First released version (May 2014)
Publication number: 1272-9741
This document is published by Sony Mobile
Communications AB, without any warranty*.
Improvements and changes to this text
necessitated by typographical errors,
inaccuracies of current information or
improvements to programs and/or equipment
may be made by Sony Mobile Communications
AB at any time and without notice. Such changes
will, however, be incorporated into new editions
of this document. Printed versions are to be
regarded as temporary reference copies only.
*All implied warranties, including without
limitation the implied warranties of
merchantability or fitness for a particular
purpose, are excluded. In no event shall Sony or
its licensors be liable for incidental or
consequential damages of any nature, including
but not limited to lost profits or commercial loss,
arising out of the use of the information in this
document.
2May 2014
Document history
Version
February 2014First released versionVersion 1
March 2014Second released versionVersion 2
March 2014Third released versionVersion 3
March 2014Fourth released versionVersion 4
March 2014Fifth released versionVersion 5
March 2014Sixth released versionVersion 6
April 2014Seventh released versionVersion 7
April 2014Eighth released versionVersion 8
April 2014Ninth released versionVersion 9
White paper | Xperia™ M2
April 2014Tenth released versionVersion 10
May 2014Eleventh released versionVersion 11
May 2014Twelfth released versionVersion 12
June 2014Thirteenth released versionVersion 13
September 2014Fourteenth released versionVersion 14
Sony Mobile Developer World
For the latest technical documentation and development tools, go to www.sonymobile.com/developer.
May 2014
White paper | Xperia™ M2
Table of contents
Facts – dimensions, weight, performance and networks ......................................2
Categorised feature list ..........................................................................................5
Technologies in detail ...................................................................................................7
UMTS HSDPA (download)Cat. 24, up to 42.2 Mbps (D2303**, D2306)
UMTS HSDPA (download)Cat. 14, up to 21 Mbps (D2305)
LTE
(upload and download)
HAC/TTY
HACM3/T3
TTYYes
Talk time (GSM)Up to 11 hours 23 min.***
Standby time (GSM)Up to 595 hours***
Talk time (UMTS)Up to 12 hours 11 min.***
Standby time (UMTS)Up to 641 hours***
Up to 107 kbps (download), Up to 85.6 kbps (upload).
Up to 296 kbps (download). Up to 236.8 kbps (upload).
Cat. 4, up to 50 Mbps (upload), up to 150 Mbps (download)
Standby time (LTE)Up to 543 hours***
Music listening timeUp to 37 hours 31 min.***
Video playback timeUp to 8 hours 4 min.***
Battery (Embedded)2330 mAh
3May 2014
White paper | Xperia™ M2
* Memory comprises of approximately of 3 GB firmware, plus 5 GB of “Internal Storage” for downloaded
applications, music, pictures and movies, and some application data. For more details about memory, see
“Memory in Android™ devices” on page 14.
** D2303 supports dual carrier.
*** Values are according to GSM Association Battery Life Measurement Technique as performed in controlled laboratory conditions. Actual time may vary.
NOTE: Battery performance may vary depending on network conditions and configurations, and device
usage.
NOTE: All performance metrics are measured under laboratory conditions.
4May 2014
Categorised feature list
White paper | Xperia™ M2
Camera
8 megapixel camera
4x digital zoom
Auto focus
Face detection
Fast capture
Flash/Photo light
Geotagging
HDR for pictures
HD video recording (1080p)
Image stabiliser
Quick Launch
Red-eye reduction
Scene recognition
Self-timer
Send to web
Superior Auto
Smile shutter™
Sony Exmor RS® for mobile
Steady shot
Sweep Panorama
Touch capture
Touch focus
Video light
Video stabiliser
White balance
Music
Album art
Bluetooth® stereo (A2DP)
ClearAudio+
Clear Bass™
Clear Phase™
Clear stereo
Dynamic normaliser
Manual equaliser
PlayNow™ service*
SensMe™
TrackID™ music recognition*
“WALKMAN” application
xLoud™ Experience
Internet
Bookmarks
Google Chrome™*
Google Play™
Google™ search*
Google Voice™ Search*
Google Maps™ for Mobile with
Street view*
NeoReader™ barcode scanner*
Web browser (WebKit™)*
Communication
Call list
Conference calls
Facebook™ application*
Friends application
Hangouts™*
HD voice support
Loud Speaker
Multiple IM
Noise suppression
Speakerphone
Twitter™ application*
Xperia™ with Facebook™
Messaging
Conversations
Email
Google mail™*
Handwriting recognition
Instant messaging
Multimedia messaging (MMS)
Predictive text input
Text messaging (SMS)
3.5 mm audio jack (CTIA)
ANT+™ sport, fitness, health support
aGPS*
Bluetooth® 4.0 wireless
technology
DLNA Certified®
GLONASS
Media Transfer Protocol support
Micro USB support
Miracast
Native USB tethering
Media Go™*
NFC
PC Companion
Play Anywhere
Smart Connect
Synchronisation via Facebook™
Synchronisation via SyncML™
Synchronisation via Google™
Synchronisation with computer
Synchronisation via Microsoft®
Exchange ActiveSync®
USB High speed 2.0 support
USB Host
USB mass storage
Xperia Link™
Wi-Fi®
Wi-Fi® Hotspot functionality
* This service is not available in all markets.
** Sony Entertainment Network with Music Unlimited is not available in every market. Separate
subscription required. Additional terms and conditions apply.
6May 2014
White paper | Xperia™ M2
Technologies in detail
NOTE: The information outlined below is general and levels of compliance to standards and specifications
may vary between products and markets. For more information, contact Sony Developer World or your
Sony contact person where applicable.
Device-to-device communications (local)
ANT+™ wireless technology
Connectable devicesANT+™ devices require download of a supporting appli-
cation
Frequency band2.4 GHz
Data transfer rateUp to 60 Kbps
EncryptionAES-128
TopologiesOne to Many, Many to One, Peer to Peer, Star, Practical
Mesh
7May 2014
Bluetooth® wireless technology
Bluetooth® profiles supportedAdvanced Audio Distribution Profile v1.2
Audio/Video Remote Control Profile v1.3
Generic Attribute Profile Client/Server over LE
Handsfree Profile v1.6 (Wide band speech)
Headset Profile v1.2
Human Interface Device Profile v1.0
Object Push Profile v1.1
Personal Area Networking Profile v1.0
White paper | Xperia™ M2
Core version and supported
core features
Connectable devicesProducts that support at least one of the profiles listed
More information:
www.sonymobile.com/developer
www.bluetooth.com
Version 4.0
above.
Bluetooth 4.0 accessories generally require installation of
a supporting application.
Shared Authentication
EAP-SIM
EAP-AKA
EAP-TLS
EAP-TTLS/MSCHAPv2
PEAPv0/EAP-MSCHAPv2
PEAPv1/EAP-GTC
WPA Personal and WPA2 Personal
WPA Enterprise and WPA2 Enterprise
White paper | Xperia™ M2
EncryptionWEP 64 bit, WEP 128 bit, TKIP and CCMP (AES)
Power saveWMM-UAPSD
QoSWMM
9May 2014
Messaging
MMS (Multimedia Messaging Service)
According to OMA Multimedia Messaging Service v1.0 + SMIL
Email
Bearer type (IP)GPRS, EGPRS, UMTS, Wi-Fi®
Character setsBIG5 Traditional Chinese
GB2312 Simplified Chinese
GB18030
ISO-2022-JP Japanese
ISO-8859-1
ISO-8859-2 Eastern Europe
ISO-8859-5 Cyrillic
ISO-8859-7 Greek
ISO-8859-9 Turkish
ISO 8859-11
KOI8-R Cyrillic
Shift_JIS Japanese
USASCII
UTF-16
UTF-8
Windows® 874
Windows® 1251 Cyrillic
Windows® 1252
Windows® 1254 Turkish
Windows® 1258 Vietnamese
White paper | Xperia™ M2
ProtocolsPOP3 and IMAP4
Push emailMicrosoft® Exchange ActiveSync® (EAS)
Secure email SSL/TLS, both port methods (POPS/IMAPS) and START-
TLS
HTML mail Yes (read only)
More information:
www.sonymobile.com/developer
www.openmobilealliance.org
10May 2014
White paper | Xperia™ M2
Positioning – location based services
Supported standards:
• OMA Secure User Plane Location (SUPL) v1.0
• 3GPP™ Control Plane location (including Emergency location), only supports E911
• Qualcomm® GPSOneXtra
Provisioning (OMA CP)
OMA CP version 1.1
11May 2014
White paper | Xperia™ M2
Multimedia (audio, image and video)
Audio PlaybackDecoder formatSupported in file format
Audio decoding MPEG-1/2/2.5,
audio layer 3
AAC, AAC+, eAAC+3GPP (.3gp), MP4 (.mp4)
AMR-NB, AMR-WB3GPP (.3gp), MP4 (.mp4)
General MIDI (GM)SMF (.mid)
Linear PCM 16bitWAV (.wav)
OTA OTA (.ota)
Ogg vorbisOgg vorbis (.ogg)
Audio RecordingEncoder formatSupported in file format
AMR-NB, AMR-WB3GPP (.3gp), MP4 (.mp4),
AMR-NB, AMR-WB, AAC-LC stereo
Sample rate: 48 kHz
Bit rate: up to 384 kbps
Image PlaybackDecoder formatSupported in file format
1, 4, 8, 16, 24 and 32 bpp and RLE
encoded formats
MP3 (.mp3), 3GPP (.3gp),
MP4 (.mp4, .m4a)
AMR (.amr)
3GPP (.3gp), MP4 (.mp4)
BMP (.bmp)
Single and multi-frame, bitmap
mask support (GIF87a format and
GIF89a format)
Joint Photographic Experts GroupJPEG (.jpg)
Portable Network Graphics Bitmap
mask support
Wireless BitmapWBMP (.wbmp)
Image CaptureEncoder formatSupported in file format
Joint Photographic Experts GroupJPEG (.jpg)
Video PlaybackDecoder formatSupported in file format
* Google Chrome™ is not available for all markets.
Related information:
www.sonymobile.com/developer
13May 2014
White paper | Xperia™ M2
Memory in Android™ devices
To use Android devices efficiently, users should be aware of the different types of device memory. This
knowledge is important in order to understand, for example, where music, photos and videos are saved;
how many apps can be downloaded from Google Play™; and how photos can be copied to a PC.
The below information is also of interest to developers who want to optimise their programs to make the
best possible use of the resources in the device.
Generally, all Android devices share the same basic memory setup. What differs is how much memory is
available to you via the different types of memory, and whether your device uses an external SD card or an
internal memory chip. Any information specific to the particular device model described in this White
Paper is noted as such.
Types of memory
The types of memory described and numbered below are consistent with the terminology used in Sony
mobile device menus and in other content relating to 2014 Xperia™ devices:
1. Dynamic Memory (also known as RAM) is used by applications that run when the device is turned on.
The amount of Dynamic Memory influences how many applications and operating system services can
run at the same time. The Android operating system automatically closes applications and services
that are not being used.
However, such automatic functionality has limits. For example, if a lower amount of free RAM is
available to applications after a new release of the operating system (due to increased capabilities in
the system), device speed will eventually be impacted. This is the main reason that a device cannot be
indefinitely upgraded to newer releases of Android™.
If you experience problems with RAM, for example, if the device runs slower than usual or if the Home
application restarts frequently when you leave an application, you should minimise the use of apps that
run all the time. Such apps could include, for example, applications that frequently download social
networking service updates. You could also consider using a static wallpaper instead of a live
wallpaper.
To see which apps and services are currently active, go to Settings > Apps > Running. You should
have at least 50 MB, and ideally 100 MB or more, of free RAM to avoid slowdowns and application
restarts.
You should also be aware that if you update the device to a later Android release, the load on the builtin Dynamic Memory will increase due to the addition of more features, as mentioned above. As a
result, the device may run slower after an update.
The Xperia™ M2 has about 1 GB of RAM available to the Android OS and applications, of which about
200 MB is already used out of the box.
2. System Memory (also known as “System partition” or “/system”) is used for the Android OS and for
most applications that are pre-loaded from the factory. This type of memory is normally locked, and
can only be changed through a firmware upgrade. There is usually some free space available in this
section of memory. However, since it is locked, you cannot save apps, photos or any other content to
this memory. System Memory is reserved for future firmware upgrades, which almost always need
more memory than the original firmware. You cannot see or influence the use of this memory.
3. Internal Storage is memory used as” working” memory. It can be compared to the C: drive on a PC
or to the startup disk on a Mac.
14May 2014
White paper | Xperia™ M2
This type of memory is used to store all application downloaded from the Google Play™ Store (and
other sources) as well as their settings and data (such as emails, messages and calendar events, for
example). All applications have an allocated area which no other applications can access and where
the application data can be stored.
Some game applications also store content such as game music and game level information outside
their own designated area. In most cases, an application can choose to save its data in a location of its
own choosing (outside the protected application settings area). Generally, such content is not deleted
when an application is uninstalled; it must be removed manually by connecting the device to a
computer with a USB cable, or by using a file manager application.
Internal Storage is also used for all user content added, for example, as a result of the user taking
photos with the camera, downloading media files, and performing file transfers. Typical user content
includes:
•photos
•movies
•music
• downloaded documents (as email attachments, for example)
Internal Storage will tend to fill up as a result of normal usage. Examples of such usage are the saving
of data by applications; the downloading and installation of new applications; the downloading of free
or paid content; and the shooting of pictures and movies. Therefore, the larger this memory is from the
start, the more applications you can download and use, and the more pictures and movies you can
shoot.
If the Internal Storage starts to get full, the device slows down, and in some cases it might no longer be
possible to install more apps. You should always ensure that you have at least 100 MB of free Internal
Storage. If not, you should consider removing some apps that you seldom use, or move content that
you do not frequently access to safe storage.
You can see approximately how much Internal Storage is free in Settings > Storage > DEVICE
MEMORY. You can also view more detail about how much memory is used by applications in
Settings > Apps. In the Xperia™ M2, about 5 GB of Internal Storage is available out of the box.
Please note that in Sony Mobile 2014 products, “Internal Storage” is now the combination of what was
previously known as “Device Memory” or “Phone Memory” (for applications and their data – also
previously known as “/data”) and “Internal Storage” (for user’s content – also previously known as “/
sdcard”). The reason for this change is to make the use of available memory more flexible, and also to
enable the optional encryption of user’s content.
Memory card slot
In some products you may find both a large internal memory and a memory card reader slot. However, on
the current Android platform, the card reader slot does not work in the same manner in a device with a
large internal memory as it does in a device with ONLY a memory card slot.
Generally, since most applications expect only a single location for storage, such applications will not
generally allow you to SAVE anything to the memory card (i.e., they do not offer the option to choose a
storage location). However, some applications (for instance, the Sony Mobile “Camera” application) may
actually allow you to do so. Other applications, for example, backup applications such as the Sony Mobile
“Memory” application, will by definition be configured to copy content from the Internal Storage to the
external SD card.
15May 2014
White paper | Xperia™ M2
On the other hand, when it comes to reading from an external SD Card, you will be able to access content
(for example, videos, photos and music) on a memory card inserted in this slot without any special
consideration since the Android system searches all available memory for content. Therefore, such
products may be regarded as supporting a fourth type of memory, called “External Card” or “SD Card”.
4. SD Card (known as “/ext_card” from a programmer’s point of view, or by other names in other Android
products) is the name for the removable SD memory card in all 2014 Sony Mobile products. As
described above, this External Card memory is generally more limited in that any application can read
from it, but many applications cannot save to this card. Only a few applications, including backup
applications and file manger applications, have the capability to save to this card.
Backing up data to different memory types
Generally, you should not save photos, videos and other personal content solely on the internal memory
of a device. If something should happen with the hardware, or if the device is lost or stolen, the data
stored on the device’s internal memory is gone forever.
In a device where an SD card reader is the main memory, it is relatively easy to take the card out and copy
all content to a PC or Mac, or to an entertainment device with a memory card slot. In a product featuring
Internal Storage as the main memory, it is not possible to physically remove the memory. Instead, any
critical or high-value content must either be copied to an external SD card by a special backup
application, transferred to remote storage over a network (mobile or Wi-Fi), or to a computer via a USB
cable.
To facilitate the transfer of data via a cable, the Xperia™ M2 supports the Microsoft standard, Media
Transfer Protocol (MTP), which makes it possible to easily transfer content back and forth between your
device and a Windows PC. For Apple Mac computers, a special application called Sony™ Bridge for Mac
is available with built-in support for MTP. This application can be downloaded from the Xperia™ M2
Support page.
Note that you do not need to back up or make a copy of applications that you have downloaded from the
Google Play™ Store. They can normally be downloaded again after you have set up your Google account
to work in a new device (or in a device where the memory has been completely erased).
Note 1:
As noted above, some Android devices, including Sony Mobile devices from 2012 and Sony Ericsson
devices from 2011 and earlier, do not use a single “Internal Storage” for both applications (and their data)
and user content. Instead, these devices use either an external SD card for user content, or a
corresponding area of internal memory to reproduce the functionality of an SD card. In such devices, there
is a fixed limit between the application area (“/data”) and the user content area (“/sdcard”), with the result
that user content can build up and reach this limit. The consequence of such a limit being reached, for
example, for the camera application, would be that no new pictures could be taken even if there was still a
considerable amount of free space in the application area (or in the user content area). In such an
instance, the download and installation of new applications would also not be possible, even if there was
enough free memory in the content area.
Note 2:
Some devices with integrated storage have abandoned the distinction between the application area and
the content area when it comes to a Factory Data Reset. As a result, there is no option in such devices to
perform a Factory Data Reset and preserve content. In such devices, all content is mandatorily and
completely deleted from the device when a reset is performed.
In contrast, Sony Mobile’s memory integration solution makes it possible to preserve user content in this
situation. Therefore, when performing a Factory Data Reset, the default action will still be to only remove
applications and their data, and an option box must be checked if all content is to be removed as well (as
might be desirable when selling the device second-hand, for instance).
16May 2014
White paper | Xperia™ M2
Note 3:
For a developer, it is important to note that from a programming point of view the location names used to
refer to the different memory areas described in Note 1 are still valid, i.e., the area used for applications (“/
data”) is still present, as is the area used for content (“/sdcard”).
In reality, “sdcard” is a so-called “symbolic link” to “/data/media”. However, from inside an Android
application, “/sdcard” can still be used. For example, you can use “sdcard/DCIM/100Android” to find all
camera images. The continued use of “/sdcard” to access the content area ensures compatibility across
different products and Android releases in this regard.
17May 2014
White paper | Xperia™ M2
Trademarks and acknowledgements
All product and company names mentioned herein are the trademarks or registered trademarks of their
respective owners. Any rights not expressly granted herein are reserved. All other trademarks are property
of their respective owners.
Visit www.sonymobile.com for more information.
18May 2014
Loading...
+ hidden pages
You need points to download manuals.
1 point = 1 manual.
You can buy points or you can get point for every manual you upload.