
In Depth: 6 of the best iPod headphones

Let's  be honest. The earbuds Apple bundles with its iPod and iPhone range are  horrible. Their sound quality is terrible, with weak bass and a tinny  mid-section, they're uncomfortable in the ears and have abysmal sound  isolation. 
It's as if a decade's progress in audio design passed  Apple by, leaving you with earbuds that would struggle to impress at the  turn of the century, and certainly won't satisfy now. 
If you've  invested in an Apple audio device, it makes sense to spend a little more  and get yourself a set of earbuds that do your music justice. And if  that device is an iPhone, you could go for a set with inline controls. 
In  a nutshell, inline controls enable you to operate your iPhone from a  unit mounted on the earbuds' cable. At the very least, you can pause  your music and receive an incoming call at the push of a button, while  an inline mic allows you to converse without removing your earbuds –  much better than fishing around in your pocket for your phone. 
Some  headsets on test also offer volume controls, track skipping and  VoiceOver support. In this group test, we take a look at six  iPhone-compatible earbuds that cost under £120. 
Are they  comfortable to wear? Are they easy to use? Is the sound quality up to  scratch? We pitch them against each other and see which set comes out on  top. 
The contenders

Klipsch Image S4i - £86

Radiopaq Custom Tuned Jazz - £50

Scosche IDR655m - £60

Sennheiser MM50iP - £40

Shure SE115M+ - £112

Ultimate Ears SuperFi 5vi - £60
Test One - Ease and comfort 
How do they feel and are the controls in easy reach? 
The  optimal form factor for iPhone-compatible earbuds is a mic on one of  the earbud cables, and therefore near the mouth, with the controls  placed in easy reach where the lead splits in two, resting on your  sternum when in use. 
The Radiopaq and Scosche sets do just that,  with the Ultimate Ears taking a similar approach but with much lower  controls that hang near your navel. The others combine the mic and  controls in a single unit. Shure and Sennheiser place it near the ear,  which is fine for the mic but less accessible, and Klipsch fits it at  the sternum, where this is reversed. 
All the buds on test were at  least reasonably comfortable, though the Scosches felt like they should  go deeper into the ear. Most used rubber flanges for tips, but the  Shure and Ultimate Ears sets also offered foam pads for better sound  isolation. 
Radiopaq's Custom Tuned Jazz earbuds felt a bit heavy, and some users found them difficult to keep in the ear. 
Results

Test Two - Audio quality Does the sound quality meet with our expectations? 
We  found that inline controls can take a toll on sound quality, especially  bass reproduction. The Scosche sounded the best, with a crisp,  throbbing bottom end that was sorely lacking in some of the others. The  Sennheisers had the strongest bass, but it tended to swamp the mix at  times, and overall sound detail wasn't as good as the Sosches. 
Indeed,  the Scosche impressed across the board, with good range and clarity,  and impressive detail and shape; a refreshingly lively sound. The  Radiopaqs offered a crystal-clear top end, but the bass was so weak we  had to switch to the biggest set of tips to stop it leaking. Perhaps  surprisingly, the most expensive earbuds we tested had weakest audio  performance. 
Despite a good mix, the Shures are dull and  lifeless. Ultimate Ears put in a good all-round performance without  excelling in any particular area, and the Klipsch earbuds were great for  definition and clarity, but the bass could be better.
Results

Test Three - Feature set 
What other capabilities do the headsets offer? 
Three  of our earbud sets offer inline volume controls as well as a call  receiver and mic, namely the Klipsch, Scosche and Shure units.  Unfortunately, iPhone owners can only take advantage of this feature if  they have a 3GS model (which is the latest release at the time of  writing), though it works on some recent iPods too. 
These same  three earbud sets also offer VoiceOver compatibility. When listening to a  VoiceOvercapable device such as the latest iPod shuffle or nano, you  can have the name of the current track and its artist read out to you  without interrupting your music. You can even navigate through your  playlists from the inline controls. 
All six sets of earbuds on  test let you skip to the next or previous track using rapid taps on the  main control button. The Radiopaq and Scosche earbuds use nylonbraided  cables, which are less prone to tangling and very useful if you tend to  carry them around in your pocket. 
Results

Test Four - Accessories What do you get in the box, and is it worth the money? 
The  Radiopaq and Sennheiser sets are the least generous with accessories.  Both offer three sizes of earbud tips, and nothing else. To be fair,  they're also the two least expensive sets on test, but they could have  at least thrown in a small carry case. 
Talking of carry cases,  the other four sets all include one. Shure gives you a zip-lock bag,  which is solid and protective but quite bulky. The Klipsch and Scosche  sets offer a velvet and sheepskin pouch respectively, and Ultimate Ears  comes bundled with a tough plastic capsule to keep your cables from  tangling. 
The Klipsch, Ultimate Ears and Shure sets come with a  handy cleaning tool and Klipsch and Scosche give you a clip to attach  the cable to your clothes. 
All six earbuds offer a range of tips  so you can choose the pair that best suits your ears. And kudos to  Ultimate Ears and Shure for giving a choice of foam and rubber tips. 
Results

The Winner / Scosche IDR655m 
It  was a tough decision. No single set of earbuds stood out from the crowd  as being without flaws. Scosche's IDR655m earbuds could have felt a  touch more comfortable and its accessory range isn't great. 

But  overall, it's the best of the bunch, with excellently placed mic and  controls, a beautifully lively sound and a comprehensive feature set,  though you need an iPhone 3GS or a recent iPod to take advantage of some  of those features. 
The Sennheiser MM50iP set came a close  second. Amazon is currently selling them for £40 – very good for a  headset of this quality. As long as you don't mind one of the earbud  leads being longer than the other so they sit side-saddle under your  chin, they offer great value for money.
Overall results



 
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Review: Samsung BD-C8500M Blu-ray player/Freeview HD recorder
There's no facility for 3D Blu-ray playback (for that 
consider this  or Blu-ray recordings, but for anyone looking for an all-in-one  solution, the BD-C8500 has little competition save its 250GB-endowed  variant, the BD-C8200M, and 
Panasonic's DMR-XW380 DVD recorder or 
DMR-BW780/880 Blu-ray recorder. 
Fitted  with a 500GB hard disk and a single Freeview HD tuner, the BD-C8500 can  pause and rewind live TV and record 120 hours of HD programmes. 
Samsung's  Internet@TV online video platform is also present, as is AllShare DLNA  streaming from a PC or Mac on the same home network, playback of DivX HD  (MKV) files, compatibility with Dolby TrueHD and DTS Master Audio, and a  link to All Media Guide (AMG), which sees any audio CD inserted  correctly named (and even ripped to the HDD). 

On  the rear of the unit is a HDMI output, Ethernet LAN (though the deck  also has a Wi-Fi card built-in), RF in and out, component video,  composite video, analogue audio out, digital optical audio out and two  CAM slots for adding Top-Up TV viewing cards – now that's impressive. 
Pictures  from any Freeview channel are excellent. Standard definition channels  are upscaled very well indeed, producing a clean picture with only a  small dose of picture noise and jagged edges to get in the way of an  otherwise enjoyable picture. Tune into one of the three Freeview HD  channels and the results improve significantly, with recordings made on  the hard disk exquisite and identical to the original broadcasts. 

Activate  the deck's Movie Frame 24Fs mode and Blu-ray playback is smooth and  detailed, though this is a noisy machine; it starts-up quickly yet  audibly shudders between chapters on a Blu-ray or DVD disc.
DivX  HD files – whether played from a DVD-R, CD-R, via a PC using DLNA, or  from a USB stick – are excellent, though there is the occasional  scanning and jerkiness issue and there were significant lip-sync issue  on some trailers we tried. 
Although the interface contains moving  thumbnails of recordings and video files, they only kick-in after  you've viewed the file, which doesn't make much sense. 
The EPG  works quickly and presents information on all upcoming programmes very  clearly, but it completely lacks real-world recording functionality. All  you can do is record the programme you're watching, or set it to record  for up to six hours (in 10-minute increments). 
And armed with  just a single Freeview tuner, you can't change channels if you've set  something to record; Freeview+ this is not, and those after Freeview+HD  should head for something like 
Digital Stream's DHR8203U. 
If  you want to inspect recordings, the main menu is where to aim for.  Acting as the main interface's hub screen, here there are tabs along the  bottom of a brushed aluminium wallpaper design for Recorded TV,  Internet@TV, Videos, Music, Photos, Channels and Settings. 

Above  are dedicated shortcuts to Internet@TV's predefined highlights;  Facebook, Picasa, a buggy Rovi TV listings, a slow and almost unusable  Google Maps and a basic, unbranded version of YouTube.
Arguably  of far more interest than any of these is Lovefilm, though a 'coming  this May' message (this unit was reviewed in late July) does not bode  well. Other 'apps' include a 'this day in history' bore-fest from the  History Channel (where's the on-demand programmes?), a rather smart, if  basic, USA Today interface, and a well designed Twitter reader. 
Go  the home screen and 'change device' and you can access a USB stick, a  PC, or a Mac on the same network. From the there it's necessary to  choose music, video or photo (can't the machine tell the difference?)  before choosing a file. 

This  machine can play AVC HD, AVI, DivX, DivX HD MKV files, WMV and WMV HD  (the latter with no audio), ASF, 3GP, VRO, MP4, MPG and MPEG video  files. MP3 files are presented well with a wood effect wallpaper and a  list of other music files (including MP3, WMA and ACC), though the first  second or so of each track is inaudible. As well as playing a lot of  file types, files can be copied between a CD/DVD, USB or a PC connected  via DLNA to the HDD, and from the HDD to a USB stick. 

Meanwhile,  the partially glow-in-the-dark remote has too many dual function  commands, though the buttons themselves are pleasingly large. 
With  such few recording functions, the giant-sized HDD of the BD-C8500M does  lend it an air of 'World Cup cash-in' (theoretically all 64 games could  have been recorded in HD), though elsewhere this is a generous,  versatile and well thought-out machine. 
We liked Fitted  with an easy to use interface, this is a versatile deck; as well as  integrating well with external media, it seamlessly connects wirelessly  to both Internet@TV content and to PCs and Macs on the same network. 
With  plenty to experiment with and some useful features (such as its twin  CAM slots), Samsung hasn't ignored the box's core duties; picture  quality impresses from all sources. 
We dislikedThe  BD-C8500 isn't a Freeview+ HD recorder, which is a huge chance missed  and severely restricts the usefulness of the HDD. An overly complex,  cluttered remote is the price to pay for its multi-platform talents.
Final verdictDespite  its ability to record from Freeview HD, this box's huge HDD will likely  be used just as much as a hub for your digital media, though its  excellent Wi-Fi connection to both PC and Mac computers – along with  its song indexing of CDs it rips to that HDD – means its usefulness is  questionable unless you want to rip an entire CD collection. 
Essentially  a Blu-ray player with a separate Freeview HD tuner alongside, the  BD-C8500M seems a way to get the latest tech into a living room in one  box rather than the all-in-one HD player-cum-recorder it should be. 
If  you're after the last word Freeview HD recording, you'd better look  elsewhere – or at least consider the smaller hard disk (and price) or  the BD-C8200M. 


 
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Guide: How to use your iPod or iPhone as a hard drive
Even  if you've got an iPhone, iPod touch or iPad, chances are that if you  need to take files away with you, a USB stick will be your method of  choice. But this needn't be the case – after all, your portable Apple  device has a hard drive built into it. 
However, using it  as simple storage isn't intuitive at all. Anything you transfer to and  from the device has to be done through iTunes, or in the case of images,  iPhoto or Image Capture. 
There's an easy way around this  obstacle that doesn't involve jailbreaking. A little app called Phone  Disk mounts the device on your desktop, meaning you can use it as you  would a memory stick. 
It will still appear in iTunes, as it  normally would. All you need to do is install the lightweight  application on any Mac where you want to use your iPhone, iPod or iPad  in this way. 
The best thing about Phone Disk is that it's free  until 1 September 2010. You'll need to activate it using the  registration code that's provided on the developer's website at www.macroplant.com/phonedisk. 
Phone  Disk unlocks other useful features on your Apple device too. It enables  you to access the images you've taken using the built-in camera  straight from Finder, meaning you can copy these to your Mac without  using iPhoto or Image Capture. The Camera Roll is the only album you can  currently access in this way, so albums that you've copied to your  iPhone through iTunes or iPhoto are hidden away.
You can also  copy images from your Mac to the Camera Roll on the device, to show off  when you're out and about. We had some issues copying photos to the  iPhone, but this was intermittent, so it may work fine for you. 
Also, make sure you eject/unmount your iPhone/iPod before disconnecting it. 
How to mount your iPod, iPhone or iPad like a USB drive 
01. Note the number 

Go to www.macroplant.com/phonedisk  and start your download. Make a note of the registration code displayed  on the homepage – you'll need to type it in manually later on. Then  install Phone Disk. Its yellow icon should appear in your Applications  folder. 
02. Enter registration code

Double-click  PhoneDisk. On the welcome screen, click Enter Registration Code. Now  type in the code you wrote down earlier. Remember the dashes, and note  that it's case-sensitive. Then click Unlock. You should see a message  confirming that registration's been successful. 
03. Menu bar icon 

Phone  Disk will now quit. Fire it up again by double-clicking its icon. If  you'd like it to check for updates, click Check Automatically. On the  welcome screen, uncheck the Show this menu when Phone Disk starts box  and click Close Window. Note the icon in your menu bar. 
04. Plug in your device 

The  icon will be grey if nothing's plugged in, but it'll turn yellow when  you connect. Your iPod will appear on the Desktop. Double-click it to  have a look inside. A lot of what you'll see shouldn't be touched,  because they're files the device uses to work properly. 
05. The portable hard drive 

To  use your iPod, iPhone or iPad as a portable disk, drag files and  folders to it as you would with any other drive – just don't meddle  with anything that's there already. Removing the device is simply a  matter of dragging it to the Trash or pressing Command+Backspace. 
06. View your photos 

There's  a folder on iPhones (but not iPads) called DCIM. Inside it, there's  another called 100APPLE, which contains the images taken using the  iPhone's camera. You can copy these across to your Mac without needing  to use iPhoto or Image Capture. 
07. Images from your Mac 

Now  find some photos on your Mac's hard drive, and copy them into the  100APPLE folder. They'll be renamed so that your device can display them  correctly. These will then display in the Camera Roll on your iPhone,  from where you can show them off out and about. 
08. Launch at startup

To  ensure you can always access your iPod, iPhone or iPad like a portable  hard drive, set Phone Disk to load automatically when you start up your  Mac. Click its icon in your menu bar, choose Preferences… and tick the  Open Phone Disk when computer starts box.


 
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Review: OCZ Onyx 32GB
When  it comes to affordable SSDs, the latest fashion is towards the tiny. In  that context, OCZ's new Onyx 32GB drive is as trendy as they come. 
But is it so small that you'd have to be a style victim to buy it? Very probably, yes. 
Fully  formatted, you're left with 29.7GB of storage. That sounds like a  reasonable result for a 32GB drive. At least, it does until you observe  how much remains after a full install of Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit.  You've left with 15.6GB to play with. 
Even as a strictly  boot-and-apps drive, that's barely enough to breathe. It's a shame, as  by several metrics the Onyx has plenty going for it. 
For  starters, it's powered by an Indilinx controller. Not the familiar,  well-regarded Barefoot, but rather the new Amigos controller designed  for smaller, cheaper drives. 
Thanks to the Amigos, the Onyx not  only supports TRIM, but also cranks out reasonable results in the  toughest of our synthetic performance tests – the 4K random read and  write benchmarks, where it scores 16MB/s and 6MB/s respectively.
Squeaking ahead The  Onyx doesn't exactly blow the competition away in the realworld  performance tests, but it does at least have the edge on its closest  competitors, Kingston's 30GB SSDNow V Series and Intel's X25-V. 
Ultimately,  however, there's no getting away from storage capacity and the Onyx's  lack thereof. Use this drive to boot your PC and you'll be constantly  running out of space. 
So, do yourself a favour and save up for something no smaller than Corsair's £150 Nova V64 64GB.
Related Links

 
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Review: Sony Ericsson Zylo
Though Sony Ericsson has recently taken care of the more serious phone users with the 
Xperia X10, the 
X10 Mini, the 
X10 Mini Pro and the 
Vivaz Pro, those looking for a mid-range feature have been left out for a while.
In  particular, there was obviously space for a media-capable feature  phone, because that's what we've been delivered in the shape of the Sony  Ericsson Zylo.
It's been a while since the Sony Ericsson Aino  last brought media to the masses, and though the Zylo doesn't have all  the fancy PS3 connectivity that made the Aino so unusual, it still has  digital playback at its core.
This slider features support for  numerous audio and video formats, including FLAC for high-quality  playback. There's also social network integration built into the Home  screen, so it's clear that the Zylo is being aimed at the digital  hipster market.

The  2.6-inch Walkman phone features YouTube integration, a 3.2-megapixel  camera and Sony's PlayNow download service. HSPA 3G mobile internet is  present, though there's no Wi-Fi connectivity.
With the Walkman  branding and lossless music playback, some have even been considering  whether the Zylo could be the audiophile's dream phone.
A slightly  more unusual audio feature is the ability to play songs in the  background while on the phone. The intention here is so you can share  your songs with your friends. 
This seems like an awfully quaint  way of trying to avoid people swapping music files – particularly when  the phone features MMS, Bluetooth, email and mass storage capabilities  via its miscroSD card slot.

More  amusingly, the Zylo comes preloaded with 'sounds' that can be played in  the background of calls instead of music, including ambient office  noises and car sounds, should you ever need to pretend to be at work  still, or or broken down by the side of the road.
Because Google  Maps (with Latitude) and camera geotagging is supported, you might be  led to believe that GPS in onboard, but you would look a fool. All  location services rely on mobile triangulation alone.
With a built-in email client and revamped threaded SMS view, its clear that no one is being forgotten for features.
The Zylo is available in silver, black and pink, and sells from around £90 on Pay As You Go
Aesthetically,  the Zylo is nothing unusual for Sony Ericsson. Our review unit came in a  somewhat plain silver with blue highlights. The exact name of the  finish is 'Chacha silver', but somehow this didn't make us feel any more  excited about it.
Certainly, it's not ugly in any way, but that  matt silver fascia and familiar button layout will give a lot of  previous Sony Ericsson users a sense of déja vu.

The  Zylo is thickest at the back, where you hold it in your palm. The sides  then narrow as they get to the front, but it's a bit of a pointy and  awkward shape. The rear face is slightly curved, but it makes little  difference.

The  phone is pretty chunky at 103 x 52 x 11.5mm, and it's easy to hold  onto, but it definitely doesn't qualify as ergonomic, isn't particularly  light at 115g.
When closed, the front of the phone is dominated  by the 2.6-inch QVGA (240 x 320) screen. It's a lovely, vibrant screen  with really appealing colours – not that we'd expect anything else  from Sony.
Beneath the obligatory Walkman logo, we find two  softkeys, a circular D-pad with a select/play/pause button in the  centre. Left of that is the Call button, with the Terminate button on  the right doubling up as the on/off switch.

At  the bottom is a Cancel button for quick deletion, and a multi-function  shortcut key, which is most useful for bringing up apps that are running  in the background.
Sliding up, which has a nice firm motion, to  reveal the keypad. It's nothing exotic – each key gives a terse little  click, and is raised in the middle to aid touch-typing.
The shiny  rim on the right edge of the Zylo houses a volume rocker and a button  that doubles a shortcut to launch the Walkman app (it has the little 'W'  logo on it) and as the camera shutter. These are both unnecessarily  small. 

They're not unusable by any means, but we see no reason they couldn't have been a little more finger-friendly.
Adorning  the right edge of the phone is yet another Walkman logo and the lone,  proprietary connector port for charging and connecting the supplied  headphones. There's no 3.5mm jack here, so you're stuck with those in  the box or you can buy another Sony Ericsson pair. We'll come back to  that fact later.

The  rear features the lens for the 3.2-megapixel camera, along with – yes  – one more Walkman logo (seriously, it's like calling on a Formula 1  car).
Pop this back case off for access to the battery, SIM card slot and microSD card slot, with up to 16GB supported.
In  the box, you get the Zylo, a mains charger and some earbud headphones.  There's no USB cable supplied and no microSD card, so you initially have  to make do with the 260MB of built-in memory. See the 'Media' section  for more of our thoughts on Sony Ericsson's decision-making here.
The  interface is a kind of progression of the Sony Ericsson phones you've  previously come to know and love/replace (delete as applicable).
The  most obvious change from older phones is the handy widgets on the Home  screen. We think Facebook and Twitter are the only two likely to be used  by 90 per cent of people, but there are others to explore.

On  the Home screen are softkey links to the Media app and to a kind of web  search widget, which is a nice touch. The D-pad offers shortcuts to  writing a new message (by pressing left) and Contacts (by pressing  down). 
Pressing right is unassigned, so you can choose your pleasure. Pressing up takes you to interact with the widgets.
Hit  the central select key to bring up the main menu, which features all  the usual culprits – access to Messaging, Entertainment, Camera,  Contacts and so on. Access to the Radio app is here, and not in the  Media app, for some reason.

You  can choose a few different themes, which change the style of icons as  well as the background. You can also switch the menu from a grid view to  rotating 3D view and other things that really aren't as practical.
Tapping  the Shortcut key on the fascia brings up your configurable Shortcut  list by default, unless you have apps running in the background (like  the radio or your music), in which case it defaults to those.

Your  recent events (messages, calls) can also be accessed from here, as can  some internet functions, like Google search and your bookmarks.
There's not much in the way of revolution here, but it's easy to forget what a simple and effective system it is.
The  last big interface addition is an accelerometer for viewing certain  apps in landscape mode. It's a pretty fancy feature to have on a phone  this price, and it does come across as shoehorned in, to be honest.

It  doesn't work with all apps – only really those that can work mostly  with the phone closed and just the fascia keys; the keypad doesn't  rotate, after all.
There's nothing in the way of animation when  you rotate, the app just appears the other way round. At first, it was  really laggy, and we were ready to write it off. But it actually got  quicker the more we used the phone, bizarrely.
The only apps it's  really significant in are the browser, the Media app and YouTube, but it  only really has any effect on the latter. It's nice being able to  choose to view the video fullscreen in landscape, or have it smaller  with other info on the page in portrait.
Don't get us wrong, we've  no complaints about its inclusion, and hopefully Sony Ericsson will  make more use of it as a feature in future phones, we just didn't feel  the need to use it in the browser or Media app.
Sony Ericsson veterans will find the Zylo reassuringly familiar when it come to the contacts list. 
You can access the contacts from either the main menu or by pressing down on the circular D-pad from the Home screen. 
Despite  the social networking widgets, there's no Facebook or Twitter (or  anything else) integration in your actual contacts. When you add or edit  a contact, the different information fields are presented in a handy  tabbed format. 

The  first tab is phone numbers, with internet presence (email, website),  address, settings (such as ringtone and picture) and a tab where you can  add information like birthdays.
When viewing your contacts, you  see the phone number of each person as you scroll to them, and you can  then press left or right on the D-pad to access different contact  information. 

Hit  the central select button to see all of their information, with the  select button then becoming context sensitive for whichever contact  method you've scrolled to – so when on a phone number it becomes 'Send  Message'; when on an email address is becomes 'Send To'.
At no  point does the central button feature the option to 'Call' – you can't  just click through using the middle button to ring someone. You have to  get to the number and then hit the Call button on the left of the  fascia. It's not a problem, but it can be a bit counter-intuitive if  you're new to Sony Ericsson's layout.

Call  quality was disappointingly average. We weren't struggling to  understand people or anything, but it didn't take much to drown people  out. Voices weren't too distorted, but they simply lacked the high level  of clarity we've come to expect from this type of phone.
We'd put the call quality about on par with the iPhone 3GS – an adequate communicator, but nothing impressive.
There  is one silly little niggle: sliding the phone closed doesn't end your  call. Come on, surely this is half the reason to own a slider – the  satisfaction of shutting it it forcefully while slipping it back in your  pocket.
As it is, you have to press the Terminate button. Don't  forget that, in case you end up accidentally talking to someone's answer  machine…
Again, Sony Ericsson has very firmly declined to  reinvent the wheel, though we do see a little more invention and social  networking coming into play. 
Accessing the Messaging menu from  the main menu produces the typical options for Write New, Conversations,  Facebook, Messages, Email and Call Voicemail.
Conversations is a  threaded view for your SMS chats. It's not as polished as some – the  speech bubbles back and forth are told apart only by the direction of  the points and that they're slightly different shades of blue – but  works well enough to be our interface of choice for SMS.

The  Facebook option simply takes you to the Messages tab in the standalone  Facebook app. It's a somewhat handy shortcut, although we often  struggled to get that tab to load.
There's no email notifications on the Home screen, like the ones you get on the 
Nokia C5,  but setting up your email inbox literally couldn't be easier. Simply  access the email wizard and, for many services (including Gmail), just  type in your name, email address and password.
In 30 seconds, our  messages were downloading and we were away. No elaborate setup screens,  no online troubleshooting – just as email on a phone should be. Kudos,  Sony Ericsson.
By default, there's no shortcut to your email, but  pressing right from the Home screen is an unattached shortcut.  Accessing it takes you to the main menu, where you can navigate and add  whatever you like as the shortcut destination.
We promptly added  our email inbox as the spare shortcut, bringing the phone right up to  what to what we expect from an internet-connected device these days.
The  email inbox isn't fancy, but it works well for the phone layout. New  messages appear with a slightly bolder subject line, which isn't the  easiest to pick out from the others but does the job.

You  can arrange the messages in different orders, use the email addresses  in various ways – all the usual email features. The software will pick  out phone numbers, email addresses and web links from emails to offer  you context-options for what to do with them.
As far as writing  the actual messages go, the T9 layout suffices for short messages, but  you won't be a power emailer. The keys on the numberpad have a nice  click giving you feedback when you hit them, but we struggled with it.

The  keys aren't very large, and we have man thumbs. Not giant, fat man  thumbs, just normal-sized, but we still found ourselves mashing two  buttons at once pretty often.
It's not even close to being a deal-breaker for messaging, but be warned if you're equally man-handed.
The  Sony Ericsson Zylo is equipped with the standard NetFront browser for  internet access. With 3G access but no Wi-Fi, the basic internet signal  is fast enough, but not blazing.
When you first load the browser  app, you're presented with a nice Sony Ericsson Green introduction  screen, where you can choose to search via Google, enter a web address  or use a pre-loaded bookmark. 
If you use one of the two text  boxes, previously entered addresses and searches will pop up, so you  don't need to be in the Google box to access terms you've searched for  before, for example. It's a good little timesaver.
The actual  browser seems to be quick enough at loading and handling web pages, but  tends to be a bit of a car crash when it comes to formatting. If you've  ever wondered what TechRadar would be like if it were two inches wide  and half a mile long, look no further.

Mobile  sites are handled better, but still look a little off, and if they  should accidentally lead you to the full version of the site at any  point, then you'll be right back to scrollsville.
We tried to zoom out to see if that helped, but were told it wasn't possible with Smart-Fit turned on. 
"But  surely Smart-Fit is designed to help you avoid these formatting woes,"  you're no doubt thinking. We thought the same thing. Then we turned it  off and suddenly everything worked so much better.

Formatting was still a little wonky, but at least things were in roughly the right order.
The  internet widgets on the Home screen are fairly useful, with the Twitter  and Facebook widgets both featuring a clever design that makes the most  of their respective raison d'être.
The Facebook widget shows  status updates from your friends, with profile pictures rotating round  in a carousel as the updates roll in. 

Twitter  is simpler affair, showing one tweet at a time with the Twitterer's  avatar. When we reviewed the Samsung Monte, we were unhappy that you  couldn't see all of a tweet at one time. 
The Zylo's widget is  exactly what we would hope for in a Twitter tool. That it's on a feature  phone, rather than a smartphone, is pretty good.

In  both cases, selecting the widget and pressing the central select button  will bring up an option to write your own status update/tweet, and the  Facebook widget also then features a button to take you to your new  notifications in the main app.

The  Sony Ericsson Zylo's camera appears modest right from the outset. The  3.2-megapixel sensor is a big step back in terms of pixel count from the  likes of 
Satio, or even the 
Aino.
However, the 
iPhone 4  has reminded everyone that it's more than just number of dots that  makes a good phone camera, so we were still hopeful of some fine images  from the Zylo.
There are a few options when taking pictures, like  Panorama and Burst modes, not scene modes (like portrait, landscape,  sports and so on), save for the solitary Night mode.
The white  balance and metering can be adjusted, though we doubt you'll ever touch  them, really. You can also add a few effects (Black & White,  Negative and Sepia).
Video recording is available, along with the ability to upload to YouTube easily from the phone.
Video  is output at 640 x 480 and 30 frames per second, and you have the  option of recording in MPEG4 for PC playback, or lower quality for  sending over MMS.

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LANDSCAPE: There's no detail in the trees, no detail in the grass and the greens are all washed out. Not an auspicious start
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NO DETAIL: This young bird was fluffy. Its wings had lots of texture. That's all gone
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CLOSE-UP: When  it comes to the flower in the mid-ground, they're actually fairly sharp  and colourful. Sadly, we were trying to take a picture of the big  blurry one at the front
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COLOUR: You  can barely see where one flower ends an another begins. In any case,  even these colours are a bit flat – none of the vibrancy the real  display hadUltimately, we were very unimpressed with the camera's output. The video quality doesn't really acquit itself any better. 
  Very  little in this scene has any definition, including the grass and trees.  The 30fps recording gets the cyclists' motion fairly smoothly, but they  all have a fuzzy trail of artefacts just behind them, which is a sign  of the compression in the codec just not being able to keep with the  movement.
It also seems to struggle to pick up much light. Any  significant amount of shade causes all information to disappear, leaving  just a murky blackness where there really should be some sort of  detail.
Similarly, though it was overcast when we took the video,  it wasn't as grey as the washed-out colours in the video might lead you  to believe.
Proving that media is central to the Sony Ericsson  Zylo, there's a softkey to the Media app from the Home screen. It brings  up a scrolling interface that has clearly taken its cues from Sony's  XMB, but doesn't use it outright, like the 
Aino.

From  here, you can access photos, music, videos, games and even web feeds  via RSS (which can be added from the browser). Each of them reveals more  options when you go in, tying together some of the other apps on the  phone.

For  example, the photos menu includes options to browse your stored albums,  as well as a link to the Photos tab in the Facebook app. The videos  menu offers your stored videos as well as a link to the YouTube app.
All  of the media playing options include a link to the PlayNow service, in  case you're desperate to spend some money on new content.
Oddly,  the music menu doesn't include a link to the TrackID song identification  app. Seems like an obvious addition to us, but there you go.
For a  handset that's focussed so heavily on media playback, we're just  astonished at some of the short-sighted decisions made in the Sony  Ericsson Zylo.

It really comes down to the phone's unique selling point: FLAC support, or the half-baked introduction of it, anyway.
FLAC  stands for Free Lossless Audio Codec. It's an open source audio format  capable of extremely high-quality sound reproduction. 
Let's be  clear: we're totally behind the introduction of higher-quality audio on  mobiles in general, and that goes double when it's a phone with the  Walkman brand behind it.
But you have to do it right. Lossless  audio carries different requirements than what you usually stick in  iTunes, but nobody seems to have told Sony Ericsson.
Lossless  files tend to be at least ten times larger than their lossy version –  we could be talking up to 100MB per song. This is fine – the phone  supports microSD cards up to 16GB, so you can still fit a few albums on  there. Except, of course, that none is supplied.
Okay, yes, in a  mid-range handset we have no divine right to a large amount memory, but  if you're going to make a big deal of playing lossless audio, it would  be polite to include enough memory to hold more than two songs.
Which  brings us neatly on to the lack of USB cable. Without this, how does  Sony Ericsson expect us to get the songs onto the phone? Bluetooth? We  tried that – it works, but it takes 10 minutes. Per song.
Maybe  when we go out to buy our microSD cards, we're also expected to pick a  card reader. Okay, fine – then don't hide the microSD card under the  battery cover! Make it easy to get to, if we're supposed to have it in  and out whenever we want to add songs.
Last in this rant is the  proprietary headphone connector (and the supplied model), which is the  most inexplicable part of it all. 
"Best sound quality ever on a  mobile phone" is what Sony Ericsson says about the inclusion of FLAC.  We're inclined to believe them, but who could ever tell using the cheapo  bundled earphones? 
They're not the worst around, but without a  3.5mm jack, we're stuck with them, rather than much higher-quality cans  for the higher-quality music we're playing.
Fortunately, we at  TechRadar have a magical drawer full of every cable known to man. It's  like the Room of Requirement in Harry Potter, provided your only  requirements are obscure gadget connectors and strong Portuguese liquor.
From  it, we fished out an adapter we had handy from an old Sony Ericsson  Walkman phone that enabled you to plug 3.5mm headphones/speakers into  the proprietary port. Just the sort of thing it might be nice to bundle  in with your new phone that features super high-quality audio, eh?
Unfortunately,  it turned out that our troubles with testing the quality of audio  playback weren't finished yet. We loaded on our first FLAC tester song  and hit play. We got only an error message.
This was a song  converted from an Apple Lossless codec file, and it clocked in at 90MB.  We figured that might be asking too much of the Zylo, so we instead  ripped a CD with the FLAC settings set to make it the smallest file  possible.
This time, we were getting 30-40MB per song, and these  worked just fine. We then loaded on MP3 versions of the exact same  songs, which were all 3-4MB each.
Honestly? Underwhelming. We  think the FLAC file had slightly more clarity to both the bass and  vocals, but in most songs we couldn't tell the difference.
We  actually tried a blind listening test, and we really didn't know which  was which, generally (we got some right, but then we did have a 50/50  chance). That didn't really change when used our special adapter to hook  up to a nice set of speakers.
Audiophiles even more serious than  us may pick out points that make it worthwhile for them, but for  everyone else, we'd suggest that this isn't going to revolutionise the  way you listen to music on your phone.
Our guess is that Sony  Ericsson haven't improved on the audio decoding chip in any way, leaving  high quality music to be squished and downgraded on its way out the  earphone socket.
For most people, we think the ability to carry  ten times as many songs is going to have more value than an almost  imperceptible increase in audio quality.
The music player is okay  to use, but we weren't blown away by it. Browsing your songs is easy  enough, and you can access settings like the equaliser on the fly. 

It  worked, and is fairly intuitive, but it sets no new standards for music  players on phones. Aside from FLAC, it also support MP3, AAC and WAV  files.
The YouTube app is similarly easy to use. It's not great if  you just want to hang out among the videos and watch nothing in  particular – though there are options for Most Viewed, Top Rated and  Most Recent – but if you're looking for something specific, you won't  be disappointed.
You can send your own videos to YouTube straight  from the video media menu. In both this case, and watching videos  generally, the lack of Wi-Fi can be a bit of an issue. 
Unless  you've got very consistent 3G signal, you could find videos stuttering.  Similarly, uploading videos has the potential to be a nightmare unless  you're confident you've got a strong, steady 3G connection.
Video  quality is boosted by the screen's lovely colours, but videos with any  significant movement suffered from an awful lot of motion blur. Fine for  the occasional YouTube jaunt, but this is definitely not a  movie-watcher's phone.
You can load and watch movies in MPEG4, H.263 and H.264 formats.
The  Radio app requires the included headphones to work, as is the norm.  Hook them up and you can either scroll through the frequencies yourself,  type in a specific frequency or use the 'Search' function.

At  first, we thought the search didn't work because nothing happened for a  few seconds, then it suddenly skipped forward and settled on a signal.  Basically, it doesn't actually register that you've pressed the button,  or tell you that it's searching, until it finds something.
It's  fine once you realise that's how it works, but a little bit of UI  feedback wouldn't go amiss. The clarity of the radio was good enough for  a little bop along, but was no substitute for the built-in music  player.
The TrackID function for identifying playing music and  taking you to buy it, is built-in to the Radio app, so there's no more  waiting for the DJ to tell you what song was. In theory. 
In practice, it identified nothing for us. Even with the clearest radio signal we could find, we got total rejection.
We  were very impressed with the general battery life of the Sony Ericsson  Zylo. With fairly standard use, you could expect to get four days out of  a single charge of the 1150mAh battery.

Start  seriously Facebooking and YouTubing, and you can knock that down quite  significantly, though. In fact, one of the potential problems we found  with the phone is that it's awfully easy to accidentally leave it doing  stuff over 3G without realising it.
There were times we picked it  up after it had been asleep for a while, to find the browser running,  with the status indicator ticking over, obviously trying to pick some  sliver of HTML that would never arrive.
Not only is this crippling  for battery life, it could be devastating to your phone bill, too. If  you get the Zylo, do make sure you get a generous internet package.
ConnectivityAs  far as specs go, the Zylo is fairly ordinary. Bluetooth is present and  handy for file transfers, and the proprietary port is capable of USB 2.0  connectivity. As we said, there's no USB cable provided, though.
Underneath the battery cover is the microSD card slot, which is also not supplied. Cards up to 16GB are supported.
The  lack of Wi-Fi is always a shame in internet and media-focussed devices,  but we can't grumble at this price. The 3G connectivity was generally  fine for whatever we wanted to do but, as always with mobile broadband,  your mileage may vary wildly.
Speaking of varying wildly, one foible we found with the Zylo was the signal bars. While we have no 
iPhone 4-style sudden drop to announce, we occasionally found they seemed to bear no particular relation to the actual signal available.
Sometimes  the Zylo reported almost no signal or internet connection, but was  actually fine when we opened the browser or Twitter widget. Once or  twice, we found that it reported strong signal, but we struggled to get  online, but that scenario happened far less.
We don't see it a major problem (it never really interfered with our use of the phone), but it struck us as an odd quirk.
AppsThe  Sony Ericsson Zylo doesn't come with a huge volume of apps pre-loaded,  but it does feature access to Sony' PlayNow service, which offers games,  apps, music ringtones themes and more. Some you need to play for, some  are free – it's all pretty standard for this kind of mid-range  service.
When we were first browsing through the media menu, we noticed an apparently well-stocked games section, including 
Bejeweled Twist, but they all turned out to be demos, sadly. 
We  think Sony Ericsson's missed a trick here – a bunch of free games  along with the Walkman functionality and YouTube integration would've  made this phone a real media powerhouse.
The apps you'll use most  often are likely to be YouTube and Facebook. We've already covered the  former, so let's talk Facebook. You can access the app either from the  Applications folder in the main menu, the Facebook option in the  Messaging menu, or via the Home screen widget.
The widget is  great, and it's not the only one. The Twitter widget is very nice,  though it doesn't lead through to a dedicated app (not that you need  one, really). Widgets are also available for MySpace, Song Genie and  Walk Mate (which counts your steps, presumably using the built-in  accelerometer).
It's great to be able to just flick between your  different online presences so neatly on a phone this size. We were  mightily impressed with their functionality.
Going into the  Facebook app, you see tabs for News, Wall, Friends, Photos,  Notifications and Messages. Going between them is pretty laggy, and the  information can take a while to load, but it's all functional and works  as you'd hope.

However,  for all our polite golf-clapping over how well it works, the Zylo's  Facebook app managed to royally anger us. In case you can't see what it  say in our Facebook screenshot, our last status update was "Matthew  Bolton used Facebook for Sony Ericsson on a W20i phone for the first  time."
We didn't write that. That's not cool. In a time when  Facebook is getting enough of an eyeballing over privacy concerns,  either Sony Ericsson or Facebook has decided to share a piece of  information about our life that we had no intention of telling anyone.
It might not seem like a big deal, and we concede that the information itself isn't that important – but that's 
our decision to make. We thought this sort of practice disappeared years ago.
Google  Maps is available, with Latitude support, but, as we said before,  there's no GPS, so accuracy is not its strongest suit. Most of the  expected features are here though, and getting directions is  spectacularly easy to sort out. It's shame we were rarely where the  software thought we were. 

To  be fair, given enough time it can get quite close, but then tends to  suddenly change its mind by a few hundred metres. Useful for reference,  but no substitute for a proper GPS system.
There also a weather  app, Music Quiz (using your music library), NeoReader for reading QR  codes and Checkbook for recording expenses and so on. These are in  addition to the usual suspects of Calendar, Tasks, Notes, Alarms,  Stopwatch and Calculator. 
These utilities are all somewhat  cursory, but are easy enough to use. The calendar suffers from the same  issue as the email inbox, where days with events on are bolded slightly  to differentiate them. That just about worked for the email, but  saunters into being obtuse when it comes to the calendar's smaller  writing.
Oddly, the option to make a video call is tucked away  down with these apps. With no front-facing camera, it's probably fair  for it to be afterthought. Hey, we were surprised to find it at all.

Considering  that the unique selling point of the Sony Ericsson Zylo is the FLAC  music playback, you'd be forgiven for thinking that's the ultimate  decider in how we view this phone.
That's not the case, though.  With its handy social networking widgets, media focus and nice messaging  features, it's a reminder of what a flexible operating system Sony  Ericsson has on these phones.
We likedThe vibrant screen is lovely to use everyday, even it does struggle with video. Apps are presented brightly and text is clear.
Email was ridiculously easy to set up, and we like the new Conversation option for viewing messages.
More  than anything, this is just an easy phone to use. Good media functions,  background apps and the excellent widgets make this a phone that's  great to live with in the online age.
We're also in support of the introduction of support for lossless music codecs, even if this implementation is clumsy.
We dislikedWell,  you can maybe guess where this starts off. Proprietary headphone  connector, no USB cable, no microSD card… we could forgive these sins  if large music files weren't the marquee feature for the Zylo.
All that, and we were disappointed with the final sound quality anyway. It just feels like such a wasted opportunity.
The  camera was also a low point of the phone. We just couldn't manage to  take a single good photo. The 30fps VGA video sounds like it would have  promise, but it just failed to pick up enough detail.
VerdictWhen  we first started exploring the Sony Ericsson Zylo, and realised the  massive shortcomings of its FLAC support, we were expecting the theme of  this review to be 'scathing'.
Ultimately, that's not the case.  Disappointing though the lossless music situation may be, it still plays  music – a whole bunch of audio file types, actually. It works, even  if it wasn't thought through properly.
The rest of the phone is  solid, and easy to use. The social networking widgets are excellent. We  still say it's a little uncomfortable to use for a while, but you get  used to its shape.
Most of all, the raft of features packed in  here is hard to fault for the price. Anyone looking for a hardy internet  and media-focussed phone will do well with the Zylo.
Audiophiles – we're afraid this isn't the phone you're looking for. Move along.
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