Hello Friends! SONY selling phones in the US. While it has managed to become one of the few Android makers to turn a profit on the backs of its global sales, Sony’s presence in the US has been crippled by delayed launches and carrier exclusives. If you’ve wanted to purchase a flagship Sony smartphone, such as the Z1 or Z2, you were forced to either be a T-Mobile customer, or pay full retail price for an unlocked device six months after it was readily available in other markets. (And if you wanted a Z1 Compact, your choices were even worse.With the new Xperia Z3, Sony is addressing this problem, or at least starting to. The Z3 proper, already available in global markets, will be hitting T-Mobile shortly, while Verizon is getting a special variant called the Z3v.
Z3v has the same Android 4.4 KitKat-based software as the Z3, with a logical and inoffensive interface. It’s far less garish than the interfaces you might find on a Samsung or LG, or even Sony’s older phones, and it’s easy enough to customize to your liking.
Unfortunately, Verizon has decided to load the the Z3v up with an offensive amount of preloaded apps and bloatware, which offer little no utility and only serve to confuse. Do I really need both the Amazon Kindle app and the Kobo e-book reader app on my phone out of the box? Worse, while some of the preloaded apps can be removed, many can’t. They can only be "disabled," which keeps them on the phone but hides them from view and prevents them from running. Fortunately, the 32GB of internal storage in the Z3v provides enough space that disabled apps shouldn’t present too much of an issue for most users.
Xperia Z3v is the fact that Sony itself makes something that’s better and Verizon customers won’t have access to it. That’s not to say the Z3v is a bad phone it performs great, has a solid camera, and awesome battery life, making it one of the best Android options on the carrier.But while the Z3v has all of the technical merits of the Z3 (and then some, if you count wireless charging), it lacks any of the Z3’s emotional appeal or lustworthiness. It’s thicker, chunkier, clumsier, and just plain uglier than Sony’s true flagship.
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