

It's really not easy to press, and its close proximity to the SIM card slot makes finding the button harder. It's made of slippery plastic, and it's recessed into the frame of the phone. The power button has a fingerprint reader built-in, just like the international Xperia Z5. This button is on the right edge just above the SIM card slot (I'll get to why that's important later). The Robin has small dome-shaped volume toggles on the left edge, and I actually quite like the way they look and feel. I'd rather have a phone with Type-C than microUSB right now, and the Robin does come with a very pretty blue cable. Moving to Type-C is tough right now, but this is the future. There's also a USB Type-C port with Quick Charge 2.0. It's a good location when I have the phone sitting an arm's length away, but if it's closer, the light isn't very visible. On the bottom is a notification LED, which I'm torn about. Anything past about half volume seems way too loud and distorted to me. They get plenty loud, but I think the tuning could use some work. On the front of the device are two front-facing speakers.
