And yet there‘s a 4mm of empty space to left and right of this area, which could have utilised to allow for larger keys. Visually, it’s fine but, again, all buttons, bar the navpad, are a bit small. The navpad and function keys are based around Sony Ericsson’s classic circular design. The overall balance of the handset doesn’t sit comfortably under the fingers and feels as though the phone might topple forwards when tapping out numbers. ![]() Underneath the smooth and responsive slide, is the relatively cramped number pad. It weighs 134g and extends to 150mm with the slide opened. But with dimensions of 104mm x 50mm x 15.5mm when closed, it isn’t ideal for slim-fit pockets. It has to be to accommodate its 3in screen. Things can be clunky and Sony Ericsson may well be trying to do too much fancy stuff without getting the basics right. Overall, it sounds like quite a lot of innovation is going on with the Aino, but in reality it doesn’t hang together that well. The phone will pick up video and audio streamed from the PS3, and you can use the console's Play TV DVR add-on to watch, pause and record live TV if you live in Italy, France, Spain, Germany or the UK – more on this later. If you have a PlayStation 3, you can control it from a distance with Aino's Remote Play feature.
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