News for 'Sony Ericsson Xperia'

Sony Ericsson plays it hard

Sony Ericsson plays it hard

Rediff.com24 Jun 2011

India's biggest mobile gaming tournament begins today to showcase Xperia.

Sony Ericsson launches Xperia X10, Vivaz in India

Sony Ericsson launches Xperia X10, Vivaz in India

Rediff.com26 Mar 2010

Handset maker Sony Ericson on Friday launched a new portfolio of high-end mobile phones priced between Rs 25,695 and Rs 35,795 in India.

Top 5 POWERFUL smartphones under Rs 10,000

Top 5 POWERFUL smartphones under Rs 10,000

Rediff.com12 Dec 2011

Android smartphones have narrowed into the category of budget-friendly yet powerful feature phones as well.

Five touchscreen phones to watch out for

Five touchscreen phones to watch out for

Rediff.com24 Sep 2009

Here are the most interesting touchscreen phones that will be battling it out for your attention this year.

Sony Xperia XZ1: A great phone, but not good enough

Sony Xperia XZ1: A great phone, but not good enough

Rediff.com2 Nov 2017

At 44,990 Sony Xperia XZ1 doesn't have anything new to offer, making it difficult to compete with rivals.

Six 'entertainment-packed' phones for India

Six 'entertainment-packed' phones for India

Rediff.com20 Aug 2010

Sony Ericsson just unveiled six new phones in the Indian market, phones it describes as entertainment-packed. They are: Xperia X8 (previously known as Shakira), the affordable GreenHeart Cedar, the QWERTY messenger Aspen, and three Walkman phones -- Yendo, Spiro, and Zylo. Unfortunately, no pricing details have been revealed yet.

Is Sony Xperia T3 worth Rs 25,000?

Is Sony Xperia T3 worth Rs 25,000?

Rediff.com1 Sep 2014

Sony will do well to pull its latest offering near to the Rs 20,000 mark if they want to make prospective buyers seriously consider the Xperia T3.

The big iPhone con

The big iPhone con

Rediff.com25 Sep 2017

Apple products are built around the notion of picking up ideas that are already common, reducing them to brightly-coloured, child-like simplicity, imposing conformity, and then suggesting that buying into that conformity means you're a seriously cool adult, says Mihir S Sharma.