
Sony Ericsson W660i review
The W660i a well featured candybar 3G phone, not ultra-slim or shiny sleek, but it does none the less have much of the functionality of the sharply designed W880i
We review the Sony Ericsson W660i Walkman phone, a handset that packs 3G functionality into the familiar music phone format
The Sony Ericsson W660i
Published on Sep 29, 2010
When Sony Ericsson redefined added the Walkman brand to a mobile for the first time, it redefined the music-focused handset. Now a proven design, the Walkman phone line-up has expanded to cover an ever-widening range of models. The W660i is one of Sony Ericsson’s mid-range variants.
The W660i boasts an impressive feature for a 3G phone, but it lacks the style and flare of the trendy W880i. Whether in "Record Black" or the female-oriented "Rose Red", complete with gold edging and a few gold control buttons, the W660i has a stab at trendiness but to a much lesser degree. It's gone for the safe design option from its tried and tested Walkman predecessors, like the 2.5G W610i.
The Sony Ericsson W660i includes the latest Walkman 2.0 music player software. This is complemented by a FM stereo radio inside and TrackID music recognition software. The 3G speed boost adds considerable pace to audio track downloading, which means other content streams with pace, too.
3G brings with it video calling, with a small camera perched above the phone's 262K-colour 176x220 pixels display. The main camera on the back is a standard issue 2.0-megapixel camera, devoid of autofocus, macro mode or flash. A shame considering Sony Ericsson normally does such an impressive job with its Cyber-shot cameraphones.
Thankfully, the W660i does away with the chic but text-unfriendly tiny keys of the W880i, with a refreshingly full-sized keypad. Sony Ericsson hasn't gone off piste with the rest of the design elements either; it's a respectable 14.5mm thin and reasonable 93 grams. Buttons are spread as you'd expect, with navigation pad at the centre of operations. A clever button set-up means there are short cuts to popular features – including one Walkman-branded gold button that brings immediate access to the Walkman player.
Sony Ericsson has refined its Walkman phone package enough by now for us to expect a crowd-pleasing music player experience. The W660i doesn't disappoint. The user interface of the Walkman 2.0 player is slick and graphically enticing. Cover art can be displayed as tracks are playing, and icon-based graphics show you how you're progressing as you hunt for your tunes, through familiar MP3 player-style categories.
The W660i package contains a quality in-ear stereo headset, which also allows a regular set of headphones to be used as an alternative, thanks to a 3.5mm jack socket on the in-line microphone module. It also takes care of handsfree calling too.
Sony Ericsson supplies a 512MB M2 memory card with the W660i, so there's plenty of room for tracks to start with. Additional M2 cards can be bought cheaply if you want to boost storage. The M2 card slots in the side of the phone - no fuss, and easily swappable.
Getting tunes into the phone is a relatively straightforwad porcedure too. You can plus in the phone to a PC via a supplied USB cable and either use Sony Ericsson's Disc2Phone PC software package to rip CDs and sideload them to the phone, or copy over tracks by simply dragging and dropping music files to the appropriate folder on the M2 card. While the Disc2Phone option helps you manage you tune list, the drag and drop option is speedy and straightforward. The Walkman player supports MP3, AAC, AAC , eAAC WMA and AMR file formats.
Alternatively, you could try zapping tunes over via Bluetooth. The W660i offers stereo Bluetooth streaming too, so you can play tunes through snazzy Bluetooth wireless headphones or speakers if you want to impress people.
It's what's in the grooves that count, though, and the W660i delivers an excellent music performance - helped no doubt by the decent headphones. The Walkman player produced a well-balanced sound with a good tonal range and bass depth. An equaliser and MegaBass options allow you to tweak up certain frequencies, but in standard mode we had no complaints. Very impressive.
You do have the option of sharing the music/annoying fellow citizens via the speaker in the back of the phone. Its sound isn't awful, just the usual tinny playback you hear on mobile speakers.
The FM radio, as part of the entertainment options, is a welcome extra you may use more than you'd expect.Sony Ericsson's impressive TrackID software is onboard too and can be used with the radio. It can identify tracks you've heard by capturing short snippets of tunes and checking online with the Gracenote database using complex algorithims.
With 3G to play with here, you may want to playback video downloads on the W660i. You can watch these in full screen landscape mode. It's not the best quality we've seen, and the screen isn't Sony Ericsson's most detailed, but its perfectly fine for a bit of entertainment on the move.
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