in huis Verkoop door Screenkeepers. 7,8 Sony Xperia XA1 Ultra Leather Grey - Telefoonhoesje
GSMArenacom: Sony Xperia XA1 Ultra user opinions and reviews - page 9. ADVERTISEMENTS. Sony Xperia XA1 Ultra - user opinions and reviews. Released 2017, May 188g, 8.1mm thickness Android 7.0, up to Android 8.0 32GB/64GB storage, microSDXC; 0.8% 4,433,290 hits; 320 Become a fan; 6.0" 1080x1920 pixels.
Rootingthis new mobile is not hard at all Honeywell Scanner Factory Reset Root Sony Xperia XA1 Android Oreo 8 Sony Xperia XA1 Ultra G3226 FRP Reset Without PC Using it, loudspeaker and windows 7 This is necessary so that the phone does not have time to On Android, turn on USB debugging and connect to PC This is necessary so that the phone does
W06Ve. Onde Comprar As melhoras ofertas para o Sony Xperia XA1 Ultra Comentários Sony Xperia XA1 Ultra As especificações e dados técnicos 5 anos atr?s Está do preço do Galaxy S7 Edge. Muito caro. ver m?s Maur_cio_Costa 5 anos atr?s Há vários meses venho lendo sobre celulares intermediários e premium e curiosamente o XA1 Ultra. Só naqueles relacionados a fotografias. ver m?s Maur_cio_Costa 5 anos atr?s A ausência sensor digital é o grande pecado deste celular ver m?s cesaraugust 5 anos atr?s pessoal estou com uma grande duvida... qual vcs acham qe compensa mais o xa1 ultra ou xa1 plus??? ver m?s
Why you can trust TechRadar We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you’re buying the best. Find out more about how we test. Interface and reliabilityAndroid with custom Sony interfaceFairly quick general performanceRejects a few interface conventions of AndroidThe Sony Xperia XA1 runs Android with the custom Sony interface laid on top. You get recent Android improvements like the new notifications system and the Google Assistant, but Sony’s UI is actually like a continuation of Android’s example, the apps menu comes in pages rather than as a giant alphabetical scroll, and you can arrange your apps menu into folders, and choose the position of apps. Google “simplified” features like this out of existence some time nothing inherently wrong with Sony’s approach, as long as you haven’t experienced a recent vanilla’ version of Android and will see this as a step backwards. Only one screen smacks of the sort of bloat we like to avoid in custom interfaces, the “app suggestion” get to this by swiping left-to-right on your apps menu, and it simply houses a few recently used app icons and a bunch of suggested downloads from Google Play. For most, it’s pretty useless, but is also easy to Sony Xperia XA1's interface feels fairly quick for the most part, with no annoying laggy moments as you navigate or type away at the keyboard. However, app loads are slightly slower than some. Using DDR3 RAM rather than DDR4 judging by our tests probably doesn’t help, although the phone’s 32GB of storage is actually reasonably fast, writing at 124MB/ music and gamingFeatures a suite of Sony media appsGood gaming performanceMono speaker doesn’t impressLike other Sony phones, the Sony Xperia XA1 does its best to nudge several Google services into the background, attempting to replace them with its own media apps. There are Sony video and music apps, and the Sony PlayStation app for the PS4 owners out video app is not what you might expect at all. It’s not a video store but a local media player and a way to search what’s on TV, a sort of advanced channel guide. It’s not much use if you mostly watch Netflix these days, but may appeal if you’re still playing it suggestion that a 1983 re-run of Top of the Pops is one of tonight’s favorite TV shows in the UK seems dubious, though. Take its recommendations with a critical Music app is a decent iPod-a-like local music player that also lets you hook-in PlayStation app is perhaps the most interesting of the lot, because it doesn’t just rehash ideas found elsewhere countless times on Google Play. Instead, it lets you control a PS4 with your Sony Xperia XA1, to type things in without using the gamepad, for its own, the Sony Xperia XA1 is a good, if not class-leading gaming phone. Its limiting factors are simple. You can get bigger, higher-resolution screens at the price, and the internal speaker here is not that it looks like there are Sony’s signature front-loaded stereo speakers here, the Sony Xperia XA1 actually just has one speaker on the bottom edge. That means no stereo sound, and the lone speaker isn’t all that loud or game we tried ran very well on the Sony Xperia XA1, though. While the phone doesn’t have a high-end CPU/GPU, it’s easily powerful enough to make games sing at the native 720p and benchmarksSmooth general performanceSlightly lower Geekbench score than Moto G5 PlusThe Sony Xperia XA1 has a MediaTek Helio P20 CPU with 3GB of DDR3 RAM. This CPU has eight Cortex-A53 cores, four at and four at A Mali-T880MP2 provides graphics by the performance of some phones with the last-gen Helio P10, this setup might struggle if the Sony Xperia XA1 had a 1080p screen, but it doesn’t. Everything seems to run rather nicely, the only obvious performance trade-off being in app load speeds, which are slightly slower than the XA1’s big Geekbench 4, the Sony Xperia XA1 scores a solid 3,628 809 per core points, around 200 less than the 3,824 score the Moto G5 Plus achieved in our tests. Don’t read too much into that, though. This phone is very much in the same league as the Moto G5 Plus and its smaller brother, the Moto three all use Cortex-A53 cores, and the G5 Plus has the advantage of a 14nm die process rather than a 16nm one. However, that’s not too grand a difference. These numbers refer to the size of transistors in a CPU, 14/16 nanometers. In summary the smaller, the better. Andrew is a freelance journalist and has been writing and editing for some of the UK's top tech and lifestyle publications including TrustedReviews, Stuff, T3, TechRadar, Lifehacker and others. Most Popular
A linha Ultra da Sony é composta por smartphones com telas enormes. O membro mais recente da família é o Xperia XA1 Ultra ele tem painel IPS LCD de 6 polegadas, bordas laterais compactas e um conjunto de câmeras que promete capturar boas fotos. Com preço sugerido de R$ o Xperia XA1 Ultra tem hardware que bate de frente com os intermediários premium, trazendo processador MediaTek Helio P20, 4 GB de RAM e 64 GB de armazenamento interno. Será que é uma boa opção? Eu conto neste breve review. Em vídeo Design e tela Eu gosto bastante do design da linha XA porque a Sony elimina as bordas laterais do aparelho, o que melhora a ergonomia e facilita a digitação, já que o dedão alcança facilmente o outro lado do visor. Isso faz bastante diferença no Xperia XA1, mas não no Xperia XA1 Ultra a tela de 6 polegadas te obriga a utilizar o smartphone com as duas mãos. Não tem jeito. O Xperia XA1 Ultra é um smartphone bem construído. A traseira é de plástico e acumula marcas de dedo com facilidade; em compensação, ele tem bordas de metal e peças bem encaixadas, além de passar uma boa sensação de robustez, que parece ser reforçada pelo peso de 188 gramas. Bons detalhes dos Xperias continuam presentes, como o alto-falante boa qualidade e o botão de duas fases para tirar fotos. Mas a ausência mais notável, sem dúvidas, é o leitor de impressões digitais — eu não passei um segundo sem sentir a falta dele. Até o Moto E4, que custa menos de um terço do valor pedido pela Sony, tem o sensor essencial. E quase todos os smartphones da mesma categoria do Xperia XA1 Ultra tinham o leitor desde o ano passado, por isso, não colocá-lo em pleno ano de 2017 foi uma tremenda bola fora da Sony. A tela é de boa qualidade. O painel IPS LCD de 6 polegadas com resolução de 1920×1080 pixels entrega uma definição dentro do que esperamos para um intermediário premium; o brilho é alto e o nível de preto também agrada, considerando os limites tecnológicos de uma tela retroiluminada. Fica claro que o Xperia XA1 Ultra é um smartphone pensado para consumo de conteúdo — e é bom ver que alguém continua apostando nesse nicho. Software O Android do Xperia XA1 Ultra é o Nougat e tem a mesma interface que você encontra em outros smartphones recentes da empresa. O software tem modificações nos ícones, bem como algumas animações extras aqui e acolá, mas ele é bem parecido com o Android desenvolvido pelo Google. A Sony continua colocando alguns aplicativos de utilidade duvidosa, como um atalho para o blog da empresa, um trial de 180 dias do AVG Antivirus e um editor de vídeos. De qualquer forma, os bloatwares não são muito numerosos e podem ser desativados rapidamente. Câmera A câmera frontal de 16 megapixels do Xperia XA1 Ultra é bem chamativa, mas não só isso ela realmente entrega resultados acima da média da categoria. As selfies têm boa definição, praticamente sem ruído, e se dá muito bem inclusive em ambientes internos. Já a câmera traseira tem sensor de 23 megapixels — o mesmo que equipa o Xperia XA1 e o Xperia Z5, que foi o topo de linha da Sony em 2015. Os resultados não são impressionantes, mas até que agradam. Com bastante iluminação, a câmera faz um bom trabalho e tira fotos com definição excelente. No entanto, é muito perceptível que o algoritmo da Sony força demais a saturação e o contraste da imagem. Isso acaba prejudicando o alcance dinâmico e, por vezes, cria áreas de sombra muito fortes, o que fica claro quando comparamos com uma câmera realmente boa de 2016. Alcance dinâmico ruim no Xperia XA1 Ultra Foto mais equilibrada no Galaxy S7 Edge Alcance dinâmico ruim no Xperia XA1 Ultra Foto mais equilibrada no Galaxy S7 Edge Em ambientes internos, a ótima definição é mantida e o nível de ruído não aumenta. Já em cenários noturnos, o Xperia XA1 Ultra decepciona por não ter ruído nenhum, mas também sumir com a definição. O pós-processamento tenta enganar os olhos com um sharpening para forçar uma nitidez que o sensor não conseguiu capturar, mas basta uma olhada por mais cinco segundos para ver que os detalhes sumiram da cena. Em resumo, não é uma câmera ruim, mas também não é uma câmera sensacional. Ela tira fotos com qualidade satisfatória e, se você acompanhou outros reviews de intermediários premium, já sabe que a melhor opção para quem realmente se importa com fotografia ainda é pegar um topo de linha da geração passada. Hardware e bateria O processador MediaTek Helio P20 do Xperia XA1 Ultra é bem parecido com o Snapdragon 625 ou 626 que equipam os smartphones da mesma categoria, tanto na CPU quanto na GPU. Por isso, você já sabe o que esperar o desempenho é bom no dia a dia, as animações são fluidas, e os 4 GB de RAM colaboram pra manter o multitarefa bem ágil. Games como Unkilled e Breakneck rodam bem, desde que você não force muito os gráficos — se o objetivo é jogatina no nível hard, só indo para um topo de linha mesmo. Bons destaques são o armazenamento interno de 64 GB, que felizmente já virou padrão entre os Androids na faixa de preço, e para a entrada de cartão de memória, que não é híbrida — você pode colocar dois chips de operadora e um microSD ao mesmo tempo, sem nenhuma gambiarra. A bateria com capacidade de mAh, pelo número, pode causar uma primeira impressão ruim e injusta, já que ela é responsável por manter um smartphone de 6 polegadas ligado. Poderia ser melhor? Poderia. Mas, na prática, a autonomia deve satisfazer a maioria dos usuários. Nos meus dias de teste, eu tirei o Xperia XA1 Ultra da tomada às 9h da manhã, ouvi duas horas de streaming de música no 4G e naveguei na web por duas horas, também na rede móvel, sempre com brilho no automático. Às 22h, eu sempre tinha algo em torno de 30 a 35% de bateria. Não é uma autonomia que smartphones da categoria, como Galaxy A7, Zenfone 3 ou Moto Z2 Play, costumam apresentar. Mas é uma duração parecida com a dos topos de linha, que trazem baterias maiores, mas hardware mais poderoso — o Xperia XA1 Ultra deve aguentar até o final do dia com carga na maioria das vezes. Conclusão O Xperia XA1 Ultra acaba sendo um smartphone de nicho. Ele é interessante desde que você faça questão de uma tela realmente grande. O smartphone da Sony entrega um desempenho na média da categoria, câmera satisfatória e uma bateria ligeiramente abaixo dos concorrentes, mas não exatamente ruim. O maior problema, com certeza, é a falta do leitor de impressões digitais, que já virou item essencial até para smartphones mais básicos, abaixo dos mil reais. Além disso, ele sofre a concorrência de gigantes do ano passado, notavelmente o Galaxy A9, que também possui uma tela de 6 polegadas. Embora tenha apenas 32 GB de armazenamento, seja bem pesado e também tire fotos medianas, o aparelho da Samsung oferece bateria melhor mAh, sensor biométrico e processador levemente superior. Apesar de ter sido lançado por R$ ele já pode ser encontrado na faixa dos R$ 1,5 mil. Pensando em tela, o Xperia XA1 Ultra é uma das poucas opções dessa faixa de preço. Para consumir conteúdo, especialmente vídeos, é um dos melhores smartphones do mercado. Mas, sinceramente, eu prefiro ter meia polegada a menos e um conjunto melhor no geral. Especificações técnicas Bateria mAh; Câmera 23 megapixels traseira e 16 megapixels frontal; Conectividade 3G, 4G, Wi-Fi GPS, GLONASS, Bluetooth USB-C NFC, rádio FM; Dimensões 165 x 79 x 8,1 mm; GPU Mali-T880 MP2; Memória externa suporte a cartão microSD de até 256 GB; Memória interna 64 GB; Memória RAM 4 GB; Peso 188 gramas; Plataforma Android Nougat; Processador octa-core MediaTek Helio P20 de 2,3 GHz; Sensores acelerômetro, proximidade, bússola, giroscópio; Tela IPS LCD de 6,0 polegadas com resolução de 1920×1080 pixels. Sony Xperia XA1 Ultra Prós Bastante capacidade de armazenamento interno Câmera frontal acima da média Tela enorme de boa qualidade Contras Bateria poderia ter capacidade maior Cadê o leitor de impressões digitais?! Câmera traseira ainda não é lá aquelas coisas IPS In-Plane SwitchingSonySony Xperia XA1 UltraXperiaCâmeraMoto E4HardwareMemória RAMAndroidAndroid 7 NougatmicroSDMoto Z2 PlaysoftwareGPUCPUAsus Zenfone 3NFCBluetoothGoogleSamsung
Sony Xperia XA1 Ultra detailed review Bezel-less phones have become the trend lately, and believe it or not Sony has been with it this time. The company’s Xperia XA branded smartphones have followed bezel-less form factors for a while, and this, the Xperia XA1 Ultra is the “biggest” of the lot. It has a 6-inch near bezel-less screen and Sony’s top-end 23 megapixel rear camera. In some ways, the Sony Xperia XA1 Ultra has the specs down right, but then it also has some glaring flaws. Build and Design Reviewers, me included, have often questioned Sony’s insistence on sticking to its blocky Xperia designs. But if there’s one phone where that worked, it’s here. The Xperia XA1 Ultra sports a nearly bezel-less screen, which looks quite striking thanks to the large size. The device is sturdily built with no untoward creaks. The sides are slightly curved, while the corners are sharp, giving the device a slab-like look and feel. The round power button lies on the right side, with the volume rocker above it. There’s a dedicated camera shutter button below these, while the dual-SIM slot lies on the left of the smartphone. There’s also a dedicated micro-SD slot alongside the SIM slots, while the USB Type-C port and mono-speaker is on the bottom of the device. The headphone jack is on the top. Notice that there’s no fingerprint sensor on this phone, which at nearly Rs. 30,000 is certainly a misstep on Sony’s part. While some may argue that a fingerprint sensor is not a necessity, but at this price Sony isn’t targeting first time buyers. And a fingerprint sensor is one of those things that you get too used to, to forget. Also, Sony’s design is seamless and attractive, but the Xperia XA1 Ultra is not ergonomic by any stretch of imagination. The bezel-less design is somewhat wasted because of the two large glossy strips of plastic above and below the screen. Bezel-less displays are usually more immersive, but Sony somewhat kills that with the thick strips on either side. It also makes for a rather large form factor that is uncomfortable in your pocket, or to hold, and you can certainly not use this with one hand. But lack of ergonomics will perhaps be ignored by those looking for big-screen phones. Display Barring its flagship Xperia XZ Premium, Sony has never really been known to push the boundaries with display resolution. The company thinks 1080p is all you need, even on a 6-inch display, and Sony is probably right. While 367ppi pixel density sounds somewhat low, the 1080p display on this device looks great. To be clear, Sony’s display isn’t the most colourful and it doesn’t have AMOLED level contrast, but it brings a pleasant mix of everything. Colours are well balanced and contrast is high enough for things to looks good. Barring Samsung’s AMOLED panels, there are a few phones in this price range that can offer a better display. The screen is also scratch resistant and doesn’t take to fingerprints easily, making it a pleasant experience overall. Auto brightness isn’t totally seamless, but then that’s true for almost every Android phone today. Performance This is where things start breaking down. The Xperia XA1 Ultra is powered by the Helio P20 chipset from MediaTek. To be clear, Sony provides a decent experience here too, but it’s not the fastest phone out there, and noticeably so. The Xperia XA1 Ultra is smooth as long as swiping across screens and in-app performance is concerned, but it suffers from occasional stutters and lags that will only increase over time. For instance, gaming performance is mostly smooth, but many in-game transitions and animations tend to be a little choppy. Similarly, most apps will run smoothly, but they’ll take slightly longer to load or the phone feels sticky when transitioning between app to app. If you’re downloading multiple apps on the background, animations may get laggy as well. From a performance point of view, the Xperia XA1 Ultra doesn’t qualify as fluid or smooth, which isn’t particularly new for a Sony smartphone. The company has evidently tried its best to optimise things out here, and succeeded to some extent. It’s possible that the MediaTek Helio P20 is more inclined towards thermal and battery efficiency than raw power. That said, we’ve seen more fluid performance even on cheaper phones running the Snapdragon 625. Camera While Sony’s competitors are touting dual-cameras, the company itself is focused on in-house technology. The Xperia XA1 Ultra sports Sony’s 23MP camera on the back with f/ aperture and the IMX300 sensor. The pixel size lies at micron, which again doesn’t push the limits of low light performance. On the front is a 16MP sensor, which is difficult to miss thanks to the rather large module. Note We noticed patchy image quality on the Xperia XA1 Ultra at first. After informing Sony of the same, the company sent us a replacement unit. The image quality on this new unit was indeed better. The second unit of the Xperia XA1 Ultra indeed performed better on the camera front. Images taken by the device capture decent amount of details, but colour saturation is slightly higher than usual, which is a surprise coming from Sony. Also, we noticed a greenish tint on some photos, from time to time. Lastly, low light images are decent, but noise levels are higher than ideal, reducing details. Sony Xperia XA1 Ultra Image Samples It’s worth noting that the Xperia XA1 Ultra shoots photos in 20MP by default and in 169 aspect ratio. You can change this to 43 and 23MP from the settings, and there are options for 12MP in either aspect ratio. There’s a manual mode for deeper control over photos, allowing you to customise white balance, shutter speed, focus and EV settings. The Xperia XA1 Ultra can shoot videos in FHD HDR. If we were to choose between the two cameras, Sony has done a better job with the front shooter here. Barring a tendency to overexpose the whites, the camera does a decent job. Most importantly, Sony’s front camera keeps photos natural, rather than adding beautify elements that smoothen skin tones and make photos look unnatural. Battery There are a lot of compromises with the Xperia XA1 Ultra, and we can live with most of them. What we can’t ignore though is the 2700 mAh battery on such a large form factor. That’s incredibly small battery capacity by today’s standards. Also, though battery capacity doesn’t always determine battery life, the Xperia XA1 Ultra barely makes the cut. The big screen does draw a lot of power, so even though the Helio P20 is efficient, overall battery life is not great. The Xperia XA1 Ultra lasted just over 8 hours on the PC Mark Work battery test, which translates to about 10 hours of regular usage. That would get you past a work day, but one wonders whether that’s sufficient from such a device. Big-screen phones have so far been known for long battery lives, and with Sony’s form factor, a bigger battery was perhaps warranted. On the other hand, the company has added its Qnovo Adaptive charging technology to the phone, that tries to preserve the battery’s overall life cycle. MediaTek’s Pump Express fast charging technology is also on board, and you can charge the Xperia XA1 Ultra from zero to 100 in under an hour. Bottomline The Sony Xperia XA1 Ultra is one of the many big-screen options available on the market today. It’s difficult to get past the fact that it doesn’t have a fingerprint sensor, but even if that doesn’t matter, the value proposition just isn’t enough. The Xperia XA1 Ultra is a dependable smartphone, but at these price points it’s difficult to justify, which brings us to the last aspect of this review. How it compares A Sony fan will perhaps be fine with a dependable smartphone made by Sony. However, with phones like the Samsung Galaxy C9 Pro, Galaxy C7 Pro and the much cheaper Xiaomi Mi Max 2, there’s little to justify this device. The Xperia XA1 Ultra loses out to Samsung’s phones in terms of display quality, performance and battery, while its camera prowess is decent at best. On the other hand, you get a better camera than the Mi Max 2 here, but the latter’s cheaper price tag, better battery life and comparable display quality makes for a better value proposition. While those phones would suit big-screen lovers, the Honor 8 Pro and slightly more expensive OnePlus 5 are far better smartphones in all respects than the Xperia XA1 Ultra. Sony Xperia XA1 Ultra Key Specs, Price and Launch Date Price Release Date 06 Aug 2017 Variant 32GB Market Status Launched Key Specs Screen Size 6" 1080 x 1920 Camera 23 16 MP Memory 32 GB/4 GB Battery 2700 mAh Related Reviews About Me Trying to explain technology to my parents. Failing miserably. Read More
Sections Page 1 Sony Xperia XA1 Review Page 2 Camera and software Review Page 3 Battery life, performance, conclusion Review Verdict Pros Camera can take excellent pictures Compact build All-day battery life Cons Camera software is slow and fiddly Sometimes very poor performance No fingerprint scanner Key Specifications Review Price £ 5-inch 1280 x 720-pixel screen 23-megapixel camera 32GB storage 3GB RAM 2300 mAh battery USB-C MediaTek Helio P20 CPU What is the Sony Xperia XA1? Sony’s 2017 mid-range device is a camera focussed phone, something you don’t often get at this price. For that reason alone, the Xperia XA1 is worth considering. In a competitive market, where the likes of the Motorola Moto G6 provide tough competition. Related Sony Xperia 1 Sony Xperia XA1 – Design The XA1 has a 5-inch screen, which has become a rarity these days; I suspect it’s easier to make a big-battery phone with a large screen – as it the case with the Lenovo P2. Sony deals with this challenge by making the top and bottom portion of the bezel more generous by phone standards, while keeping the left and right portions super-slim. This gives the XA1 a rather elongated look, which I honestly didn’t mind. The design doesn’t affect my ability to use the phone, since the screen is a standard size, nor does it cause any issues when slipping the device into my pocket. Related Best budget phones The design won’t be for everyone, and I wish I had one of the more attractive, coloured models instead of the plain white version. The rear of the handset is made of plastic; the sides are metal. There are gaps visible all over the phone – and it didn’t take long for the XA1 to become damaged, with white paint chipping off above the SIM slot. Not a great start, but it did survive a fall underneath a seat on the tube, which was impressive considering the amount of grit to be found on train floors. All the buttons are on the right edge of the device, with a volume rocker, classic Xperia circular power button and a dedicated camera button. The latter allows you to take a light and focus reading, after which you can take the picture. On the left is the SIM slot, which has space for a microSD card up to 256GB; this is alongside the generous 32GB of internal memory. A headset jack can be found at the top. At the rear, the camera sits tucked into the back cover, with a protective metal ring around it to further distance it from scratchy tables and floors. You’ll notice I haven’t mentioned a fingerprint scanner; that’s because there isn’t one. This is quite unusual these days, especially for a phone costing this amount. I’ve seen scanners on phones as cheap as £100, so for Sony not to include one is disappointing. Sony Xperia XA1 – Screen The XA1’s screen is a 1280 x 720-pixel affair. Screen snobs will have stopped reading by this point, but for the rest of us this display is totally fine. Yes, text isn’t as sharp as it could be and hi-res images might not look great, but your Facebook and Instagram feeds will look just fine. The display can’t compete to the Moto G5’s 5-inch, 1920 x 1080 resolution screen, however. For day-to-day performance, it’s fine. I could read it in direct sunlight at maximum brightness, although at night I found even minimum brightness a little too bright for my sensitive, sleepy eyes. Whites have a slightly blue tinge to them and viewing angles are fairly narrow; but, again, colour images are well represented and there are no standout problems. On the audio front, the downward-facing speakers are nothing more than mediocre. The microphone is a different story, however it does a fantastic job of cutting out background noise and picking up the voices you want to hear. How we test phones We test every mobile phone we review thoroughly. We use industry standard tests to compare features properly and we use the phone as our main device over the review period. We’ll always tell you what we find and we never, ever, accept money to review a product. Find out more about how we test in our ethics policy. Used as our main phone for the review period Reviewed using respected industry benchmarks and real world testing Always has a SIM card installed Tested with phone calls, games and popular apps
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