Showing posts with label Motorola. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Motorola. Show all posts

Thursday, October 25, 2007

Motorola T305 Bluetooth Hands-Free Speaker



Product Features

* Small compact design produces great volume
* Up to 14 hours of talk time
* No installation required � Just clip and go. Quickly secure to your car's sun visor.
* Designed with the car in mind. Echo and noise reduction technology minimize background noise and 1-watt speaker delivers clear audio.
* Effortless controls keep you in the driver's seat and the full duplex speaker allow you to talk over eachother and still hear everything

Motorola Headphones : MOTOROKR S9 Bluetooth Active

motoral-accessories-headphones


Product Features


* Play time up to 6 hours, talk time up to 7 hours, and Standby time up to 150 hours
* Sweat and water resistant
* Integrated music and call controls in a discreet iconic design
* Supports HS, HF1.5, Bluetooth v2.0, A2DP, and AVRCP Bluetooth profiles
* Compatible with most Bluetooth enabled handsets and audio devices

Free international GSM SIM card : Best Seller Motoral CellPhone, Motorola Ming A1200 Black Phone (Unlocked)

Cell-Phone-Free-International-GSM-SIM-card

Motorola shares up after profit beats estimates

Motorola Inc (MOT.N) reported on Thursday its first quarterly profit in 2007 and gave an outlook that beat Wall Street expectations, in a sign the mobile phone maker has started to turn around its business.

Motorola shares rose as much as 5 percent as investors took heart from the results, even though third-quarter profit still fell 94 percent as the company lost cell phone market share to rivals Nokia (NOK1V.HE) and Samsung Electronics (005930.KS).

Analysts said the report buys some time for Chief Executive Ed Zander, who had been under pressure from activist investor Carl Icahn and other shareholders who wanted him to step down.

RBC analyst Mark Sue said the results were encouraging but noted Motorola has a lot of work to do as competition in mobile devices had intensified in the past year.

"It's stopped getting worse for Motorola," he said. "The handset division is still operating at a loss but the loss is narrowing which suggests the light at the end of the tunnel is getting a little bit brighter. It's about sustainability."

While Motorola lost market share in the Asia Pacific region, including India, it regained its lead in Latin America and kept its lead in North America, executives said.

Motorola has been losing share to leader Nokia and Samsung, which took its number-two ranking in the second quarter. It also faces competition from Apple Inc's (AAPL.O) iPhone.

Third-quarter net profit fell to $60 million, or 3 cents a share, from $968 million, or 39 cents a share, in the year-ago quarter. The profit came after two quarters of losses.

Excluding items such as charges from job cuts, Motorola's profit was 6 cents a share, ahead of the average analyst estimate of 4 cents a share, according to Reuters Estimates.

"Our third quarter can be characterized by one word, progress," Zander said on a conference call. "We also recognize there is a lot more work to be done."

Revenue fell 17 percent to $8.8 billion, in line with the average of analyst estimates, according to Reuters Estimates.

MORE PROFITS EXPECTED

Motorola forecast fourth-quarter earnings per share from continuing operations of 12 cents to 14 cents, excluding any reorganization charges or other items, compared with the average analyst forecast of 11 cents.

The company, criticized for not creating a strong successor to its flagship Razr phone, shipped 37.2 million phones in the quarter, giving it an estimated market share of 13 percent.

Jane Snorek, an analyst at First American Funds, which has Motorola shares among its $68 billion assets managed, said investors would give Zander another year as long as Motorola delivers strong new handsets.

"He has six more months to launch new phones. Nobody's going to kick anybody out before then. Then you'll give the new phones six more months," she said. "If phones get delayed again I would think the CEO would be under pressure."

Motorola's handset business posted an operating loss of $138 million compared with a profit of $843 million a year ago. Mobile phone revenue fell 36 percent to $4.5 billion.

Zander said in an interview mobile demand did not appear to be hurt by U.S. economic concerns so far this quarter. Motorola said the total mobile market tends to grow by a double-digit percentage from the third quarter to the fourth quarter.

Asked by analysts about plans for share buybacks, Motorola Chief Financial Officer Tom Meredith hinted there could be news on this in coming weeks. Motorola has about $4 billion left to spend on its roughly $11 billion buyback plan.

The company has been cutting jobs to lower costs, and ended the quarter with 67,000 employees, down from 72,000 in early 2007.

Motorola said revenue for its set-top box and network equipment unit rose 6 percent from a year ago. Its enterprise business posted a 47 percent revenue increase to $2 billion.

Shares of Motorola, which had lost almost a third of their value in the last 12 months, were up 58 cents at $19.13 in midday trade on the New York Stock Exchange.

Motorola A1200 Ming Review - CNET

Motoral A1200 Review


CNET reviews the Motorola A1200 Ming and writes, "The Ming's 2-megapixel camera offers fewer features than we'd expect on a high-res shooter. You can take pictures in just three resolutions (1,200x1,600; 768x1,024; and 480x640) while editing options are limited to a self-timer, brightness and white balance settings, a night mode, four color effects, and an 8x zoom. There's also the aforementioned Macro switch, but we'll say again that we were hoping for a camera flash. The camcorder records clips in three resolutions (352x288; 320x240; and 176x144) with sound and offers a similar set of editing options. On the upside, we like the camera interface. Almost all options are displayed directly on the display, which eliminates the need to sift through multiple menus to change settings. Also, you're given a handy meter detailing how much memory is remaining for your shots and clips. The Ming has 8MB of internal memory, which is quite small, but it can accommodate microSD cards up to 2GB...Photo quality was decent, but we noticed a few flaws. Though most colors were bright, oranges and reds looked a bit unnatural and whites were somewhat fuzzy. Also, though object outlines were distinct, the flowers in our test shot were somewhat blurry. True shutterbugs can take advantage of the Ming's photo editor application, which allows you to alter your shots using basic tools. Videos seem fine as long as your subjects are close to the phone."

Saturday, October 06, 2007

Motorola R&D Looks to 5G, Morphing Keypads

3G is old news. At Motorola's annual Research Experience Day Thursday, where the mobile phone giant's researchers showed off their not-ready-for-prime-time technologies, the company's network experts were looking at 4G and beyond.

"We're going to focus on creating the next new set of markets, which will be very different, with different devices and different business models" than today's mobile world, Motorola CTO Padmasree Warrior said.

In terms of phones, that means "simplifying the user experience," Warrior said. She pointed out two technologies that Motorola was working on. The first was "morphing" keypads, which have keys that change from activity to activity. They're presumably like the keypad on the Firefly FlyPhone, which appears as a standard number keypad when you're making phone calls, but turns into a music control keypad when you're playing MP3s.

Motorola is also working with haptics, Warrior said. Haptic keypads are touch keypads that bite back; imagine an iPhone where, after a user has pressed a virtual button, he or she could feel a vibration in the exact location that was pressed, making the virtual button feel like a real one. That kind of localized haptic response has been demonstrated by Synaptics on a kiosk, but has never been shown working on something as small as a phone.

But phones weren't the stars of the day. The day's demos and speeches by Warrior and Motorola chief operating officer Greg Brown spent relatively little time talking about specific handsets, focusing instead on Motorola's work on next generation networks.

"It's not just about the devices. It's beyond devices," Brown said.

I wouldn't read too much into the focus on "experiences" rather than specific phones. While Motorola has been struggling to find the next big thing after the decline of the RAZR, the annual Experience Day was about networks and off-the-wall technologies last year, too.

This year, Motorola wanted to showcase the company's work on WiMAX and LTE, both commonly called "4G" mobile technologies – and something even beyond 4G. Is it 5G? Who knows?

The future of the network

For WiMAX, which will be used by Sprint's upcoming Xohm home and mobile Internet service, Motorola showed two elegant tabletop modems, both smaller than a breadbox. One looked rather like a tiny Dalek, the Doctor Who villain; the other was a smooth black cube. Both can connect home networks to WiMAX. A new Motorola base station technology, spatial division multiple access, could double or quadruple the capacity of WiMAX base stations by aiming signals in different directions.

The 4G technologies will bring true broadband speed to mobile networks. Sprint has committed to WiMAX, and Verizon and AT&T have announced they're moving to LTE.

"We also plan on continuing to leverage the early leadership position with WiMAX," Brown said. "The Sprint/Clearwire [Xohm] deal will facilitate and accelerate WiMAX deployment in the US, and Motorola will play a key component."

But 4G will be in place by 2010, and Motorola's looking past that. Motorola's "Beyond 4G" demo theorized a network where antennas and base stations cooperate to achieve even higher speeds by dividing the work. For instance, a mobile device could connect to two base stations at once, transmitting data through both of them. Or it could connect to both a base station and another device, using the second cell phone (with its permission) as a sort of pass-through to leap over to another base station.

In a country where the radio spectrum is crowded, Motorola's cognitive radio technology may come in handy. Cognitive radio, otherwise known as "white space" radio, finds channels in the UHF TV band that aren't currently being used by broadcasters and uses them for data connections, without interfering with existing TV signals. The FCC has rejected one white-space scheme, but Motorola said theirs is superior because it combines two ways of avoiding existing signals: it uses a database of reserved channels from the FCC, and also tries to automatically sniff out occupied channels that might not be in the database.

Of course, some countries are still working on 1G, and Motorola showed intriguing technologies for the developing world at the show.

For towns with little electricity, Motorola showed solar-powered base stations and solar-powered phone booths that functioned both as public phones and charging stations for up to 20 cell phones at a time. And for towns with little connectivity, they had a kiosk where villagers could write email or picture messages. When a bus passed through town, the kiosk would wirelessly off-load its messages to a cellular unit on the bus, which would store them until it got into range of a wireless network.

Motorola also showed off a grab-bag of technologies for a wide range of consumer experiences. In Motorola's future you'll be able to unlock your car using a Bluetooth phone, which will automatically bump your calls to voice mail if your driving gets too "complex," according to a Motorola engineer doing the demo. "Social TV" will let you gab about your favorite shows over instant messager with communities formed through your cable box. Your kids will wear "e-charms," little bits of jewelry which glow when a friend calls them.

And when they call back, Motorola's hoping, it'll still be on one of Motorola's phones.

Wednesday, October 03, 2007

Best Seller Cell Phone Accessories : Motorola H700 Bluetooth Headset

Headset Best Seller Motorola H700 Bluetooth


Product Features

  • Compact, small and lightweight design is approximately 30% smaller than its predecessor

  • Award winding PowerFlip foldable microphone design with ergonomic reversible ear hook

  • Cutting-edge noise reduction and echo cancellation technologies

  • Multi-function button to control 3-way calling, call start and end, hold and mute and 6 hours talk time or 130 hours standby time

  • Compatible with Bluetooth 1.2- or 1.1-enabled mobile phones, PDAs, PCs, printers and more that support headset and hands-free profiles

New Cell Phone Product by Motorola : Motorola KRZR K1 Phone

Motorol New Cell Phone Motorola KRZR K1


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