|
Mar
09
|
In recent months there have been numerous reports of new Android phones from various manufacturers – HTC, Motorola and Samsung. All of them want to jump on the train or even share some time on the operating system. A name previously entered in rare phenomenon – Sony Ericsson. But now the Japanese-Swedish manufacturer responded and announced new Android phones with a new interface.
Two years of development work put in the new interface – the manufacturer wants to score with new features. According to a report by Wired, the developers of Sony Ericsson put more than two years in the development of the new interface. Meaning and purpose it was to collect multimedia and contacts from social networks on a single platform .
SonyEricsson thus starts a trial with its MotoBLUR the Motorola or HTC with sense some time ago had begun. “We have the complex PlayStation middleware where streamlined to fit in Android OS,” said George Arriola from Wired.
Later this quarter, SonyEricsson in the United States wants its new Android phones get into the trade including the Xperia X10 with 4-inch touch screen, 1-GHz Snapdragon CPU and 8.1-megapixel camera, or the Mini, a compact mobile phone with 2.6-inch display – either as a touch-screen model, or with fold-out keyboard.
From the perspective of the Sony wired interface that provides “visually attractive yet on” approach in comparison to current competitors in the centre of the Sony . UXP-interface is a widget called ‘Timescape’. “Timescape” collects feeds from social networks and presents them in a map view. In addition, it also collects messages and posts on Facebook and Co.
Sony, however, continues to embrace multimedia and want to show with “Mediascape” its approach to better presentation and management of video, music and photos. The icon – known from the PSP or PlayStation Network World – designed to ensure the best possible overview. Sony Ericsson’s UI UXP is for Android much less confusing than the MotoBlur interface and significantly revamped as the HTC Sense,” says Wired.
Related posts:









































