Sony Ericsson W995 review

The latest Sony Ericsson Walkman also has an 8 megapixel camera

Sony Ericsson W995
The Sony Ericsson W995 could be the best Walkman phone yet released

TechRadar Verdict

We liked the Sony Ericsson W995 - it's still very much a music phone, and it does it better than virtually anything bar the iPod, and even though its camera isn't quite at the top of the 8 megapixel game, it's certainly good enough to make it worth your while

Pros

  • +

    Walkman music player

  • +

    8.1 megapixel camera

  • +

    Decent quality headphones

  • +

    Supplied loudspeaker

  • +

    A-GPS

  • +

    Wi-Fi and HSDPA 3G

Cons

  • -

    Camera disappointing

  • -

    Battery life could be better

  • -

    Weak video stand

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The Sony Ericsson W995 is the latest phone to carry the famous Walkman name.

Sony Ericsson's music-oriented Walkman series and photography-centred Cybershot series have been drawing closer for a while now, as the camera phone's music player has improved and the music player's camera has got steadily better.

And it's quite possible that the two will disappear altogether next year following announcements from Japan that the company is planning to move away from the two sub-brands next year, instead focusing on providing similar quality levels of each function in specific phones

So if this is to be one of the last Walkman phones to appear, it's just as well then that it's the best one yet, with an 8.1 megapixel camera, an improved media syncing system (which few could deny it needed), HSDPA 3G, Wi-Fi and A-GPS, all wrapped up in a neat, if slightly bulky and button-heavy slider package.

Casing

The Sony Ericsson W995 is a slider, so you'd expect it to be on the chunky side. That said, they've kept it reasonably slim by keeping the top part to a svelte 4mm, delivering the vital statistics of 97x49x15mm and 113g. So it's still a fair old handful, but not bad at all considering what's inside.

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SIDE: it's not the slimmest slider phone, but it does pack a lot of features

But before we get to that, we have a wealth of buttons to get through, namely the six semicircles surrounded the circular D-pad on the front (call start and stop, plus two soft keys, cancel and the shortcuts menu), and the music controls on the right side, plus a volume/zoom rocker and camera shutter button.

dpad

BUTTONS: each button takes on a different role depending what you're doing

On the left side there's Sony Ericsson's Fast Port power socket, a dedicated Walkman button and the Memory Stick Micro slot, though it's hidden under the back cover.

At the top there's a 3.5mm headphone jack (at last!) while on the back is the 8.1 megapixel lens (wot, no cover? For shame…), LED flash and a small metal flip stand so you can set it somewhere handy to watch video.

It's right at the end of the phone though and ours kept falling over until we realised it worked best with the slider open.