When Sony sells you a smartphone for $600, it’s making a promise. Actually, it makes a whole bunch of them: Power, beauty, waterproof protection, and everyday utility. Can this slab of metal and glass do it all?
To find out, we bought a retail unit and used it for several weeks. This is not a review unit sent by Sony, but one that we paid for in full — in other words, we don’t “owe” anyone a positive review, and this is our truly unbiased take on the Sony Xperia Z1.
Playing The Specs Game
Just for the sake of comparison, these are better specifications than what you’d get with the original Samsung Galaxy S4 (I9505), and are roughly on par with the refreshed S4 (I9506) and the LG Nexus 5, two phones that also ship with the Snapdragon 800 and Adreno 330.
If I hadn’t mentioned the camera so far, that’s because it merits a section of its own: The Xperia Z1 ships with a 20-megapixel rear shooter that uses a sensor as large as the ones on many compact cameras. When I reviewed the Xperia Z, I found that the camera was not exactly astounding, and the Xperia Z1 seeks to atone for its older sibling’s shortcomings.
The Camera
Let me put it this way: The Xperia Z1′s camera works. I am not just talking about image quality, which is on par with what I’d expect from a full fledged point-and-shoot, and is far better than any smartphone I’ve previously owned. It’s also the fact that the Z1 has a dedicated camera button, and is fast and responsive.Once you’ve composed your shot, the camera works as you’d expect it to: A half-press on the shutter button locks focus and exposure, and a full press captures an image. This also means you can recompose your image, just like with a “real” camera. One of the few software annoyances on the Xperia Z1 is that when quick-launching the camera like this, it always loads with Sony’s Superior Auto mode. This ambitious capture mode is supposed to auto-detect the current scene and load the appropriate preset (say, Sports, or Twilight Portrait). In reality, it doesn’t work as well as simply switching to Manual mode and dialing in your own settings. I found myself switching to Manual mode every time after I quick-launched the camera — something that definitely hampered speed and ease of use.
While we’re on the subject of camera software annoyances, there is no easy way to re-bind the camera button so that it launches a different camera app: You can only quick-launch Sony’s own camera, despite the fact that you may get better shots out of an app like Camera FV-5.
Sony went out of its way to make this feel like a “real” camera, and for the most part, it works. You get multiple modes, image stabilization, ISO and metering control, and much more.
The software takes advantage of the phone’s beastly specs to offer a mode called “Timeshift burst.” Meant for capturing action shots, this mode lets you press the shutter button and then flick back and forth between 30 different frames of that moment to get the exact shot you want. The interface works well and is very responsive and smooth to use. Unfortunately, even after you pick the image you wanted, all burst images are saved onto your device. I woke up one morning to find no less than 830 images of splashing waves auto-uploaded to my Google+ account.
Look and Feel: Don’t Let The Glass Back Fool You
Side by side, the Xperia Z1 is barely distinguishable from the $449.99 Xperia Z. There’s one extra hardware button for the camera, but other than that, it’s the same aesthetic: Sparse slabs with glass backs and a power button that’s reminiscent of the crown on an analog watch.One impressive touch for the Xperia Z1 is that the headphone jack is actually open. This is not a big deal on most phones, only the Z1 is actually waterproof: You can submerge it in 1 meter of water for up to 30 minutes, and it’ll keep working just fine. All other ports on the device are protected behind rubberized flaps, just like on the Z.
The Software
Good news on the software front: Sony did not utterly ruin Android. Yes, the phone does run a customized version of Android, but it’s actually fine, for the most part.Performance and Battery Life
It’s a beast. There’s no other way to say this: The Xperia Z1 outperforms every other Android device I’ve tested to date, hitting Antutu scores as high as 32,000 and 35,000 with ease. Just for the sake of comparison, that’s higher than you could expect to get with the Galaxy S4, or even with the Note 3 – and that’s with no overclocking or any software tweaks whatsoever, merely running Sony’s stock firmware. Antutu’s bar chart doesn’t lie:The lack of a user-replaceable battery is one of the few things I dislike about the phone, much like its predecessor. But while the Z had a relatively paltry 2330 mAh battery, the Z1′s 3000 mAh cell offers noticeably more power. Sony also built in a power-saving Stamina mode into its ROM, which lets you significantly extend the phone’s battery life by shutting down just about everything while the screen is off. Extended screen-on time will still drain the battery (naturally), but Stamina mode does mean you may be able to get through 2-3 days of conservative use (brief email/text sessions) without charging.
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