Motorola Cell Phones
Motorola Cell Phones are one of the most popular cell phones available in the marketplace today. They are high tech stylish necessities that look like fashion accessories. Apple computers is licensing iTunes and its protected file format for use with Motorola cell phones.
Now you are able to purchase Motorola cell phones with the software for iTunes already installed (Motorola ROKR for Cingular). You are able to download you favorite songs from you PC with a USB cable, using Bluetooth for MP3 or in Apple's protected AAC format and then just listen to them on your Motorola cell phones.
As mentioned previously, Motorola's deal with Apple has caused rumor that Real Networks will be offering iPod and possibly Motorola compatible downloads from its Rhapsody music service. Every day, the line between music players and cell phones gets blurred.
Motorola also entered into an agreement with Research in Motion to allow the popular Blackberry email technology to be used on some of Motorola smartphones. Motorola manufacture's one of the fasted computer central processor available and that cutting edge technology is carried over into their high quality Motorola cell phones. Motorola makes everything from barebones basic cell phones to the most sophisticated smartphones.
Some phones from the Motorola Cell Phones roster are:
Motorola V710 - for Verizon wireless. It has Bluetooth networking, a 1.2 megapixel camera, transflash and expandable memory storage.
Motorola V810 - a typical flip phone with a VGA camera and CDMA 1X data support MPx220 - a Windows, Bluetooth networking and a 1.3-megapixel camera with flash and will be able to connect to RIM's Blackberry servers for push-style e-mail.
Motorola RAZR V3 - a fashion accessory made of titanium and aircraft-grade aluminum and measures just half an inch thick. This GSM phone in one of their most amazing comeback phone models.
Motorola A780 - a flip-up GSM smartphone that runs on Linux, it has Bluetooth networking, a TransFlash memory slot, EDGE high-speed data, a big 320 by 240 screen, a 1.3-megapixel camera, MP3 player, and a document reader, supporting Microsoft Office and PDF files. The big question is whether its Linux Os will be compatible with the Microsoft OS smartphones.
Motorola CN620 - able to roam between Wi-Fi and cellular networks, allows Voice over IP (VoIP) calls and roll the same call onto GSM when you leave the building. Since it runs on Windows CE, it should have smartphone features as well. No US carrier has picked it yet.
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About the Author
Matt Smith has been involved in the wireless and cellular phones market for over 13 years. He is a contributing publisher at 4-Cell-Phones.com