Typical price: £370
What is it: Hand- and pocket-friendly mobile with huge storage capacity and pretensions as a mobile music player
What we think: Small, neat and good looking, but ultimately falls over its own music-playing feet
Sony Ericsson W800i Review
Reviewed on: 17 August 2005
The marriage of Sony and Ericsson has, until now, concentrated on leveraging the former's media empire and the latter's phone-making abilities. With the W800i, that changes. This is the first handset to sport the Walkman logo, and as such the first from the partnership where music-playing ability is considered the primary feature.
Music aside, the W800i is in many respects an update of the K750i, which we loved. Both handsets boast a 2-megapixel camera and there are a number of other similarities in terms of looks, features and operation. One of the more obvious differences between the two handsets is the more fashion-oriented orange-and-white colouring of the W800i.
Appropriately enough, Orange has taken on this handset, but it is also available from other operators. The cheapest contract price we've seen is £60 with a £40-per-month contract, but we expect it'll be free with a £25-30 per month contract before too long. If you must have it SIM-free, online retailers are selling it for just under £400.
Design
Mostly white with orange banding around the sides, this small, light, tidy handset looks rather neat. You can't miss the Walkman logo, because it is plastered on the front of the casing twice -- once beneath the number pad, and again on a special key that gets the music-playing part of the W800i into gear.
There is much about the general design of this handset that is similar to Sony Ericsson's K750i. The two are identical in size and weight, and the arrangement of side buttons is uncannily twin-like. On the left edge there's a Play/Pause button and Memory Stick slot; on the right edge a rocker that doubles as camera zoom and music volume control, and the camera's shutter button.
The back of the casing houses the lens for the built-in 2-megapixel camera. There's a tacky-feeling sliding lens cover automatically starts the camera software when opened. The cover only protects the lens itself and feels far less sturdy than the one on the K750i. The 'one side phone, one side camera' looks of the K750i are not quite replicated here. Still, as with the K750i, if you turn the W800i on its side, the shutter button sits under your right forefinger. Check our review of the K750i for more camera details, including the macro mode, as the features are the same on this handset.
The screen is up to Sony Ericsson's usual high standards. Its 262K colours and sharpness are impressive. The applications hide behind 12 brightly coloured animated icons which you navigate using the tiny joystick sitting above the number keys. As with the K750i, this may be a bit fiddly for those with larger hands. You can set up North, East, South and West on the joystick to perform shortcut actions.
Features
When you power up, you are asked whether you want to 'Start phone' or go for 'Music only'. The latter is ideal for times when phones aren't allowed -- for example, when you are several thousand metres up in the air. If you are in phone mode and want to play music, press the key with the Walkman logo.
You can generate playlists on the handset, but it's painful. For each playlist you have to step through all the tracks you've copied across and choose those you want to include. This could take some time, because there is plenty of storage capacity. The 34MB of internal memory is augmented by a 512MB Memory Stick Pro Duo.
Tell us what you think
Do you own this product? Want to share your experiences with other CNET UK users?
Write your own review of the Sony Ericsson W800i
Can't find the product you're looking for? Want to suggest a product for review?
Special Offers from our Sponsors
Latest Mobile phone Reviews
BlackBerry Storm 2
Clicking touchscreen may be useful for clumsy people, but ditching the Qwerty keyboard has its drawbacks
INQ Mini 3G
Sluggish at times, and not the easiest phone to use, but it offers a great range of features at a low price
BlackBerry Bold 9700
Has everything that makes the BlackBerry format great, but other smart phones offer more innovation
on Mobile Phones
Carphone Warehouse stops selling faulty Sony Ericsson Satio
Sony Ericsson's flagship media smart phone, the Satio, has been taken off the shelves at Carphone Warehouse until it sorts out its software problems
More:






