Wednesday, April 23, 2014

New Samsung Galaxy K Zoom photos pop up, cases in tow

A new photo of the upcoming Samsung Galaxy K Zoom (formerly known as the Galaxy S5 Zoom) has surfaced, showing the back of the device. Still, you can clearly see the back cover sports the perforated leather-imitating pattern of the Galaxy S5.
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You may have also spotted that the cameraphone is wrapped with a protective plastic casing. A listing on a Chinese website shows two of them, a transparent and a blue one. They hint that the left side is clear of any buttons, while the right will hold a Power/Lock key, volume rocker and a camera shutter key.
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The photo once again confirms that the camera lens at the back doesn't protrudewhen not in use. That's certainly going to be helpful when using the devices as a phone. The first Galaxy K Zoom photo shows that the Samsung logo is below the camera, while the Xenon flash is above it.
While not really readable on this photo, the first one reveals the Galaxy K Zoom 20MP camera will sport a 10x zoom lens covering the 24-240mm range in 35mm equivalent. The rest of the specifications include a 4.8" 720p display, Android KitKat with Samsung's TouchWiz UI, and a quad-core 1.6 GHz chip or the new Exynos hexa-core with two Cortex-A15 and four Cortex-A7 cores.
Update: A couple of new photos of the Galaxy K Zoom have showed up. This time, their depict the cameraphone with the lens on full zoom.
 
Source • Source (2) • Source (3)

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

EXCLUSIVE: LG G3 screenies show new Optimus UI, QHD res


We just got hold of a few new screenshots taken directly from the LG G3. They not only show how the latest Optimus user interface is going to look like, but also confirm the phone indeed features a QHD resolution display (2560x1440 pixels).
These screenshots were provided to us by a credible industry source. Our source tells us that the title "You may want to take an umbrella since rain is expected during this afternoon" on the first screenshot is in fact a new feature, which combines the weather forecast with your habits to provide you with a personalized recommendations for your daily routine.
The overall look and feel of the latest Optimus UI (on top of Android 4.4 KitKat) is very clean and flat, a trend that a lot of manufacturers are embracing. Everything from the icons, launcher and notification drawer is less cluttered and looks very nice.
   
The quick settings toggles are rounded icons, similarly to the latest Samsung TouchWiz UI on the Galaxy S5. The position of the QSlide Apps remains unchanged, but still, the notification drawer seems too busy for our taste.
Here's a full resolution screenshot for you to gaze at, as we had to shrink the rest to a reasonable web-friendly size.
LG G3 QHD resolution screenshot

Unrelated to these screen caps, recent rumors claim the LG G3 is going to be based on the JapaneseLG isai FL, which leaked a few days ago. The Japan-only smartphone sports a quad-core Snapdragon 801 SoC, clocked at 2.5GHz, a 5.5-inch LCD rumored to have 2560x1440 resolution, 2GB RAM, 32GB internal memory with microSD support, 3000mAh battery, and an IPX7 rating, which means it is water resistant.

Micromax Canvas Doodle 3 is official, launches on April 25

Micromax has just announced its latest smartphone dubbed the Canvas Doodle 3 (A102). It is built around a 6" LCD display of 854x480 pixel resolution (FWVGA) with a pixel density of 163ppi.



The phone is powered by the MediaTek 6572 chipset with 1.3GHz dual-core CPU and 512MB of RAM. Internal storage is just 4GB but the company has included a microSD card slot capable of supporting up to 32GB of additional storage. The battery capacity is 2,500mAh with Micromax suggesting a talk time endurance of up to 9 hours.



At the back of the Canvas Doodle 3, there's a 5MP auto-focus camera with LED flash. The front features a 0.3MP camera for video chat and selfies. The phone runs Android 4.2.2 Jelly Bean and Micromax has pre-loaded it with Bigflix, Kingsoft Office, Opera and games like Rope Cut, Marble and Jelly Jumper. FM Radio is present as well.
The phone launches on April 25 in India with a $140 (INR 8,500) price tag.

Monday, April 21, 2014

Amazon and Samsung partner up for custom Kindle store on Galaxy smartphones and tablets

Samsung Galaxy S5

Samsung and Amazon have struck a deal to produce a custom version of the Kindle eBook store specifically for Galaxy smartphones and tablets, giving Samsung customers another way to get Amazon's extensive range of books, magazines and articles onto their device.
Essentially a modified version of the existing Kindle app for Android, Kindle for Samsung has all the features existing users will expect including Whispersync for saving and synchronising the last page read, bookmarks and annotations across all Kindle devices and apps, automatic archiving to the cloud, and Time To Read, which indicates how long it will take to finish a particular chapter based on your average reading speed.
The biggest selling point for Samsung device owners will almost certainly be Samsung Book Deals, which lets you choose a free book from a selection of four different titles every month. Each selection is apparently chosen "specifically for Galaxy smartphone and tablet owners" from a wide selection of prominent titles. The announcement will come as good news to anyone picking up the newly-launched Galaxy S5, as they will be entitled to twelve free eBooks a year on top of their existing Premium software bundle.
Samsung Book Deals
The first month's selection includes THe Fort by Aric Davis, Elizabeth Street by Laurie Fabiano, Apocalypse Z: The Beginning of the End by Manel Loureiro and Bone River by Megan Chance.
“We’re delighted to be able to deepen our long-standing relationship with Amazon and offer Kindle for Samsung as the perfect app for reading on a smart device," Lee Epting, Samsung's European Media Solution Center VP said of the deal. "With this service we demonstrate our commitment to creating and broadening key content partnerships that deliver rich and personalised experiences for our customers.”
The custom Kindle app is available right now for the Galaxy S5 and existing Samsung Galaxy smartphones and tablets running Android 4.0 or above.

HTC Desire 500 review

UPDATED 15th April 2014

When the HTC Desire 500 was first released, it struggled to compete with other budget phones such as the excellent Moto G. Five months on, is the HTC Desire 500 a better buy today?
Surprisingly, prices have remained more or less constant for the Desire 500. Tracking down a SIM free phone is still around £210 from Handtec, while the Moto G is only £115 SIM free from Phones4U, or £99 on O2 pre-pay.
With these prices, the Desire 500 simply can't compete with the quicker and longer-lasting Moto G, but if you're dead set against paying for a phone upfront and you want a better camera, then Three might have an answer for you. At the time of writing, it's currently offering a great contract deal on the Desire 500, giving you 1GB of data, 300 minutes and unlimited texts for just £15 per month.
The Moto G, on the other hand, is generally more expensive on contract and you don't get such a good deal. The best we could find was on O2, which gives you 500MB of data, 500 minutes and unlimited texts for £19 per month.
However, in this case, we still think the Moto G is worth the extra expense, particularly when, if you buy the phone upfront, you can get a £10 giffgaff goody bag of 500 minutes, unlimited texts and 1GB of data for £10 a month and it doesn't tie you in to a 24-month contract either.

ORIGINAL REVIEW

Thanks to Motorola's Moto G, which by virtue of being an almost compromise-free Android smartphone for £130 has thoroughly disrupted the budget smartphone market, new budget phones from other manufacturers were always going to struggle.
The Desire 500 is HTC's latest effort. We liked the last budget HTC smartphone we saw, the Desire X, which won a Budget Buy award a year ago, so were hopeful the 500 would also be a wallet-friendly champion.
HTC Desire 500
First impressions are certainly good. The Desire 500 is a great-looking phone. It's a slim handset with bevelled edges and a slightly raised screen, which together give it a chiselled, defined look. Our test handset was the Glacier Blue model, with a white back and metallic turquoise around the sides and surrounding the camera lens. We're fans of this colour scheme, but there's also a more restrained black model available. Whichever colour you choose, you'll have a phone which is both slimmer and more stylish than pretty much any budget handset out there.

DISPLAY

The Desire 500 may look top-drawer, but its specification is more modest. The screen, for example, is an 800x480-pixel model, which was fairly standard for a phone this price until the Moto G came along with its 1,280x720 display. Android looks fine at this resolution, but it's not ideal for desktop-mode web pages; you can read headlines fine, but you have to zoom in to decipher smaller text. The display is reasonable, with clean whites and no colour tinge, but it's not particularly inspiring. Most text is grey rather than black, and colours lack punch.

CHIPSET AND BENCHMARKS

The phone has a 1.2GHz quad-core processor, which is standard for the price, and 1GB RAM, which is the minimum we'd expect on an Android handset. The phone is generally a reasonable performer. It’s not quite as slick when going back and forth to the app tray as the Moto G, possibly due to some overhead from HTC's Sense interface, but it's quick enough to be perfectly usable.
HTC Desire 500
It's a slim and lovely phone

One problem we noticed was when using the Chrome browser instead of the default HTC version. Chrome is very slow to respond on desktop mode web pages, with a significant delay between you swiping your finger on the screen and the phone responding. The default browser showed none of these problems. The phone completed the Sunspider JavaScript benchmark in 1790ms, which is fine for an inexpensive handset, but this was significantly slower than the Moto G's 1,410ms. However, there was little to choose between the two phones' web browsing performance when compared side by side.

We had less luck testing the phone's 3D performance, though, as 3DMark refused to run all its tests. In our subjective tests using Real Racing 3, the game ran smoothly enough, but the game had dialled its resolution and detail settings right down, so the game was no longer very pretty. This isn't the phone to choose if you want to enjoy all the fancy graphical effects in the latest Android titles.

ANDROID

Whether you like HTC's extensive interface modifications to Android is really a matter of taste. The most obvious change is the Blink Feed, which first appeared on the HTC One. This is a tiled feed on one of your home screens, showing updates from news sources you choose and your social networks. If you love to keep up with developments and your contacts, you could find it highly useful, but the sources you can choose are limited; you have Reuters, The Financial Times, the Guardian and The Independent, as well as some design blogs, a couple of sports sites and three tech sites. Social networking-wise, Blink Feed supports Facebook, Flickr, LinkedIn and Twitter, but you're out of luck if you're a Google+ fan. If you don’t like Blink Feed you can simply ignore it, and set a standard Android home screen as your default.
HTC Desire 500 Blink Feed
Blink Feed aggregates all your news in one place

You may find other design decisions more obtrusive. The apps in the app tray, for example, are widely spaced, which leaves only room for nine apps on a screen. You can change this to 16 in the options if you don't fancy flicking through lots of app screens when you have many apps installed. Generally, though, HTC's interface is prettier than the stock Android 4.1.2 underpinning it, so we don’t have a problem with the software tweaks. The main problem with the software is how much space it seems to take up; after a factory reset, only 0.9GB of the phone's 4GB storage remains for apps and files. You'll definitely need to buy a microSD card and ensure you install bigger apps to the card.

COMPASS AND MAPPING

There were a couple of glaring problems that cropped up during our testing, and both were to do with mapping. The Desire 500 has a terribly weak GPS receiver, which often lost signal when we were driving on the open road. By contrast, the Motorola Moto G could even get a signal indoors by a window, which the Desire 500 refused to do. The other problem was the apparent lack of a compass. This is a serious problem when navigating, especially around town when you emerge from a station and need to know which way to turn. We had to walk a few yards and see in which direction the blob on the map moved, and definitely missed the reassuring direction arrow in Google Maps.

CAMERA

The Desire 500 has an 8-megapixel camera, and it's reasonably impressive. Low-light shots had low levels of noise and plenty of detail considering the phone's price. Daylight shots were trickier to judge. On the one hand, they were sharp and detailed with little noise, and we were impressed by the camera's ability to capture colours accurately. On the other, the photos were definitely overexposed, with light areas blowing out and no detail in the sky. Overexposure is a common issue with smartphone cameras, and despite this problem the Desire 500's camera remains above average.
HTC Desire 500
No problems in low-light for the camera

HTC Desire 500
Daylight shots are detailed but overexposed in parts

Aside from the lack of a compass, we like the HTC Desire 500. It's a great-looking phone that shows you don’t need to buy a tedious black slab if you have less than £250 to spend on an Android smartphone. It also has a reasonable screen and good camera, and acceptable performance. However, it struggles to compete with the Motorola Moto G, which has a better screen, similar performance and four times the free storage space, as well as being around £80 cheaper than the Desire 500

Details

Part CodeDesire 500
Review Date15 Apr 2014
Price£210
Rating*** stars out of 5

Hardware

Main display size4.3in
Native resolution800x480
CCD effective megapixels8-megapixel
GPSyes
Internal memory4096MB
Memory card supportmicroSD
Memory card included0MB
Operating frequenciesGSM 900/1800/1900, 3G 900/2100
Wireless dataGPRS, EDGE, 3G
Size132x67x10mm
Weight123g

Features

Operating systemAndroid 4.1.2 (JellyBean)
Microsoft Office compatibilityWord, Excel, PowerPoint
FM Radioyes
Accessoriesheadphones, data cable, charger
Talk time12 hours
Standby time18 days

SIM-free price£210
Price on contract0
SIM-free supplierwww.handtec.co.uk
Contract/prepay supplierwww.mobiles.co.uk
Detailswww.htc.com

HTC Desire 500 review

UPDATED 15th April 2014

When the HTC Desire 500 was first released, it struggled to compete with other budget phones such as the excellent Moto G. Five months on, is the HTC Desire 500 a better buy today?
Surprisingly, prices have remained more or less constant for the Desire 500. Tracking down a SIM free phone is still around £210 from Handtec, while the Moto G is only £115 SIM free from Phones4U, or £99 on O2 pre-pay.
With these prices, the Desire 500 simply can't compete with the quicker and longer-lasting Moto G, but if you're dead set against paying for a phone upfront and you want a better camera, then Three might have an answer for you. At the time of writing, it's currently offering a great contract deal on the Desire 500, giving you 1GB of data, 300 minutes and unlimited texts for just £15 per month.
The Moto G, on the other hand, is generally more expensive on contract and you don't get such a good deal. The best we could find was on O2, which gives you 500MB of data, 500 minutes and unlimited texts for £19 per month.
However, in this case, we still think the Moto G is worth the extra expense, particularly when, if you buy the phone upfront, you can get a £10 giffgaff goody bag of 500 minutes, unlimited texts and 1GB of data for £10 a month and it doesn't tie you in to a 24-month contract either.

ORIGINAL REVIEW

Thanks to Motorola's Moto G, which by virtue of being an almost compromise-free Android smartphone for £130 has thoroughly disrupted the budget smartphone market, new budget phones from other manufacturers were always going to struggle.
The Desire 500 is HTC's latest effort. We liked the last budget HTC smartphone we saw, the Desire X, which won a Budget Buy award a year ago, so were hopeful the 500 would also be a wallet-friendly champion.
HTC Desire 500
First impressions are certainly good. The Desire 500 is a great-looking phone. It's a slim handset with bevelled edges and a slightly raised screen, which together give it a chiselled, defined look. Our test handset was the Glacier Blue model, with a white back and metallic turquoise around the sides and surrounding the camera lens. We're fans of this colour scheme, but there's also a more restrained black model available. Whichever colour you choose, you'll have a phone which is both slimmer and more stylish than pretty much any budget handset out there.

DISPLAY

The Desire 500 may look top-drawer, but its specification is more modest. The screen, for example, is an 800x480-pixel model, which was fairly standard for a phone this price until the Moto G came along with its 1,280x720 display. Android looks fine at this resolution, but it's not ideal for desktop-mode web pages; you can read headlines fine, but you have to zoom in to decipher smaller text. The display is reasonable, with clean whites and no colour tinge, but it's not particularly inspiring. Most text is grey rather than black, and colours lack punch.

CHIPSET AND BENCHMARKS

The phone has a 1.2GHz quad-core processor, which is standard for the price, and 1GB RAM, which is the minimum we'd expect on an Android handset. The phone is generally a reasonable performer. It’s not quite as slick when going back and forth to the app tray as the Moto G, possibly due to some overhead from HTC's Sense interface, but it's quick enough to be perfectly usable.
HTC Desire 500
It's a slim and lovely phone

One problem we noticed was when using the Chrome browser instead of the default HTC version. Chrome is very slow to respond on desktop mode web pages, with a significant delay between you swiping your finger on the screen and the phone responding. The default browser showed none of these problems. The phone completed the Sunspider JavaScript benchmark in 1790ms, which is fine for an inexpensive handset, but this was significantly slower than the Moto G's 1,410ms. However, there was little to choose between the two phones' web browsing performance when compared side by side.

We had less luck testing the phone's 3D performance, though, as 3DMark refused to run all its tests. In our subjective tests using Real Racing 3, the game ran smoothly enough, but the game had dialled its resolution and detail settings right down, so the game was no longer very pretty. This isn't the phone to choose if you want to enjoy all the fancy graphical effects in the latest Android titles.

ANDROID

Whether you like HTC's extensive interface modifications to Android is really a matter of taste. The most obvious change is the Blink Feed, which first appeared on the HTC One. This is a tiled feed on one of your home screens, showing updates from news sources you choose and your social networks. If you love to keep up with developments and your contacts, you could find it highly useful, but the sources you can choose are limited; you have Reuters, The Financial Times, the Guardian and The Independent, as well as some design blogs, a couple of sports sites and three tech sites. Social networking-wise, Blink Feed supports Facebook, Flickr, LinkedIn and Twitter, but you're out of luck if you're a Google+ fan. If you don’t like Blink Feed you can simply ignore it, and set a standard Android home screen as your default.
HTC Desire 500 Blink Feed
Blink Feed aggregates all your news in one place

You may find other design decisions more obtrusive. The apps in the app tray, for example, are widely spaced, which leaves only room for nine apps on a screen. You can change this to 16 in the options if you don't fancy flicking through lots of app screens when you have many apps installed. Generally, though, HTC's interface is prettier than the stock Android 4.1.2 underpinning it, so we don’t have a problem with the software tweaks. The main problem with the software is how much space it seems to take up; after a factory reset, only 0.9GB of the phone's 4GB storage remains for apps and files. You'll definitely need to buy a microSD card and ensure you install bigger apps to the card.

COMPASS AND MAPPING

There were a couple of glaring problems that cropped up during our testing, and both were to do with mapping. The Desire 500 has a terribly weak GPS receiver, which often lost signal when we were driving on the open road. By contrast, the Motorola Moto G could even get a signal indoors by a window, which the Desire 500 refused to do. The other problem was the apparent lack of a compass. This is a serious problem when navigating, especially around town when you emerge from a station and need to know which way to turn. We had to walk a few yards and see in which direction the blob on the map moved, and definitely missed the reassuring direction arrow in Google Maps.

CAMERA

The Desire 500 has an 8-megapixel camera, and it's reasonably impressive. Low-light shots had low levels of noise and plenty of detail considering the phone's price. Daylight shots were trickier to judge. On the one hand, they were sharp and detailed with little noise, and we were impressed by the camera's ability to capture colours accurately. On the other, the photos were definitely overexposed, with light areas blowing out and no detail in the sky. Overexposure is a common issue with smartphone cameras, and despite this problem the Desire 500's camera remains above average.
HTC Desire 500
No problems in low-light for the camera

HTC Desire 500
Daylight shots are detailed but overexposed in parts

Aside from the lack of a compass, we like the HTC Desire 500. It's a great-looking phone that shows you don’t need to buy a tedious black slab if you have less than £250 to spend on an Android smartphone. It also has a reasonable screen and good camera, and acceptable performance. However, it struggles to compete with the Motorola Moto G, which has a better screen, similar performance and four times the free storage space, as well as being around £80 cheaper than the Desire 500

Details

Part CodeDesire 500
Review Date15 Apr 2014
Price£210
Rating*** stars out of 5

Hardware

Main display size4.3in
Native resolution800x480
CCD effective megapixels8-megapixel
GPSyes
Internal memory4096MB
Memory card supportmicroSD
Memory card included0MB
Operating frequenciesGSM 900/1800/1900, 3G 900/2100
Wireless dataGPRS, EDGE, 3G
Size132x67x10mm
Weight123g

Features

Operating systemAndroid 4.1.2 (JellyBean)
Microsoft Office compatibilityWord, Excel, PowerPoint
FM Radioyes
Accessoriesheadphones, data cable, charger
Talk time12 hours
Standby time18 days

Buying Information

SIM-free price£210
Price on contract0
SIM-free supplierwww.handtec.co.uk
Contract/prepay supplierwww.mobiles.co.uk
Detailswww.htc.com

Sony Bravia KDL-50W829B review

For this review we tested the 50in model in the W829 range, but it's also available in a 42in (KDL-42W829B) screen size for £700. Both models have identical specifications except for their dimensions and power usage. We're confident that image quality will be practically identical across the range.
The Sony W829 is one of the first 2014 TVs from Sony, reviewed here with a 50in screen size. It may not be the flagship model, but it has every feature we've come to expect from one, including a revised SEN smart TV interface and an incredibly minimal design that puts other TVs to shame.
Sony Bravia KDL-50W829
In fact, Sony has gone to such lengths that it has removed the internal power circuitry to make the set as thin as possible, opting for an external power adaptor instead. This is great if you plan on wall-mounting the TV, as it’ll sit a lot closer to the wall than other models. A minimal bezel, metal edges and subtle blue activity LED (which also doubles as the point of contact for near-field communication (NFC) connections) all give the impression of a premium set.
The thin design leaves less space for speakers, but the W829 does an impressive job with its two 8W drivers. They produce a clear sound and even create a small amount of bass. The sound produced can easily fill a small or medium size room with sound. It's possible to push them too far, though, so we'd suggest staying below 70 per cent of maximum to avoid any possible distortion.
The W829 certainly doesn’t skimp on connection ports. There are four HDMI inputs, along with SCART, composite and component video, digital optical audio, Ethernet, a Common Interface slot, satellite and aerial inputs, and two USB ports. These can be used to play multimedia files from a flash drive or record broadcast TV to an external hard disk; we were able to play all our test files, including DivX and MKVs.
Sony Bravia KDL-50W829
It's easy to find and play your files, too. Sony's SEN smart TV system has always been one of the best looking, even if it didn't always have the same number of catch-up or on demand services as other manufacturers, and the company has improved things further for 2014. The refined user interface really makes use of the Full HD resolution with much smaller yet still clearly legible fonts, icons and images. This fits significantly more information on screen at once, so you don't have to scroll through long lists or multiple pages of content to find a particular app or channel. It's also very responsive, with no waiting between pressing a button and the changes taking effect on screen.
Unfortunately on-demand video is still a little limited; you do at least get BBC iPlayer and Demand 5 for catch-up TV, and both Netflix and Amazon Instant Video (formerly LoveFilm) for films and US shows, but there's no 4oD or ITV player. Sony's own Video and Music Unlimited services go some way to balancing this, however.
Whatever content you end up watching, the W829 does a fantastic job of making it look good. 2D picture quality was excellent out of the box, with bright, detailed pictures. Colour accuracy was superb, helped by the Neutral colour temperature setting which prevents a cold blue or warm yellow screen cast. Images were slightly muted, though, and enabling Live Colour would often push things too far in the other direction.
Despite being an LCD set, black levels were also impressive, with very little light bleed during dark scenes. The backlight doesn't bleed into the image and there were no bright spots in corners or at the edges of the set. We noticed that images weren't quite as sharp as our reference Samsung set when watching HD broadcasts, and despite playing with the sharpness and Reality Creation menus it was impossible to match it on the Sony set. You certainly couldn't call pictures fuzzy, but they simply aren't as crisp as the competition.
Sony Bravia KDL-50W829
There's room to improve things further in the settings menu, which contains a whole host of image processing options. The most important is Reality Creation, which adds extra detail to images without creating much excess noise or digital artefacts. It works incredibly well, scaling standard definition content to 1080p resolutions and even sharpening some HD content, although it does introduce a few artefacts during fast-moving panning shots and action scenes.
The W829’s standard motion smoothing setting is likely be the preferred setting for most people, as it reduces stutter but doesn’t make video overly smooth so that it looks like a TV soap opera. True Cinema is best used when watching films, while the Impulse mode ensures the smoothest possible playback at the expense of brightness. You'll have to watch TV in the dark, though, as the image is significantly dimmer than the other presets.
Sony Bravia KDL-50W829
The W829 also supports 3D video, with two pairs of active shutter glasses bundled in the box. Sadly, we weren't too impressed with the depth effects. Although there was very little flicker and pictures were bright, Avatar never felt as if it was jumping out of the screen at us. Unless you're a real fan of 3D films, we don't think this is a major concern.
The closest competitor to the W829 is the similarly priced, 50in Panasonic TX-L50ET60B, which is a 2013 model. The TX-L50ET60B has fewer smart TV features than the W829 and limited image processing, but there are still plenty of picture quality settings to adjust.
However, we think the W829 is a better TV. It produces beautiful images for the price, needing very little in the way of calibration or tweaking to get the best results, and Sony's smart TV interface is one of the most responsive and easy to use. The Sony Bravia KDL-50W829W829B is a fantastic buy.

Basic Specifications

Part CodeKDL50W829BBU
Review Date16 Apr 2014
Rating***** stars out of 5

Physical

Viewable size50in
Native resolution1,920x1,080
1080p supportYes
Aspect ratio16:9
HD readyyes
3D capableyes
Speakers2x 8W

Connections

D-sub inputs0
HDMI inputs4
Component inputs1
SCART1
Composite inputs1
Audio outputsoptical S/DIF out, headphone minijack
Otherheadphone output, CI slot, RJ45 LAN (DLNA), 2x USB, Wi-Fi

Tuner

Tuner typeFreeview HD, DVB-S2
EPG8 day

Environmental

Power consumption standby0W
Power consumption on48W

Buying Information

Warrantyone year RTB
Price£900
Supplierhttp://www.johnlewis.comhttp://mobileie.blogspot.com/
Detailswww.sony.co.uk