Archive for the ‘Motorola’ category

Motorola Droid Bionic 4G

December 24th, 2011

The Motorola Droid Bionic 4G the latest phone from Verizon Wireless has a dual-core processor with both cores running at 1 GHz and includes 1 GB of powerful PC-grade RAM. The smartphone runs on the Android 2.3 Gingerbread OS and the 4G LTE network for Verizon Wireless which, is 10 times faster than 3G. The smartphone packs a powerful punch and is very quick for internet browsing (on Firefox browser) and multi-tasking on different apps. The Droid Bionic has a built in mobile hotspot wifi and supports up to five devices including, MP3 Player, Laptop and other phones which, is subject to an additional charge.

The smartphone features a scratch-resistant and glare reducing 4.3-inch qHD display with a 24-bit color depth and 960 x 540 px resolution. The screen is excellent for gaming which offers rich and clear images at console quality and can be attached via HDMI cable (sold seperately) to your HDTV for the full HD experience at 1080p. The Droid Bionic has a front facing VGA camera with a see what I see feature for sharing your experiences via a wireless connection or 4G. The rear facing  8 megapixel camera allows to to capture stunning photographs and video in high quality full HD in 1080p.

As well as the ultra fast 4G and dual-core processors there is ample storage space to match making this phone more than big enough to store all of your files, videos, photos and apps with 16 GB of onboard storage including an extra 16GB Micro SD card with an option to upgrade to a 32GB Micro SD card should you run out of space. There are also features to stream TV and video simultaneously and wirelessly stream stereo audio and video via compatable DNLA devices.

Other features of the Droid Bionic 4G include GPS satellite navigation with location based services, built in Google maps navigation with spoken word for word directions , bluetooth for hands free devices, and 10.8 hours of talktime with up to 200 hours standby time.

Motorola Droid Bionic 4G Specs

Weight – 5.6 ounces

Dimensions – 2.6 x 5 x 0.4 inches

Battery – 1735 mAh lithium-ion

Talk/Standy Time – 10.8 hours/200 hours

Network – Verizon Wireless 4G LTE network, EV-DO, Rev A 3G, CDMA 800/1900



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Motorola Xoom (Wi-Fi)

August 19th, 2011

First things first: We reviewed the Verizon Motorola Xoom back in February, and we recently updated that review to reflect the Android 3.1 update. In a nutshell, the Xoom started off missing some key features—full Flash support was a big one. With the latest update to Google’s tablet OS, Honeycomb, support for Adobe Flash 10.3 moved out of shaky beta mode and now works like a charm. Multitasking was also improved to include far more possible active apps at once. The Xoom Wi-Fi ships with the Android 3.1 update, so all you need to do is power up and log on to a wireless network. This review specifically discusses the Wi-Fi-only version of the tablet. Since there are few differences between the Wi-Fi tablet and carrier-backed versions, we will refer you to our original Verizon Motorola Xoom review for all the nitty gritty details—just skip the sections on cellular service and pricing.

Motorola Xoom (Wi-Fi)

As for the Wi-Fi Xoom, here’s what you need to know. The tablet comes in a single 32GB capacity, costs $599, and can be purchased directly from Motorola, or from a handful of additional retailers. The aforementioned Verizon model with cellular connectivity (in addition to Wi-Fi) is available for $599.99 with a two-year agreement. The monthly charge for 3G service is $20 for up to 1GB of data, but unlike with the iPad, you cannot opt in or out on a monthly basis.

Two things are worth considering before you plunk down $600 for a Wi-Fi-only tablet. Are you sure you won’t miss that always-on cell service? There’s a chance you will find a tablet with no Internet access far less useful, but if that prospect doesn’t bother you, or you’re really only going to use it at home, then there’s only one more thing to consider: is the Xoom the right Wi-Fi-only tablet for you?

If you have already ruled out the Apple iPad 2 ($699, 4.5 stars), then you are likely choosing between competing Android tablet versions. The iPad 2 is definitely worth your serious consideration, however—it’s the best tablet currently available. The RIM BlackBerry PlayBook ($599, 2.5 stars), on the other hand, is the other major tablet with a non-Android-based OS, but if you check out our review, you will see several reasons not to go that route.

This leaves a couple other strictly Wi-Fi, Honeycomb tablet options. The Asus Eee Pad Transformer TF101 (3.5 stars) is cheaper no matter which model you get, the 16GB ($399) or the 32GB ($499). It also has a great keyboard-with-trackpad dock accessory that snaps on and folds the tablet into a makeshift netbook, though it costs $149 extra. The Acer Iconia Tab A500 ($449, 3.5 stars) is quite similar to the Xoom in many regards, but its $450 price tag only gets you 16GB—but if that’s all you need, it’s obviously a better deal.

For a deeper dive, read our Motorola Xoom review, which discusses the tablet in greater detail. Everything you need to know about design, performance, the OS, and apps is there.

Spec Data

CPU nVidia Tegra 2 Dual-Core
Processor Speed 1 GHz
Operating System Google Android 3.0 or higher
Screen Resolution 1280 x 800 pixels
Screen Size 10.1 inches
Battery Type Supported Rechargeable
Storage Capacity (as Tested) 32 GB
Dimensions 9.8 x 6.6 x 0.5 inches
Weight 1.6 lb
Networking Options 802.11b, 802.11g, 802.11n
Email Access Dedicated email app
Web Browser Yes
Flash support No
GPS Yes
Camera(s) 1 front-facing and 1 rear-facing
Video Chat Yes
Music Playback Formats AAC, MP3
Photo Formats JPEG, PNG, GIF
Video Formats MPEG4

Video Review :

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Motorola Quench XT5 review

July 18th, 2011

The Motorola Quench XT5 XT502 has a 3.2in Gorilla Glass display that also serves as a capacitive touchscreen. The display has a resolution of 320×480 pixels with 256K colour output. The Quench also supports Wi-Fi and GPS and offers 3G support (HSDPA 7.2 Mbps). The Quench has a 5Mp camera (without autofocus) complemented by an LED flash that can shoot videos at 320×480 pixels.

The Quench is powered by a 600MHz ARM11 processor and a dedicated Adreno 200 GPU. It also has 256MB of RAM and 100MB of internal storage, expandable up to 32GB using microSD cards. The Motorola runs Android 2.1 which means that you will have to install all needed apps on the phone’s internal memory and will not be able to do so on external memory.

However, Android 2.1 still means you get access to the entire gamut of Google Mobile Services including excellent integration with Gmail, Google Contacts and Google Calendar.

Call quality is very good on the Motorola Quench XT5, with voices coming across clearly and loudly. It also handles calls well and you can easily access other functions during a call without the risk of the device hanging. However, the absence of smart dialling was a negative mark against the Motorola.

Motorola Quench XT5: Design and usability

The Quench doesn’t depend on flashiness to be a good-looking device. Instead, it relies on an elegant all-black (with metal edges) plastic, rubber and glass body. The build quality also does no disservice to Motorola’s reputation of building quality handsets. The XT5 may not have an AMOLED or SLCD display that the newer high-end smartphones boast of, but its display is sharp nonetheless and also looks fine under sunlight. An added bonus is that entire screen is made of Gorilla Glass that keeps it safe from scratches.

Motorola has intelligently decided to stick with the stock Android UI and as a result, performance is great. The Motorola Quench XT5 is the fastest mid-range Android phone that I’ve used so far and the responsive touchscreen just adds to its great usability. Motorola has also given the Quench a helpful little scrolling wheel which comes to use especially when scrolling through text.

The XT5 also has all the requisite hardware buttons below the screen to bring up the context sensitive menus, jump to the homescreen, bring up the search tool or go one step back in the navigation. I do wish these keys were backlit because they are absolutely necessary to use and it’s very difficult to do so when there isn’t enough light to see what button you’re tapping.

Motorola Quench XT5: Browsing and multimedia

Our colleagues at PC World India gave the Motorola Quench XT5 a thorough testing in their labs. Here’s how it got on.

If you look past the missing Flash support, you will find that the XT5‘s default browser is very usable and performs well too. The browser responds well to touch and operates smoothly. Couple that with must-have features such as support for multiple windows and an extensive bookmarks manager and you have a very good web browsing experience.

The Motorola Quench XT5‘s 5Mp camera is about average. The outdoor shots I took were very dark and looked underexposed. However, there was no noise in both the indoor and outdoor shots. The absence of auto-focus did take its toll in close-up shots as details went for a toss. Extreme close-up shots were just a hodge-podge of blurs. The XT5 has a powerful LED flash that managed to capture subjects in excess of 10ft away from the camera in complete darkness. The Quench also captures sharp videos that were a little choppy.

 

 

 

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Motorola Defy ruggedized smartphone

June 4th, 2011

Motorola announced their new “Defy” smartphone today for T-Mobile. The Defy is a ruggedized smartphone with a 3.7 inch scratch-resistant screen and is shock resistant, dust-proof and water-resistant.

The specs we know are: 3.7 inch 854×480 display, 5MP camera, Android OS with Motoblur, and dual mic noise cancellation. Some important details were left out like processor type and Android version, however there is a Defy available now in Europe that has Android 2.1 and a TI OMAP 3610 chipset (800-MHz ARM Cortex-A8) which is faster than the original Droid but slower than the Droid X.

We can assume that the Defy here in the US will have these same specs, possible with a bump up to Android 2.2. The main selling point of this phone will be its durability, not processing speed. Motorola says that it will be available this holiday season.

Video Review :

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Motorola Bionic on Verizon

June 3rd, 2011

Motorola announced a new phone at CES last week, the Bionic. It will run on Verizon’s new 4G LTE network and will be very fast. It will also feature a dual core 1GHz processor and a new qHD screen with higher resolution.

It will be running Android 2.3 and feature a 4.3-inch qHD display along with 512MB of RAM and 2 cameras (VGA on front and 8MP on back).

Video Review :

 

 

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Motorola Xoom

May 24th, 2011

The Motorola Xoom tablet is easily the best competition Apple’s iPad has ever seen. Sporting a 10.1-inch screen, front and rear cameras, HDMI output, a dual-core processor, and Google’s tablet-optimized version of Android, the Xoom is entering the tablet wars with guns blazing.

Priced at $800 off-contract or $600 with a two-year commitment from Verizon, the Xoom isn’t out to win frugal customers. Instead, Motorola is taking the approach used with its successful line of Droid smartphones: emphasizing the device’s horsepower and the many capabilities not found on its Apple counterpart.

To this end, the Xoom’s spec sheet is an all-star cast of dual-core processors, multimegapixel cameras, expansion slots, and maxed-out RAM. Combine the hardware with Motorola’s exclusive access to Google’s long-awaited Android Honeycomb operating system, and you have one of the most talked-about tablets of 2011.

Does the reality of the Xoom match up with the hype? Let’s dive in and see what’s working and what could be better.

Video Review Motorola Xoom :

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Motorola Atrix 4G Lapdock and HD Multimedia Dock Review

May 3rd, 2011

 

Motorola Atrix 4G Lapdock and HD Multimedia Dock Review

Motorola Atrix 4G Lapdock and HD Multimedia Dock

Along with the introduction of the Motorola Atrix 4G came the debut of the Lapdock, a docking station that promises to turn your smartphone into a fully-featured laptop. The company is also offering the HD Multimedia Dock, which turns your Atrix 4G into a desktop computer.

BUILD & DESIGN

First and foremost, it cannot be denied that Motorola knows how to build attractive hardware.  A few years ago it built the RAZR, a super-slim phone whose popularity has yet to be matched by the iPhone; after an extended period of irrelevance, it came back to launch one of the best-selling Android smartphones, the Droid.

Motorola Atrix 4G Lapdock and HD Multimedia Dock ReviewLaptop Dock
The Lapdock is no different, and as a design philosophy, is both more daring and more striking than its partner, the Atrix 4G. Compared to traditional laptops, the Motorola Lapdock is extremely thin — we’re talking closer to the Macbook Air in size, not the netbrick one might expect. In addition to being sleek, the device is well-built, too — the exterior of the Lapdock is clad in a matte charcoal grey metal. It’s cool to the touch and, since there is no actual processor inside of the docking station, it stays that way.

Since the Lapdock is so thin, there is insufficient room for the USB ports or the dock mechanism on the sides. Motorola stuck these onto the rear of the machine and covered it all in a black rubbery plastic. It feels a lot like the soft finish on the back of the HTC EVO 4G.

The docking station itself was a contentious design choice. Rather than bolting on a slide-in dock to the back of the display, Motorola chose to go with a flip-out bay that easily pops up. On the up side, it provides for a slimmer device overall, as putting the dock on the display would have required Motorola to add thicker supports. On the down side, it makes the Lapdock substantially longer than it might have been otherwise. It’s not really a good or bad decision, just different.

The phone slides into the dock easily, but take care — it’s very easy to scratch the side of the phone trying to slot the phone into the sculpted insert. Next to the swivelling dock area are two USB ports, suitable for connecting either USB flash drives, or an external mouse and keyboard when using the webtop application. There’s also an input for the AC adapter.

Opening the Lapdock presents you with a big keyboard as well as a huge trackpad. Two physical buttons sit below the trackpad, and an LED in the pad’s upper left corner shows its status — lit means the trackpad is turned on, off means that it isn’t.  A quick double-tap switches it on and off. Astonishingly, despite the size and apparent quality, the trackpad is merely single touch.  It’s 2011, and this was a terrible decision. Scrolling with a single-touch trackpad is difficult, a difficulty compounded by the fact that there isn’t an option to use the side of the trackpad as a scrolling mechanism.  Still, at least it’s responsive.

On the surface, the keyboard is very good.  The chiclet-style layout is generally easy to type on, and there is little flex. While the width of the keyboard is almost full-size, the height of the keyboard isn’t — it’s a little bit squished.  This is apparent after typing for just a few minutes, and the decision is a little mind-boggling: given the leftover size of the device, there’s really no reason for it.

The screen is clear and bright. The 11.6-inch display is glossy (very glossy), with a resolution of 1366 x 768. Like most TN panels these days, viewing the screen head-on is a solid experience: the horizontal viewing angles are decent, though the vertical viewing angles are lacking.

Video


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Motorola Bionic on Verizon

February 7th, 2011

motorola-bionic-on-verizon

Motorola announced a new phone at CES last week, the Bionic. It will run on Verizon’s new 4G LTE network and will be very fast. It will also feature a dual core 1GHz processor and a new qHD screen with higher resolution.

It will be running Android 2.3 and feature a 4.3-inch qHD display along with 512MB of RAM and 2 cameras (VGA on front and 8MP on

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Motorola i365 – Black (Nextel)

December 1st, 2010
Motorola i365 - Black (Nextel)

Motorola i365 - Black (Nextel)

If there ever was a Nextel phone, the Motorola i365 would be it. Big, burly, and bulky, the i365 looks as if it could withstand just about anything. Make no mistake: this is a serious phone for making voice and push-to-talk (PTT) calls. There’s no camera or music player, and it makes no effort to be trendy or stylish. Normally we might complain, but with a Nextel phone, it’s more than appropriate. Yet, the i365 does throw us a few bones. Bluetooth, voice dialing, and GPS are onboard, and the color display, while rather small, is easy on the eyes. It’s also cheap, at just $89 with service. To find accessories for this phone, see our cell phone ringtones and accessories guide.

Video Motorola i365 – Black (Nextel) Review :


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Motorola i335 (Nextel)

November 25th, 2010
Motorola i335 (Nextel)

Motorola i335 (Nextel)

The Motorola i335 has a durable, user-friendly design and a decent feature set. It also offers excellent call quality. It’s been so long since we’ve reviewed a Nextel cell phone (the last was the Motorola i580 in July 2006) that we almost forgot they existed. In the wake of the 2005 Next/Sprint merger, the carrier announced it was phasing out iDEN-only models in favor of dual-mode handsets like the Motorola ic902 and ic502. But with its new Motorola i335, iDEN is back. Sporting Nextel markings only (you won’t find “Sprint” anywhere on the handset or its packaging), the i335 combines traditional Nextel design with a dose of modern style. Its candy bar body is tough and durable, but the i335 is the thinnest Nextel handset to date. It lacks a camera, but of course it offers Nextel’s standard array of push-to-talk (PTT) services. The i335 will put a crimp in your wallet if you pay full price ($249), but you can get it for as low as $49.99 with service if you buy it online. To find accessories for this phone, see our cell phone ringtones and accessories guide.

Video Motorola i335 (Nextel) Review :

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