Sammanfattning: I had just one day with Motorola’s soon-to-launch Atrix smart phone and its collection of innovative accessories before writing this review. That’s not enough time to properly figure out how long the battery lasts, much less definitively determine whet...
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Publicerad: 2011-07-25, Författare: Nic , testad av: itnews.com.au
Sammanfattning: In terms of external design it looks like most smartphones – a 4in display in a frame measuring 117.75 × 63.50 × 10.95 mm with a very decent weight of only 135g. This means the phone does feel a little less solid than some on the market and we also found ...
Dual-core processor. Loads of connectivity. Good 5-megapixel camera. Awesome music player
Some software instability. Poor battery life. Battery heats up during use. Screen resolution isn't compatible with some apps
With its vast range of connectivity and some punchy performance, the Atrix is a good smartphone, but software instability stops us from calling it a great smartphone....
Slick and fast user experience, HDMI-out, Good build quality and battery life
Screen is hard to see in sunlight, Touch-sensitive buttons, No word on Gingerbread update
The Motorola Atrix doesn't stray too far from the norm once you look past its dual-core processor and fingerprint reader, but it is a slick, super-fast Android phone with good battery life. Anyone after a new Android phone with a big screen should definit...
The review wouldn't be complete without tipping my hat to Alistair and the team at MobiCity. The Atrix is a phone that's unlikely to make it to Australia soon, and these guys have brought it here with overnight shipping at a reasonable cost, considering t...
136 grams. It's a good weight, 4″ screen. It's big, it's beautiful. It's an odd resolution, though – 540 x 960 pixels, It's tough as nails – Gorilla Glass screen, It has naff features – like a fingerprint reader, You don't need a micro-SD card – it has 16
The fingerprint reader is cool, but having to use it every time to unlock the screen gets old, AT&T's built in crap-ware is annoying, though it can be removed. The Motoblur stuff can't be, Hardware
I really like it.The Atrix is unlike a lot of Android phones I’ve reviewed lately. It’s not got curious proportions. It’s not heavy, and it doesn’t feel cheap and nasty. The case is plastic – yes – but it doesn’t feel plastic and nasty, unlike some oth...
The Motorola Atrix 4G features a dual-core processor and a sharp qHD (quarter HD) display. The Android 2.2 smartphone has a sleek design and a 5-megapixel camera, a front-facing camera for video calls, and an HDMI port
No 1080p HD video recording or playback at launch. You can't install non-Market third-party apps. We didn't experience great HSPA+ 4G data speeds
The laptop dock is a decidedly cool (and pricey) feature, but the dual-core Motorola Atrix 4G has plenty to offer on its own. The smartphone packs speed and high-end features into a sleek package and earns its place at the top of AT&T's Android lineup....
The Motorola Atrix is a smartphone of a familiar shape and size, but once it's placed into one of two docking accessories, the Atrix offers an experience more like a computer than a phone.
Sammanfattning: The year 2011 has been flooded with loads of Android smartphones, plus the touch-screen technology, this year, has surpassed its previous features with even smoother and more precise touch sensing interfaces. Touchscreen phones have now largely swapped th...