Sony has finally struck out on its own. The Sony Ericsson partnership is over – Sony bought out Ericsson's slice of the phone-making venture earlier this year – and the first Sony-branded phone is the Xperia Ion, a new Android handset exclusive to AT&T's 4G LTE network.
It goes on sale Sunday priced at $100 with a 2-year contract, much less than flagship devices like the iPhone 4S, the HTC One X and the Samsung Galaxy S III.
The Ion is physically modest, and it runs the outdated Gingerbread version of Android. But it has a nice 12-megapixel camera, a quality screen, and an HDMI-out feature that makes it a fine device for enjoying streaming media when you hook it up to your TV. For only $100, it's not a bad buy, but it feels behind the times when compared to the latest crop of smartphones.
For only $100, it's not a bad buy, but it feels behind the times when compared to the latest crop of smartphones.Just looking at the Xperia Ion tells you it's no thoroughbred. The 0.46-inch thick body feels rather bloated compared to the sleek top-tier phones. With its chunky, flat edges and curved aluminum back, it looks more like a TV remote than a modern smartphone. Unfortunately, the rounded rear results in an unwelcome wobble when you lay the phone down, and it makes typing while the phone is laying on a table near-impossible. The glass touchscreen on the front is accented with four chrome buttons, which are needed to operate the Ion's outdated Android Gingerbread OS. There is also a Sony and an AT&T logo, in chrome, on the front face.
At 4.9-ounces, the Ion isn't heavy, and the aluminum back plate makes the phone feel tougher and sturdier than an all-plastic supermodel like the Galaxy S III. Underneath a plastic door on the phone's left side is a mini-USB port for charging and a mini-HDMI port for connecting to a TV (more on that later). On the right side is a power button, volume rocker and a dedicated camera button.
