- CNET
- Portable Audio
- Sony NWZ-X1060 (32GB)
Sony NWZ-X1060 (32GB)
Sony's new offering has a brilliant display, good sound quality and an immense feature set. What's not to like?
| The good | Excellent touchscreen; OLED display looks brilliant; good sound quality; noise cancelling mode; physical buttons for main functions; Wi-Fi. |
|---|---|
| The bad | Noise cancelling works only with supplied in-ear headphones; Internet browser is slow; text input can get cumbersome with phone-style entry; album art browsing is useful only if your music collection contains album art. |
CNET Editors' Rating
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CNET Editors' rating
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Rating breakdown
The X-Series comes in 16GB (X1050) and 32GB versions (X1060), with memory capacity the only difference between these two players.
Design
Unlike the posh look of the iPod touch, Sony has opted for a more unconventional look in a sparkling black granite hue on both the front and back surfaces. The sides of the unit have a rough "stone-ish" texture, presumably for your hands to get a firm grip on it.
Sony's first touchscreen player has a lot to live up to.

The bare essential buttons.
The Hold button is located on the rear, and can be set to disable all user inputs on the controls, or to deactivate the touchscreen. The front of the set is home to a 3-inch OLED screen and the Home button which also doubles as a power switch.
Features
The WQVGA screen offers a 432 x 240-pixel resolution. We were very impressed by the color reproduction of the photos and videos. The screen was even readable in direct sunlight. Text appeared sharp and videos lacked any ghosting effects. We wished Sony had given it a larger screen, which would have upped the enjoyment level by another notch.
The Home screen.
The interface has several elements borrowed from the Sony Ericsson range of phones, which is good if you're familiar with that interface, but it was generally easy to adapt to. Browsing the music library was a breeze, especially through album view where we spent most of the time flicking through the album art. After loading the player with songs, we found that going through a long song list was remarkably easy since you can browse through albums, songs and artists in alphabetical order.
The device only allows MTP USB connections with Windows-based PCs (However, if you have Windows Media Player 11 installed, it allows for easier drag-and-drop file transfer. If you prefer, Sony also bundles the Media Manager for Walkman software, which was a pretty decent performer. The unit also offers a tree directory navigation, which is nice. Hook it up to a Mac, or a PC running a non-Windows OS and it goes into UMS mode.
MTP
Media Transfer Protocol (MTP) is a protocol for transferring music and movie files on portable media players. MTP is supported in Microsoft Windows XP if Windows Media Player 10 or later versions are installed. Windows Vista has MTP built-in.Performance
The MP3 playback was very decent given Sony's pedigree in making portable audio devices. However, we did notice some noise when we plugged in more sensitive in-ear headphones. The X1050 also offers audio tuning options such as a five-band user-customizable equalizer, VPT surround, DSEE sound enhancer, Clear Stereo, and Dynamic Normalizer.
According to the frequency response chart, the X1050 is mellow-sounding with more pronounced low-frequency sound reproduction. Tested with the Creative X-Fi Surround 5.1.

Internet browsing on the player's built-in Wi-Fi and NetFront Browser is quick and easy to navigate. Full-sized Web pages do overwhelm the player and the browsing turns extremely sluggish, sometimes ending up with a message to warn the user that resources have been used up.

We spent hours watching YouTube videos.
The YouTube client, on the other hand, is excellent. It feels fast even when scrolling through the list of videos. You can browse through Featured, Most Viewed, Keyword Search and Related Videos. Unfortunately, getting to the video is what we think is the worst part of the player.

We particularly hated it when we had to delete long lines of letters (e.g. long URLS), and we ended up most of the time going to a blank page to start afresh. Another gripe we had was that the browser does not add "http://" to the front of any url; you'll have to do it yourself.
Conclusion
We're not sure just how much we like this Sony NWZ-X1050. It looks interesting, has loads of features, yet we were left frustrated at punching in simple keywords into the player. Audio and video performance are very good, the screen is brilliant, but paying for the extra Wi-Fi feature doesn't seem quite right as the set does not seem capable of full-on Internet browsing partly due to its small screen size and sluggish built-in browser. But if you're a touchscreen fan with adoration for all things Sony, then glitches aside, this Walkman might just hit the spot.Be the first to comment
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