Motorola and Sprint today announced the Motorola i1, the first Android-powered push-to-talk phone. It is the first i1 Android phone. The price range is 6000-15000 it is not yet sure.
In there is 3.1-inch touch screen, Wi-Fi, Opera Mini 5 as the default browser, and Motorola’s custom Android MOTOBLUR user interface. This will be a big push for Motorola on Sprint’s network, which has a number of U.S. workers who communicate through the Nextel Direct Connect service. Now they’ll be able to quickly reach others even when sneaking a few moments on Facebook or their favorite Android website – wink, wink.
Important features:
- Motorola pitches the i1 as a business-first phone for “those who work and play hard.” The phone has military-grade protection against dust, shock, vibration, and blowing rain.
- Skype is pre-installed as the phone’s keyboard, though users have the option of disabling it.
- The device has a 5MP camera with LED flash, autofocus, and 4X digital zoom
- The phone will include Opera Mini 5 and the ability to use Flash 8 websites (older than the Flash 10-level content seen on the Droid and Nexus One).
- It runs Android 1.5 (face-palm!) but you’d have to imagine that Motorola would wise up and put 2.1 or at least Donut on there, right? Right?
- Bluetooth 2.0, micro USB, 2.5mm headset jack
- Adobe Flash, MP3, WAV, WMV, MIDI, MP4, and H.263/H.264 media format can be support.
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