Re: [id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

2013-02-14 Terurut Topik gugun gabe
coba energizer turut berperan dalam kontribusinya dalam gadget,terutama
hp...pastinya awetan batrenya ketimbang hpnya
;€…sambilPasangAkiMotorDiHp
On Feb 14, 2013 2:53 PM, dedi.sop...@gmail.com wrote:

 **
 2330 mAh masih diatas sgs 3 yang cuman 2100 mAh, tapi kalau performance
 kurang tau juga soalnya apple device aj kapasitas batere sedang tapi bisa
 lebih awet.
 Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone from Sinyal Bagus XL, Nyambung
 Teruuusss...!
 --
 *From: * Willy Gunawan mi...@robot-ijo.com
 *Sender: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Date: *Thu, 14 Feb 2013 14:46:11 +0700
 *To: *Indonesian Android Community [id-android]
 id-android@googlegroups.com
 *ReplyTo: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Subject: *Re: [id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

 intinya: baterenya busuk as ever :p
 kecuali stamina dijalanin di mana itu smua wireless dimatiin.


 --

 Its 2,330mAh battery looped a video for slightly less than four hours.
 This is hardly impressive since the HTC Butterfly, with a similar display
 size, resolution and battery capacity, survived for at least an hour more.

 --





 On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 2:44 PM, dedi.sop...@gmail.com wrote:

 **
 Intinya gimana bro? Maklum kacamata baca bahasa inggrisnya ketinggalan :p
 Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone from Sinyal Bagus XL, Nyambung
 Teruuusss...!
 --
 *From: * Willy Gunawan mi...@robot-ijo.com
 *Sender: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Date: *Thu, 14 Feb 2013 14:25:02 +0700
 *To: *Indonesian Android Community [id-android]
 id-android@googlegroups.com
 *ReplyTo: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Subject: *[id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

 hmmm
 nasib kalo reviewnya aja begini.
 bakalan mikir 2x dulu kalo mau beli si Z ini.
 disadur dari digital life, st times.


 --

 Phones with generous display sizes and high-definition screen resolutions
 are the latest rage, and joining the ranks of these juggernauts is the new
 Sony Xperia Z.

 Announced at the annual Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas last
 month, Sony's latest Android smartphone is a sight to behold.

 Sporting a clean and sharp look with its angular design, the Xperia Z
 resembles a slab of glass with an imposing presence.

 Weighing 146g, the phone feels solid in my hands. Similar to the LG
 Optimus G, the front and rear panels are covered by glass, which are touted
 to be scratch-resistant and shatterproof.

 While the phone is not slippery, it somehow fell out of my grasp due to
 my clumsy handling and landed face first on a concrete floor. It proved to
 be somewhat shatterproof, although I noticed a few scratches when I looked
 closer at the phone.

 The hardy phone is waterproof as the connection ports are not exposed to
 the elements. This is fine for the micro-SIM and microSD ports, which are
 rarely used; but imagine the chore of removing the cover to access the
 micro-USB port to charge the phone, or moving the kibble away from the
 3.5mm audio port to plug the earphones.

 The power button, placed right smack in the middle on the right side of
 the phone, is surprisingly easy to use. The volume buttons below the power
 button are not so friendly though.

 My thumb had to move downwards in an awkward stretch just to press the
 buttons, and I found myself hitting the power button instead of raising the
 volume quite often.

 Preloaded with Google Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, the phone is rejigged with
 Sony's customised user interface, starting with the lock screen.

 Unlike the LG and Samsung phones which let you swipe anywhere on the
 screen to unlock the device, you have to swipe up or down on the Sony
 smartphone to unlock. Swatting from left to right will reveal the music
 player, while the opposite direction will unlock the camera.

 On the home screen, the back, home and recent applications buttons
 appear as on-screen short cuts. Considering that there is a thick black
 bezel below the 5-inch display, it seems wasteful to place the short cuts
 within the screen.

 Incidentally, this is the first Sony smartphone equipped with a quad-core
 processor, running at a clock speed of 1.5GHz.

 Its overall performance is not too shabby, producing above average
 numbers when I ran the Quadrant and Geekbench 2 benchmark apps on it. The
 customised interface flowed smoothly without a hitch, and webpages were
 rendered quickly. This is more noticeable when the phone is connected to
 the high-speed LTE network.

 Pictures taken by the 13-megapixel camera came out sharp and clear, with
 minimal noise under low lighting conditions.

 Text and images are displayed with crystal clarity, though the colours
 are slightly muted. Activating the Mobile Bravia Engine 2 feature enhances
 the colours, but it will add a significant drain to its battery life.

 The phone's weakness became clear when it was subjected to Digital Life's
 battery test.

 Its 2,330mAh battery looped a video for slightly less than four hours.
 This is hardly

Re: [id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

2013-02-14 Terurut Topik Andre Tampubolon
Sayang yah... padahal overall hardwarenya kayanya wah banget.

Tapi baguslah. Isi dompet jd aman XD 


:: AT ::
Powered by Telkomsel BlackBerry®

-Original Message-
From: Willy Gunawan mi...@robot-ijo.com
Sender: id-android@googlegroups.com
Date: Thu, 14 Feb 2013 14:46:11 
To: Indonesian Android Community [id-android]id-android@googlegroups.com
Reply-To: id-android@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

intinya: baterenya busuk as ever :p
kecuali stamina dijalanin di mana itu smua wireless dimatiin.


--

Its 2,330mAh battery looped a video for slightly less than four hours. This
is hardly impressive since the HTC Butterfly, with a similar display size,
resolution and battery capacity, survived for at least an hour more.

--





On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 2:44 PM, dedi.sop...@gmail.com wrote:

 **
 Intinya gimana bro? Maklum kacamata baca bahasa inggrisnya ketinggalan :p
 Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone from Sinyal Bagus XL, Nyambung
 Teruuusss...!
 --
 *From: * Willy Gunawan mi...@robot-ijo.com
 *Sender: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Date: *Thu, 14 Feb 2013 14:25:02 +0700
 *To: *Indonesian Android Community [id-android]
 id-android@googlegroups.com
 *ReplyTo: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Subject: *[id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

 hmmm
 nasib kalo reviewnya aja begini.
 bakalan mikir 2x dulu kalo mau beli si Z ini.
 disadur dari digital life, st times.


 --

 Phones with generous display sizes and high-definition screen resolutions
 are the latest rage, and joining the ranks of these juggernauts is the new
 Sony Xperia Z.

 Announced at the annual Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas last month,
 Sony's latest Android smartphone is a sight to behold.

 Sporting a clean and sharp look with its angular design, the Xperia Z
 resembles a slab of glass with an imposing presence.

 Weighing 146g, the phone feels solid in my hands. Similar to the LG
 Optimus G, the front and rear panels are covered by glass, which are touted
 to be scratch-resistant and shatterproof.

 While the phone is not slippery, it somehow fell out of my grasp due to my
 clumsy handling and landed face first on a concrete floor. It proved to be
 somewhat shatterproof, although I noticed a few scratches when I looked
 closer at the phone.

 The hardy phone is waterproof as the connection ports are not exposed to
 the elements. This is fine for the micro-SIM and microSD ports, which are
 rarely used; but imagine the chore of removing the cover to access the
 micro-USB port to charge the phone, or moving the kibble away from the
 3.5mm audio port to plug the earphones.

 The power button, placed right smack in the middle on the right side of
 the phone, is surprisingly easy to use. The volume buttons below the power
 button are not so friendly though.

 My thumb had to move downwards in an awkward stretch just to press the
 buttons, and I found myself hitting the power button instead of raising the
 volume quite often.

 Preloaded with Google Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, the phone is rejigged with
 Sony's customised user interface, starting with the lock screen.

 Unlike the LG and Samsung phones which let you swipe anywhere on the
 screen to unlock the device, you have to swipe up or down on the Sony
 smartphone to unlock. Swatting from left to right will reveal the music
 player, while the opposite direction will unlock the camera.

 On the home screen, the back, home and recent applications buttons
 appear as on-screen short cuts. Considering that there is a thick black
 bezel below the 5-inch display, it seems wasteful to place the short cuts
 within the screen.

 Incidentally, this is the first Sony smartphone equipped with a quad-core
 processor, running at a clock speed of 1.5GHz.

 Its overall performance is not too shabby, producing above average numbers
 when I ran the Quadrant and Geekbench 2 benchmark apps on it. The
 customised interface flowed smoothly without a hitch, and webpages were
 rendered quickly. This is more noticeable when the phone is connected to
 the high-speed LTE network.

 Pictures taken by the 13-megapixel camera came out sharp and clear, with
 minimal noise under low lighting conditions.

 Text and images are displayed with crystal clarity, though the colours are
 slightly muted. Activating the Mobile Bravia Engine 2 feature enhances the
 colours, but it will add a significant drain to its battery life.

 The phone's weakness became clear when it was subjected to Digital Life's
 battery test.

 Its 2,330mAh battery looped a video for slightly less than four hours.
 This is hardly impressive since the HTC Butterfly, with a similar display
 size, resolution and battery capacity, survived for at least an hour more.

 On a full charge, the phone came to a halt after 13 hours of mixed usage
 with WhatsApp, Facebook, Twitter and my e-mail messages constantly synced
 to the phone.

 Activating the various power saving modes

Re: [id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

2013-02-14 Terurut Topik sony djuana
ah gpp...yg penting daptar dulu bro..he..he...

https://www.singtelshop.com/xperiaz/?utm_source=twitterutm_medium=twitter_wallpostutm_campaign=xperiaz_roiutm_content=


best regards,

sony djuana


On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 3:56 PM, Willy Gunawan mi...@robot-ijo.com wrote:

 nah itu mereka udah test, vs butterfly, layar ukuran mirip2, kapasitas
 batere sama, tp hampir beda 1 jam :D




 On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 2:52 PM, dedi.sop...@gmail.com wrote:

 **
 2330 mAh masih diatas sgs 3 yang cuman 2100 mAh, tapi kalau performance
 kurang tau juga soalnya apple device aj kapasitas batere sedang tapi bisa
 lebih awet.
 Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone from Sinyal Bagus XL, Nyambung
 Teruuusss...!
 --
 *From: * Willy Gunawan mi...@robot-ijo.com
 *Sender: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Date: *Thu, 14 Feb 2013 14:46:11 +0700
 *To: *Indonesian Android Community [id-android]
 id-android@googlegroups.com
 *ReplyTo: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Subject: *Re: [id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

 intinya: baterenya busuk as ever :p
 kecuali stamina dijalanin di mana itu smua wireless dimatiin.


 --

 Its 2,330mAh battery looped a video for slightly less than four hours.
 This is hardly impressive since the HTC Butterfly, with a similar display
 size, resolution and battery capacity, survived for at least an hour more.

 --





 On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 2:44 PM, dedi.sop...@gmail.com wrote:

 **
 Intinya gimana bro? Maklum kacamata baca bahasa inggrisnya ketinggalan :p
 Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone from Sinyal Bagus XL, Nyambung
 Teruuusss...!
 --
 *From: * Willy Gunawan mi...@robot-ijo.com
 *Sender: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Date: *Thu, 14 Feb 2013 14:25:02 +0700
 *To: *Indonesian Android Community [id-android]
 id-android@googlegroups.com
 *ReplyTo: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Subject: *[id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

 hmmm
 nasib kalo reviewnya aja begini.
 bakalan mikir 2x dulu kalo mau beli si Z ini.
 disadur dari digital life, st times.


 --

 Phones with generous display sizes and high-definition screen
 resolutions are the latest rage, and joining the ranks of these juggernauts
 is the new Sony Xperia Z.

 Announced at the annual Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas last
 month, Sony's latest Android smartphone is a sight to behold.

 Sporting a clean and sharp look with its angular design, the Xperia Z
 resembles a slab of glass with an imposing presence.

 Weighing 146g, the phone feels solid in my hands. Similar to the LG
 Optimus G, the front and rear panels are covered by glass, which are touted
 to be scratch-resistant and shatterproof.

 While the phone is not slippery, it somehow fell out of my grasp due to
 my clumsy handling and landed face first on a concrete floor. It proved to
 be somewhat shatterproof, although I noticed a few scratches when I looked
 closer at the phone.

 The hardy phone is waterproof as the connection ports are not exposed to
 the elements. This is fine for the micro-SIM and microSD ports, which are
 rarely used; but imagine the chore of removing the cover to access the
 micro-USB port to charge the phone, or moving the kibble away from the
 3.5mm audio port to plug the earphones.

 The power button, placed right smack in the middle on the right side of
 the phone, is surprisingly easy to use. The volume buttons below the power
 button are not so friendly though.

 My thumb had to move downwards in an awkward stretch just to press the
 buttons, and I found myself hitting the power button instead of raising the
 volume quite often.

 Preloaded with Google Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, the phone is rejigged with
 Sony's customised user interface, starting with the lock screen.

 Unlike the LG and Samsung phones which let you swipe anywhere on the
 screen to unlock the device, you have to swipe up or down on the Sony
 smartphone to unlock. Swatting from left to right will reveal the music
 player, while the opposite direction will unlock the camera.

 On the home screen, the back, home and recent applications buttons
 appear as on-screen short cuts. Considering that there is a thick black
 bezel below the 5-inch display, it seems wasteful to place the short cuts
 within the screen.

 Incidentally, this is the first Sony smartphone equipped with a
 quad-core processor, running at a clock speed of 1.5GHz.

 Its overall performance is not too shabby, producing above average
 numbers when I ran the Quadrant and Geekbench 2 benchmark apps on it. The
 customised interface flowed smoothly without a hitch, and webpages were
 rendered quickly. This is more noticeable when the phone is connected to
 the high-speed LTE network.

 Pictures taken by the 13-megapixel camera came out sharp and clear, with
 minimal noise under low lighting conditions.

 Text and images are displayed with crystal clarity, though the colours
 are slightly muted. Activating the Mobile Bravia Engine 2 feature enhances

Re: [id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

2013-02-14 Terurut Topik Tomy Mandala Putra
intinya minus di batre?


On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 3:37 PM, sony djuana sonydju...@gmail.com wrote:

 ah gpp...yg penting daptar dulu bro..he..he...


 https://www.singtelshop.com/xperiaz/?utm_source=twitterutm_medium=twitter_wallpostutm_campaign=xperiaz_roiutm_content=


 best regards,

 sony djuana


 On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 3:56 PM, Willy Gunawan mi...@robot-ijo.comwrote:

 nah itu mereka udah test, vs butterfly, layar ukuran mirip2, kapasitas
 batere sama, tp hampir beda 1 jam :D




 On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 2:52 PM, dedi.sop...@gmail.com wrote:

 **
 2330 mAh masih diatas sgs 3 yang cuman 2100 mAh, tapi kalau performance
 kurang tau juga soalnya apple device aj kapasitas batere sedang tapi bisa
 lebih awet.
 Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone from Sinyal Bagus XL, Nyambung
 Teruuusss...!
 --
 *From: * Willy Gunawan mi...@robot-ijo.com
 *Sender: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Date: *Thu, 14 Feb 2013 14:46:11 +0700
 *To: *Indonesian Android Community [id-android]
 id-android@googlegroups.com
 *ReplyTo: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Subject: *Re: [id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

 intinya: baterenya busuk as ever :p
 kecuali stamina dijalanin di mana itu smua wireless dimatiin.


 --

 Its 2,330mAh battery looped a video for slightly less than four hours.
 This is hardly impressive since the HTC Butterfly, with a similar display
 size, resolution and battery capacity, survived for at least an hour more.

 --





 On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 2:44 PM, dedi.sop...@gmail.com wrote:

 **
 Intinya gimana bro? Maklum kacamata baca bahasa inggrisnya ketinggalan
 :p
 Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone from Sinyal Bagus XL, Nyambung
 Teruuusss...!
 --
 *From: * Willy Gunawan mi...@robot-ijo.com
 *Sender: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Date: *Thu, 14 Feb 2013 14:25:02 +0700
 *To: *Indonesian Android Community [id-android]
 id-android@googlegroups.com
 *ReplyTo: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Subject: *[id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

 hmmm
 nasib kalo reviewnya aja begini.
 bakalan mikir 2x dulu kalo mau beli si Z ini.
 disadur dari digital life, st times.


 --

 Phones with generous display sizes and high-definition screen
 resolutions are the latest rage, and joining the ranks of these juggernauts
 is the new Sony Xperia Z.

 Announced at the annual Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas last
 month, Sony's latest Android smartphone is a sight to behold.

 Sporting a clean and sharp look with its angular design, the Xperia Z
 resembles a slab of glass with an imposing presence.

 Weighing 146g, the phone feels solid in my hands. Similar to the LG
 Optimus G, the front and rear panels are covered by glass, which are touted
 to be scratch-resistant and shatterproof.

 While the phone is not slippery, it somehow fell out of my grasp due to
 my clumsy handling and landed face first on a concrete floor. It proved to
 be somewhat shatterproof, although I noticed a few scratches when I looked
 closer at the phone.

 The hardy phone is waterproof as the connection ports are not exposed
 to the elements. This is fine for the micro-SIM and microSD ports, which
 are rarely used; but imagine the chore of removing the cover to access the
 micro-USB port to charge the phone, or moving the kibble away from the
 3.5mm audio port to plug the earphones.

 The power button, placed right smack in the middle on the right side of
 the phone, is surprisingly easy to use. The volume buttons below the power
 button are not so friendly though.

 My thumb had to move downwards in an awkward stretch just to press the
 buttons, and I found myself hitting the power button instead of raising the
 volume quite often.

 Preloaded with Google Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, the phone is rejigged
 with Sony's customised user interface, starting with the lock screen.

 Unlike the LG and Samsung phones which let you swipe anywhere on the
 screen to unlock the device, you have to swipe up or down on the Sony
 smartphone to unlock. Swatting from left to right will reveal the music
 player, while the opposite direction will unlock the camera.

 On the home screen, the back, home and recent applications
 buttons appear as on-screen short cuts. Considering that there is a thick
 black bezel below the 5-inch display, it seems wasteful to place the short
 cuts within the screen.

 Incidentally, this is the first Sony smartphone equipped with a
 quad-core processor, running at a clock speed of 1.5GHz.

 Its overall performance is not too shabby, producing above average
 numbers when I ran the Quadrant and Geekbench 2 benchmark apps on it. The
 customised interface flowed smoothly without a hitch, and webpages were
 rendered quickly. This is more noticeable when the phone is connected to
 the high-speed LTE network.

 Pictures taken by the 13-megapixel camera came out sharp and clear,
 with minimal noise under low lighting conditions.

 Text and images are displayed with crystal

Re: [id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

2013-02-13 Terurut Topik dedi . sopian
Intinya gimana bro? Maklum kacamata baca bahasa inggrisnya ketinggalan :p
Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone from Sinyal Bagus XL, Nyambung Teruuusss...!

-Original Message-
From: Willy Gunawan mi...@robot-ijo.com
Sender: id-android@googlegroups.com
Date: Thu, 14 Feb 2013 14:25:02 
To: Indonesian Android Community [id-android]id-android@googlegroups.com
Reply-To: id-android@googlegroups.com
Subject: [id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

hmmm
nasib kalo reviewnya aja begini.
bakalan mikir 2x dulu kalo mau beli si Z ini.
disadur dari digital life, st times.


--

Phones with generous display sizes and high-definition screen resolutions
are the latest rage, and joining the ranks of these juggernauts is the new
Sony Xperia Z.

Announced at the annual Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas last month,
Sony's latest Android smartphone is a sight to behold.

Sporting a clean and sharp look with its angular design, the Xperia Z
resembles a slab of glass with an imposing presence.

Weighing 146g, the phone feels solid in my hands. Similar to the LG Optimus
G, the front and rear panels are covered by glass, which are touted to be
scratch-resistant and shatterproof.

While the phone is not slippery, it somehow fell out of my grasp due to my
clumsy handling and landed face first on a concrete floor. It proved to be
somewhat shatterproof, although I noticed a few scratches when I looked
closer at the phone.

The hardy phone is waterproof as the connection ports are not exposed to
the elements. This is fine for the micro-SIM and microSD ports, which are
rarely used; but imagine the chore of removing the cover to access the
micro-USB port to charge the phone, or moving the kibble away from the
3.5mm audio port to plug the earphones.

The power button, placed right smack in the middle on the right side of the
phone, is surprisingly easy to use. The volume buttons below the power
button are not so friendly though.

My thumb had to move downwards in an awkward stretch just to press the
buttons, and I found myself hitting the power button instead of raising the
volume quite often.

Preloaded with Google Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, the phone is rejigged with
Sony's customised user interface, starting with the lock screen.

Unlike the LG and Samsung phones which let you swipe anywhere on the screen
to unlock the device, you have to swipe up or down on the Sony smartphone
to unlock. Swatting from left to right will reveal the music player, while
the opposite direction will unlock the camera.

On the home screen, the back, home and recent applications buttons
appear as on-screen short cuts. Considering that there is a thick black
bezel below the 5-inch display, it seems wasteful to place the short cuts
within the screen.

Incidentally, this is the first Sony smartphone equipped with a quad-core
processor, running at a clock speed of 1.5GHz.

Its overall performance is not too shabby, producing above average numbers
when I ran the Quadrant and Geekbench 2 benchmark apps on it. The
customised interface flowed smoothly without a hitch, and webpages were
rendered quickly. This is more noticeable when the phone is connected to
the high-speed LTE network.

Pictures taken by the 13-megapixel camera came out sharp and clear, with
minimal noise under low lighting conditions.

Text and images are displayed with crystal clarity, though the colours are
slightly muted. Activating the Mobile Bravia Engine 2 feature enhances the
colours, but it will add a significant drain to its battery life.

The phone's weakness became clear when it was subjected to Digital Life's
battery test.

Its 2,330mAh battery looped a video for slightly less than four hours. This
is hardly impressive since the HTC Butterfly, with a similar display size,
resolution and battery capacity, survived for at least an hour more.

On a full charge, the phone came to a halt after 13 hours of mixed usage
with WhatsApp, Facebook, Twitter and my e-mail messages constantly synced
to the phone.

Activating the various power saving modes, such as stamina mode, which
disables mobile data when the screen is off, is essential to keep the phone
active for a full working day.

This Sony phone looks great, feels sturdy and has powerful hardware. Its
premium pricing and low

battery mileage are its biggest disadvantages.
--

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Join Forum  ID-ANDROID: 

Re: [id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

2013-02-13 Terurut Topik Willy Gunawan
intinya: baterenya busuk as ever :p
kecuali stamina dijalanin di mana itu smua wireless dimatiin.


--

Its 2,330mAh battery looped a video for slightly less than four hours. This
is hardly impressive since the HTC Butterfly, with a similar display size,
resolution and battery capacity, survived for at least an hour more.

--





On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 2:44 PM, dedi.sop...@gmail.com wrote:

 **
 Intinya gimana bro? Maklum kacamata baca bahasa inggrisnya ketinggalan :p
 Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone from Sinyal Bagus XL, Nyambung
 Teruuusss...!
 --
 *From: * Willy Gunawan mi...@robot-ijo.com
 *Sender: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Date: *Thu, 14 Feb 2013 14:25:02 +0700
 *To: *Indonesian Android Community [id-android]
 id-android@googlegroups.com
 *ReplyTo: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Subject: *[id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

 hmmm
 nasib kalo reviewnya aja begini.
 bakalan mikir 2x dulu kalo mau beli si Z ini.
 disadur dari digital life, st times.


 --

 Phones with generous display sizes and high-definition screen resolutions
 are the latest rage, and joining the ranks of these juggernauts is the new
 Sony Xperia Z.

 Announced at the annual Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas last month,
 Sony's latest Android smartphone is a sight to behold.

 Sporting a clean and sharp look with its angular design, the Xperia Z
 resembles a slab of glass with an imposing presence.

 Weighing 146g, the phone feels solid in my hands. Similar to the LG
 Optimus G, the front and rear panels are covered by glass, which are touted
 to be scratch-resistant and shatterproof.

 While the phone is not slippery, it somehow fell out of my grasp due to my
 clumsy handling and landed face first on a concrete floor. It proved to be
 somewhat shatterproof, although I noticed a few scratches when I looked
 closer at the phone.

 The hardy phone is waterproof as the connection ports are not exposed to
 the elements. This is fine for the micro-SIM and microSD ports, which are
 rarely used; but imagine the chore of removing the cover to access the
 micro-USB port to charge the phone, or moving the kibble away from the
 3.5mm audio port to plug the earphones.

 The power button, placed right smack in the middle on the right side of
 the phone, is surprisingly easy to use. The volume buttons below the power
 button are not so friendly though.

 My thumb had to move downwards in an awkward stretch just to press the
 buttons, and I found myself hitting the power button instead of raising the
 volume quite often.

 Preloaded with Google Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, the phone is rejigged with
 Sony's customised user interface, starting with the lock screen.

 Unlike the LG and Samsung phones which let you swipe anywhere on the
 screen to unlock the device, you have to swipe up or down on the Sony
 smartphone to unlock. Swatting from left to right will reveal the music
 player, while the opposite direction will unlock the camera.

 On the home screen, the back, home and recent applications buttons
 appear as on-screen short cuts. Considering that there is a thick black
 bezel below the 5-inch display, it seems wasteful to place the short cuts
 within the screen.

 Incidentally, this is the first Sony smartphone equipped with a quad-core
 processor, running at a clock speed of 1.5GHz.

 Its overall performance is not too shabby, producing above average numbers
 when I ran the Quadrant and Geekbench 2 benchmark apps on it. The
 customised interface flowed smoothly without a hitch, and webpages were
 rendered quickly. This is more noticeable when the phone is connected to
 the high-speed LTE network.

 Pictures taken by the 13-megapixel camera came out sharp and clear, with
 minimal noise under low lighting conditions.

 Text and images are displayed with crystal clarity, though the colours are
 slightly muted. Activating the Mobile Bravia Engine 2 feature enhances the
 colours, but it will add a significant drain to its battery life.

 The phone's weakness became clear when it was subjected to Digital Life's
 battery test.

 Its 2,330mAh battery looped a video for slightly less than four hours.
 This is hardly impressive since the HTC Butterfly, with a similar display
 size, resolution and battery capacity, survived for at least an hour more.

 On a full charge, the phone came to a halt after 13 hours of mixed usage
 with WhatsApp, Facebook, Twitter and my e-mail messages constantly synced
 to the phone.

 Activating the various power saving modes, such as stamina mode, which
 disables mobile data when the screen is off, is essential to keep the phone
 active for a full working day.

 This Sony phone looks great, feels sturdy and has powerful hardware. Its
 premium pricing and low

 battery mileage are its biggest disadvantages.
 --

 --
 ==
 Download Aplikasi Kompas versi Digital dan Keren
 https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.kompas.android.kec
 

Re: [id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

2013-02-13 Terurut Topik bimo wicaksono
Sama harganya mahal...


Regards,


bimo wicaksono

-Original Message-
From: Willy Gunawan mi...@robot-ijo.com
Sender: id-android@googlegroups.com
Date: Thu, 14 Feb 2013 14:46:11 
To: Indonesian Android Community [id-android]id-android@googlegroups.com
Reply-To: id-android@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

intinya: baterenya busuk as ever :p
kecuali stamina dijalanin di mana itu smua wireless dimatiin.


--

Its 2,330mAh battery looped a video for slightly less than four hours. This
is hardly impressive since the HTC Butterfly, with a similar display size,
resolution and battery capacity, survived for at least an hour more.

--





On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 2:44 PM, dedi.sop...@gmail.com wrote:

 **
 Intinya gimana bro? Maklum kacamata baca bahasa inggrisnya ketinggalan :p
 Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone from Sinyal Bagus XL, Nyambung
 Teruuusss...!
 --
 *From: * Willy Gunawan mi...@robot-ijo.com
 *Sender: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Date: *Thu, 14 Feb 2013 14:25:02 +0700
 *To: *Indonesian Android Community [id-android]
 id-android@googlegroups.com
 *ReplyTo: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Subject: *[id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

 hmmm
 nasib kalo reviewnya aja begini.
 bakalan mikir 2x dulu kalo mau beli si Z ini.
 disadur dari digital life, st times.


 --

 Phones with generous display sizes and high-definition screen resolutions
 are the latest rage, and joining the ranks of these juggernauts is the new
 Sony Xperia Z.

 Announced at the annual Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas last month,
 Sony's latest Android smartphone is a sight to behold.

 Sporting a clean and sharp look with its angular design, the Xperia Z
 resembles a slab of glass with an imposing presence.

 Weighing 146g, the phone feels solid in my hands. Similar to the LG
 Optimus G, the front and rear panels are covered by glass, which are touted
 to be scratch-resistant and shatterproof.

 While the phone is not slippery, it somehow fell out of my grasp due to my
 clumsy handling and landed face first on a concrete floor. It proved to be
 somewhat shatterproof, although I noticed a few scratches when I looked
 closer at the phone.

 The hardy phone is waterproof as the connection ports are not exposed to
 the elements. This is fine for the micro-SIM and microSD ports, which are
 rarely used; but imagine the chore of removing the cover to access the
 micro-USB port to charge the phone, or moving the kibble away from the
 3.5mm audio port to plug the earphones.

 The power button, placed right smack in the middle on the right side of
 the phone, is surprisingly easy to use. The volume buttons below the power
 button are not so friendly though.

 My thumb had to move downwards in an awkward stretch just to press the
 buttons, and I found myself hitting the power button instead of raising the
 volume quite often.

 Preloaded with Google Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, the phone is rejigged with
 Sony's customised user interface, starting with the lock screen.

 Unlike the LG and Samsung phones which let you swipe anywhere on the
 screen to unlock the device, you have to swipe up or down on the Sony
 smartphone to unlock. Swatting from left to right will reveal the music
 player, while the opposite direction will unlock the camera.

 On the home screen, the back, home and recent applications buttons
 appear as on-screen short cuts. Considering that there is a thick black
 bezel below the 5-inch display, it seems wasteful to place the short cuts
 within the screen.

 Incidentally, this is the first Sony smartphone equipped with a quad-core
 processor, running at a clock speed of 1.5GHz.

 Its overall performance is not too shabby, producing above average numbers
 when I ran the Quadrant and Geekbench 2 benchmark apps on it. The
 customised interface flowed smoothly without a hitch, and webpages were
 rendered quickly. This is more noticeable when the phone is connected to
 the high-speed LTE network.

 Pictures taken by the 13-megapixel camera came out sharp and clear, with
 minimal noise under low lighting conditions.

 Text and images are displayed with crystal clarity, though the colours are
 slightly muted. Activating the Mobile Bravia Engine 2 feature enhances the
 colours, but it will add a significant drain to its battery life.

 The phone's weakness became clear when it was subjected to Digital Life's
 battery test.

 Its 2,330mAh battery looped a video for slightly less than four hours.
 This is hardly impressive since the HTC Butterfly, with a similar display
 size, resolution and battery capacity, survived for at least an hour more.

 On a full charge, the phone came to a halt after 13 hours of mixed usage
 with WhatsApp, Facebook, Twitter and my e-mail messages constantly synced
 to the phone.

 Activating the various power saving modes, such as stamina mode, which
 disables mobile data when the screen is off, is essential to keep

Re: [id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

2013-02-13 Terurut Topik dedi . sopian
2330 mAh masih diatas sgs 3 yang cuman 2100 mAh, tapi kalau performance kurang 
tau juga soalnya apple device aj kapasitas batere sedang tapi bisa lebih awet. 
Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone from Sinyal Bagus XL, Nyambung Teruuusss...!

-Original Message-
From: Willy Gunawan mi...@robot-ijo.com
Sender: id-android@googlegroups.com
Date: Thu, 14 Feb 2013 14:46:11 
To: Indonesian Android Community [id-android]id-android@googlegroups.com
Reply-To: id-android@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

intinya: baterenya busuk as ever :p
kecuali stamina dijalanin di mana itu smua wireless dimatiin.


--

Its 2,330mAh battery looped a video for slightly less than four hours. This
is hardly impressive since the HTC Butterfly, with a similar display size,
resolution and battery capacity, survived for at least an hour more.

--





On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 2:44 PM, dedi.sop...@gmail.com wrote:

 **
 Intinya gimana bro? Maklum kacamata baca bahasa inggrisnya ketinggalan :p
 Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone from Sinyal Bagus XL, Nyambung
 Teruuusss...!
 --
 *From: * Willy Gunawan mi...@robot-ijo.com
 *Sender: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Date: *Thu, 14 Feb 2013 14:25:02 +0700
 *To: *Indonesian Android Community [id-android]
 id-android@googlegroups.com
 *ReplyTo: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Subject: *[id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

 hmmm
 nasib kalo reviewnya aja begini.
 bakalan mikir 2x dulu kalo mau beli si Z ini.
 disadur dari digital life, st times.


 --

 Phones with generous display sizes and high-definition screen resolutions
 are the latest rage, and joining the ranks of these juggernauts is the new
 Sony Xperia Z.

 Announced at the annual Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas last month,
 Sony's latest Android smartphone is a sight to behold.

 Sporting a clean and sharp look with its angular design, the Xperia Z
 resembles a slab of glass with an imposing presence.

 Weighing 146g, the phone feels solid in my hands. Similar to the LG
 Optimus G, the front and rear panels are covered by glass, which are touted
 to be scratch-resistant and shatterproof.

 While the phone is not slippery, it somehow fell out of my grasp due to my
 clumsy handling and landed face first on a concrete floor. It proved to be
 somewhat shatterproof, although I noticed a few scratches when I looked
 closer at the phone.

 The hardy phone is waterproof as the connection ports are not exposed to
 the elements. This is fine for the micro-SIM and microSD ports, which are
 rarely used; but imagine the chore of removing the cover to access the
 micro-USB port to charge the phone, or moving the kibble away from the
 3.5mm audio port to plug the earphones.

 The power button, placed right smack in the middle on the right side of
 the phone, is surprisingly easy to use. The volume buttons below the power
 button are not so friendly though.

 My thumb had to move downwards in an awkward stretch just to press the
 buttons, and I found myself hitting the power button instead of raising the
 volume quite often.

 Preloaded with Google Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, the phone is rejigged with
 Sony's customised user interface, starting with the lock screen.

 Unlike the LG and Samsung phones which let you swipe anywhere on the
 screen to unlock the device, you have to swipe up or down on the Sony
 smartphone to unlock. Swatting from left to right will reveal the music
 player, while the opposite direction will unlock the camera.

 On the home screen, the back, home and recent applications buttons
 appear as on-screen short cuts. Considering that there is a thick black
 bezel below the 5-inch display, it seems wasteful to place the short cuts
 within the screen.

 Incidentally, this is the first Sony smartphone equipped with a quad-core
 processor, running at a clock speed of 1.5GHz.

 Its overall performance is not too shabby, producing above average numbers
 when I ran the Quadrant and Geekbench 2 benchmark apps on it. The
 customised interface flowed smoothly without a hitch, and webpages were
 rendered quickly. This is more noticeable when the phone is connected to
 the high-speed LTE network.

 Pictures taken by the 13-megapixel camera came out sharp and clear, with
 minimal noise under low lighting conditions.

 Text and images are displayed with crystal clarity, though the colours are
 slightly muted. Activating the Mobile Bravia Engine 2 feature enhances the
 colours, but it will add a significant drain to its battery life.

 The phone's weakness became clear when it was subjected to Digital Life's
 battery test.

 Its 2,330mAh battery looped a video for slightly less than four hours.
 This is hardly impressive since the HTC Butterfly, with a similar display
 size, resolution and battery capacity, survived for at least an hour more.

 On a full charge, the phone came to a halt after 13 hours of mixed usage
 with WhatsApp, Facebook, Twitter and my

Re: [id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

2013-02-13 Terurut Topik Willy Gunawan
nah itu mereka udah test, vs butterfly, layar ukuran mirip2, kapasitas
batere sama, tp hampir beda 1 jam :D




On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 2:52 PM, dedi.sop...@gmail.com wrote:

 **
 2330 mAh masih diatas sgs 3 yang cuman 2100 mAh, tapi kalau performance
 kurang tau juga soalnya apple device aj kapasitas batere sedang tapi bisa
 lebih awet.
 Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone from Sinyal Bagus XL, Nyambung
 Teruuusss...!
 --
 *From: * Willy Gunawan mi...@robot-ijo.com
 *Sender: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Date: *Thu, 14 Feb 2013 14:46:11 +0700
 *To: *Indonesian Android Community [id-android]
 id-android@googlegroups.com
 *ReplyTo: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Subject: *Re: [id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

 intinya: baterenya busuk as ever :p
 kecuali stamina dijalanin di mana itu smua wireless dimatiin.


 --

 Its 2,330mAh battery looped a video for slightly less than four hours.
 This is hardly impressive since the HTC Butterfly, with a similar display
 size, resolution and battery capacity, survived for at least an hour more.

 --





 On Thu, Feb 14, 2013 at 2:44 PM, dedi.sop...@gmail.com wrote:

 **
 Intinya gimana bro? Maklum kacamata baca bahasa inggrisnya ketinggalan :p
 Sent from my BlackBerry® smartphone from Sinyal Bagus XL, Nyambung
 Teruuusss...!
 --
 *From: * Willy Gunawan mi...@robot-ijo.com
 *Sender: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Date: *Thu, 14 Feb 2013 14:25:02 +0700
 *To: *Indonesian Android Community [id-android]
 id-android@googlegroups.com
 *ReplyTo: * id-android@googlegroups.com
 *Subject: *[id-android] wti: review Z dari DL st times.

 hmmm
 nasib kalo reviewnya aja begini.
 bakalan mikir 2x dulu kalo mau beli si Z ini.
 disadur dari digital life, st times.


 --

 Phones with generous display sizes and high-definition screen resolutions
 are the latest rage, and joining the ranks of these juggernauts is the new
 Sony Xperia Z.

 Announced at the annual Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas last
 month, Sony's latest Android smartphone is a sight to behold.

 Sporting a clean and sharp look with its angular design, the Xperia Z
 resembles a slab of glass with an imposing presence.

 Weighing 146g, the phone feels solid in my hands. Similar to the LG
 Optimus G, the front and rear panels are covered by glass, which are touted
 to be scratch-resistant and shatterproof.

 While the phone is not slippery, it somehow fell out of my grasp due to
 my clumsy handling and landed face first on a concrete floor. It proved to
 be somewhat shatterproof, although I noticed a few scratches when I looked
 closer at the phone.

 The hardy phone is waterproof as the connection ports are not exposed to
 the elements. This is fine for the micro-SIM and microSD ports, which are
 rarely used; but imagine the chore of removing the cover to access the
 micro-USB port to charge the phone, or moving the kibble away from the
 3.5mm audio port to plug the earphones.

 The power button, placed right smack in the middle on the right side of
 the phone, is surprisingly easy to use. The volume buttons below the power
 button are not so friendly though.

 My thumb had to move downwards in an awkward stretch just to press the
 buttons, and I found myself hitting the power button instead of raising the
 volume quite often.

 Preloaded with Google Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, the phone is rejigged with
 Sony's customised user interface, starting with the lock screen.

 Unlike the LG and Samsung phones which let you swipe anywhere on the
 screen to unlock the device, you have to swipe up or down on the Sony
 smartphone to unlock. Swatting from left to right will reveal the music
 player, while the opposite direction will unlock the camera.

 On the home screen, the back, home and recent applications buttons
 appear as on-screen short cuts. Considering that there is a thick black
 bezel below the 5-inch display, it seems wasteful to place the short cuts
 within the screen.

 Incidentally, this is the first Sony smartphone equipped with a quad-core
 processor, running at a clock speed of 1.5GHz.

 Its overall performance is not too shabby, producing above average
 numbers when I ran the Quadrant and Geekbench 2 benchmark apps on it. The
 customised interface flowed smoothly without a hitch, and webpages were
 rendered quickly. This is more noticeable when the phone is connected to
 the high-speed LTE network.

 Pictures taken by the 13-megapixel camera came out sharp and clear, with
 minimal noise under low lighting conditions.

 Text and images are displayed with crystal clarity, though the colours
 are slightly muted. Activating the Mobile Bravia Engine 2 feature enhances
 the colours, but it will add a significant drain to its battery life.

 The phone's weakness became clear when it was subjected to Digital Life's
 battery test.

 Its 2,330mAh battery looped a video for slightly less than four hours.
 This is hardly impressive since the HTC