Snake game for sony ericsson w302
Although the phone feels a little on the cheap side when you first scoop it up, the overall design and build quality are both above-average. The majority of the phone is constructed from plastic but the front is metal even though it might not feel that way to begin with.
Expect plenty of botched messages when using the W Putting all of these negative aspects aside for a moment, the W does at least provide a decent amount of portable entertainment. The buttons are reasonable. The number keys are thin wide lozenges and they do look small. But they are raised from the fascia and give a reassuring click when pressed which helps a great deal with usability.
I found them OK to use, though if you have broad fingertips you might have a problem. Above the number keys and beneath the screen is an array of buttons. Sony Ericsson has adopted its familiar rounded design for these. So, to the far left and right are small Call and End buttons that are complete circles. These are embedded into partially circular rockers the top end of which accesses the softmenus and the bottom end of which is for Clear and Shortcuts features.
Left and right D-pad presses act as back and forwards buttons in music playback too. So far this all sounds like pretty standard Sony Ericsson stuff. Network capabilities are a bit limited with quad-band GSM setting the limit.
Nor does the phone offer a lot by way of native memory. I have to mention the loathed standard Sony Ericsson headset connector which as usual sticks out like a sore thumb from the left side of the casing. The player supports album art and you can skin it which adds a little something positive to proceedings. As indicated by the lack of shake control, there is no accelerometer.
Countering that with another plus point you get a Blogger. It shoots photos at just 2-megapixels, which puts it way down the pecking order. There is no flash and no self-portrait mirror. The yellow flowers are really lacking in detail and look very washed out. The white chair is reasonably good, though, with near-uniform colour and good detailing.
Scrolling through stations is a slow process, setting up new stored stations is confusing, and the lack of a skip function is criminal. The W doesn't support podcast subscriptions, which is a feature we love in handsets that are higher up the Sony Ericsson totem pole, like the W Walkman , for example.
You can sync podcasts along with your other music using the free Media Manager software, but we're not fans of the software's usability. We like that it supports drag and drop, but it reorganised our music based on its own rules, and it's not clear what file formats are supported. Files in all of those formats can be packed onto the handset's MB memory stick.
If you like, you can spend the money saved by not buying a pricier phone on a memory-stick upgrade, up to 4GB. The W also has 20MB of on-board memory. Boring browsing The W's music features got us through the night, but the rest of the package let us down.
Pictures look fine on the xpixel screen -- nothing to write home about, but clear and bright, with vibrant colours. But Web pages look awful in the browser, with images an over-compressed mess. Since it also doesn't have 3G or Wi-Fi, we wouldn't recommend the W for anything more than an occasional emergency Google search. Say cheesy The 2-megapixel camera can shoot video or stills, but, with no flash or LED, it's only suitable for snapshots in bright light.
The multimedia experience is also let down by a poor user interface -- something's that's excellent on some other Sony Ericsson phones , like the C Cyber-shot.
Photos, video and music are hard to find in the media browser. It's also hard to navigate once you're in the photo-viewing application. We struggled to find photos that we'd just taken, and had to trawl through unsorted wallpapers, slowly scrolling past one image at a time.
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