The Xperia Z Has earned quite a lot of accolades for its new OmniBalance design, so taking this design to the mid/lower end market Sony has launched the Xperia M. On the front it has got a 4-inch FWVGA (854 x 480) display that is accompanied by a scratch resistant glass. The Xperia M runs Android 4.1 on a 1 GHz Qualcomm MSM8227 (dual core) processor with 1 GB of RAM. In terms of photography it has a 5 megapixel fast capture camera with auto-focus and HDR and a front VGA for video calls with a dedicated shutter key. The Xperia M also features colour-changing illuminations for notifications. In terms of internal memory it has a meagre 4GB out of which less than 2 GB is user accessible, however to make up this flaw Sony has included a microSD card slot expandable up to 64 GB.
The device features NFC, Bluetooth 4.0, Micro USB support, Native USB tethering and the regular Wi-Fi. A-GPS and Google maps take care of navigation and the phone will work dual band UMTS HSPA and quad band GSM networks. The smartphone will be powered by a user removable 1750 mAh battery that will give up to 10 hours of talk time and 498 hours of standby. The battery discharge cycle can be controlled by the ‘Stamina Mode’ of the phone with can be started by the user to prevent unnecessary applications from eating up your charge. Inside the box users can expect battery, charger and Micro USB cable. The phone will also have a dual SIM twin called the Xperia M dual which will run Android 4.2 (other specs are same as the single SIM model). The phones will be available in black, white and purple yellow colours globally in the third quarter of 2013 at an undisclosed price.