There’s no getting around it, the RAZR is one lustworthy device, and a worthy namesake to the original esteemed RAZR that went on to sell more than 130-million units.
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Instead of the clamshell form factor of yore, the follow-up is a 4.3″ touch screen slate device. At 7.1mm thick, it’s impossibly thin, but doesn’t compromise on performance with a 1.2GHz TI OMAP 4430 CPU. Moto is touting its new Motocast “personal cloud” feature that allows you to stream media from your home or work computer over WiFi or 3.5G to your RAZR.
The RAZR has a Super AMOLED Advanced display and while it’s unclear how exactly it differs from Super AMOLED or Super AMOLED Plus, it does look vibrant and clear at a qHD 540×960 resolution. The RAZR has impeccable build quality with a KEVLAR fiber back, Corning Gorilla Glass display, “Splash Guard” splash proof design, and re-enforced steel internal chassis.
The RAZR runs Gingerbread 2.3.5, but has been confirmed to receive Ice Cream Sandwich 6 weeks after it becomes available for the Samsung Nexus Prime at the end of this year. As dimensions for the RAZR go, it’s 130.70mm in length 68.90 in width and boasts that record holding 7.1mm thinness.
The RAZR weighs a mere 127g despite its illustrious gear which also includes a 1780.00 mAh battery, 8 MP rear camera (LED flash, autofocus, image stabilisation, 1080p at 30fps video) , 1.3 MP front-facing camera, 1GB of RAM, 16GB internal storage with removable microSD storiage (up to 32GB).
Connectivity comes with the fresh new Bluetooth 4.0 standard, dual-band 2.4GHz/5GHz 802.11b/g/n WiFi, 14.4 HSPA+ and GPS (A/S/Glonass) and of course , micro HDMI out and microUSB.
The RAZR also has the usual fun stuff like an accelerometer, proximity sensor, ambient light sensor, compass and supports the DLNA standard.
The RAZR on-board software includes MotoCast
Sadly the RAZR does not have a removable battery, but it’s a sacrifice Moto readily made to grab the “world’s thinnest smartphone” moniker. The absence of NFC prompted a conversation with Nikolakopoulos who suggested that NFC mass adoption is an infrastructure problem.
In South Africa — a country with no mass consumer facing NFC solutions –, a RAZR with NFC would be useless. He hinted that we might see RAZR versions with NFC coming to other markets like Japan where NFC is more prevalent.
The Motorola Droid RAZR will be available in South Africa in November 2011, for R6 999 prepaid, or approximately R269 on a Business Call Vodacom package.