Motorola XT800 Android touchscreen phone hands-on in Shenzhen

Lusting for more Android love from Motorola? Then you should start searching for a Chinese soulmate. We’ve been told that this ¥5,680 ($830) XT800 dual-SIM (one CDMA and one GSM) smartphone had been out for just a few days in Shenzhen — right before the country shuts down for Chinese New Year on Sunday. Packing the same OMAP3430 core used by the Droid and Milestone, both the 2.0.1 firmware and a 720p sample video we watched were running smoothly on the lovely 3.7-inch 854×480 screen. The rubberized battery cover felt nice in our palm, too, but enough with the talking — go gorge yourselves on the gallery pics, won’t you?

Motorola XT800 Android touchscreen phone hands-on in Shenzhen originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 11 Feb 2010 19:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Motorola MOTOSPLIT to have dynamic key labels, lame processor?

A quick glance at that render we’d obtained of the rumored MOTOSPLIT had us thinking we were seeing a large, Sholes-style phone with a musclebound OMAP3 core, but hold up — maybe this is a lower-end (and stranger) phone than we’d originally thought. Android Community has gotten tipped with additional details and another supposed render of the handset, and the most notable tidbit here seems to be that the phone is said to use dynamic key labels (a la Samsung Alias 2) to let the user pull out a single side as a numeric keypad or both sides (hence the “SPLIT” in the name) for full QWERTY action. In the QWERTY configuration, there’s apparently a kickstand around back that would help you set the phone on a desk and type with all the ease of the world’s smallest netbook cocked at an awkward 45-degree angle.

The wisdom and usability of this kind of setup remains a huge question mark, but the bigger question mark might be inside the phone itself: we’re hearing here that the MOTOSPLIT would use the same core as the Backflip, an old-school Qualcomm MSM7201A. Frankly that seems unlikely at best — virtually every Qualcomm-powered midrange smartphone to be introduced in 2010 from here on out will be using an MSM7227 or 7627 (including Moto’s own Devour), so we’re going to cautiously assume this particular piece of the intel is incorrect. Please let it be incorrect, Motorola, we beg of you.

Motorola MOTOSPLIT to have dynamic key labels, lame processor? originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 06 Feb 2010 20:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony Ericsson answers your nagging X10 questions, ‘newer version’ of Android will come

While we all continue to twiddle our thumbs in anticipation of the X10’s general availability, Dutch site Tweakers took some time out with Sony Ericsson’s Jacob Sten Harold de Kort to get a few pressing questions from the community answered. It’s quite a test — de Kort fielded over 80 questions in all — and there were a few big takeaways that should be of interest to anyone who’s got even glancing interest in putting this thing in their pocket in the next few months. First off, it’s still scheduled to launch with Android 1.6 Donut, but his words along with a post over on SE’s official Product Blog give us hope that we’ll be seeing 2.0, 2.1, or something even fresher down the road (to quote the post’s headline, the phone “will be upgradeable”). 1.6 doesn’t support multitouch in the framework, and indeed, de Kort confirms that the X10 will be a unitouch device, though it’s not clear whether that could change with a newer firmware or if there’s a hardware issue involved. As for pricing, we can expect this to launch for €599 (about $817) — in Holland, anyhow, where it’s on track to hit shelves before the end of the quarter. The subsidized pricing should hopefully be a tad less heart-stopping.

[Thanks, Len B. and Moody]

Update: The questions were actually fielded by Harold de Kort, marketing manager for Sony Ericsson in the Netherlands, not Jacob Sten. Thanks, domipost!

Sony Ericsson answers your nagging X10 questions, ‘newer version’ of Android will come originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 06 Feb 2010 07:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dell Mini 5 earns FCC approval, AT&T 3G coverage assured

Remember those rumors back in the day that Dell’s Android-powered Streak MID — the device that would later be revealed as the Mini 5 — would be manufactured by Qisda? Well, we’ve got some pretty solid proof of that now that it’s hit the FCC under Qisda’s name. What you see on the left is the label submitted in today’s filing for a device called the Qisda M01M; on the right, you have a shot from that pictorial of a device in Shenzhen of the same name. Look pretty much identical? Yeah, we’ve definitely got the Mini 5 here, and it’s described in the RF test reports as a “mobile internet device” with support for WiFi plus full HSPA on WCDMA bands II and V (that’s the coverage needed by AT&T, Rogers, Bell, and Telus, by the way) plus EDGE on the same frequencies. We’re sure that this version’s got a few more bands for user outside North America, too, but seeing how the FCC generally doesn’t care about them, Qisda’s gone light on the details. Anyhow, this works out nicely for a release later this year, doesn’t it?

Dell Mini 5 earns FCC approval, AT&T 3G coverage assured originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 05 Feb 2010 18:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Multitouch Pinch-to-Zoom Hits Motorola Droid

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Motorola Droid owners: it’s time for you to freak out.  Google just dropped a new version of Google Maps and it offers pinch-to-zoom multitouch. Simply go into the Android Market, search for Google Maps and you’ll be given the option to download the update for your Motorola Droid.
The Motorola Droid’s web browser and picture gallery still do not support the pinching gesture, though that’s likely to change very soon.  As reported earlier this morning, Google has updated the Android 2.1 OS to support he gesture in the web browser and picture gallery applications, but that will most likely require Motorola to push out an OS update to the Droid (which they said is the works.)  Sprint subscribers will see Android 2.1 on the HTC Hero and Samsung Moment sometime later this year. 

Motorola Droid gets official multitouch support — in Google Maps, anyway

When it rains, it pours, huh, Google? Not even a week after announcing the big multitouch update for its own Nexus One, Google has turned loose a new version of Google Maps that enables pinch-to-zoom support on the Droid. Of course, it was no secret that Android 2.0 had the framework in place to support this kind of stuff — Moto enabled it all by its lonesome on the Euro-spec Milestone — but it looks like this could be the watershed moment where multitouch finally becomes a must-have feature on Android devices across the board, as Moto CEO Sanjay Jha recently suggested would happen. The new version 3.4’s available as a software update in the Market right now, so grab it if you’ve got your Droid handy.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Motorola Droid gets official multitouch support — in Google Maps, anyway originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 05 Feb 2010 13:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Motorola Milestone looks set for February 18 launch on Telus; AT&Ters, get your unlocking pants on

Telus hasn’t yet committed to a date for the release of its mighty Milestone, but no sweat — Best Buy’s happy to commit on their behalf, pegging February 18 as the date that Canadians will have access to their most powerful subsidized Android set yet. That’s really awesome, don’t get us wrong — but the other side of this win-win is that it’ll be the first time that a Milestone has been available with 850 / 1900MHz 3G, meaning this thing could become a boon for anyone willing to whisk a few across the border, assuming it’s not a nightmare to unlock (we doubt it will be). So yes, it’s true, if you really want to wait to get your Android-powered Motorola on through AT&T proper, you can hold out for the Backflip, but considering that the Milestone’s a more juicily-spec’d piece to start, you might just want to swing this way — assuming you’ve got a penchant for hacking and smuggling, of course.

Motorola Milestone looks set for February 18 launch on Telus; AT&Ters, get your unlocking pants on originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 05 Feb 2010 12:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sensorly aims to keep coverage maps honest

Say you’re planning that next camping trip and you need to know whether you’re going to be able to incessantly check your work email every 10 minutes — do you trust a carrier’s coverage map of unknown age, origin, and honesty, or real-world experience? If French firm Sensorly has its way, you’ll soon be able to answer the latter thanks to the deployment of an app for your phone that continuously measures cellular and WiFi signal strength at your location and silently reports it back to the company’s servers where it’s compiled into color-coded maps predicting your ability to connect. The concept’s very similar to that being undertaken by another up-and-comer that’s been getting a good deal of coverage lately, Root Wireless, but the key difference is that Root’s system is still in private beta — Sensorly’s mobile app is available right now to anyone who’d like to download it and participate (albeit only for Android; iPhone and WinMo are in the pipe). It seems unlikely that they’ve got critical mass to provide meaningful feedback in most areas at this point, but if marginal boost in battery drain is tolerable for you, it might be worth giving it a whirl.

Sensorly aims to keep coverage maps honest originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 05 Feb 2010 05:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Google waxes poetic on Nexus One’s design in video series, new docks shown off

Curious about the bright minds behind the OLED-wrapped, Android-powered Snapdragon in your pocket? Google’s just posted its first in a series of videos about the Nexus One’s magical journey from concept to production, and this particular episode calls in Mountain View’s own Erick Tseng alongside HTC project manager Tomasz Hasinski and Lloyd Watts of Audience, which provided the phones dual-mic noise reduction tech. Don’t expect too much depth here — the entire video’s only four minutes long — but after Erick talks about the Nexus One’s unprecedented fusion of bleeding-edge hardware and software design, we get to hear a little bit about HTC’s selection of soft-touch materials and a large display for the device and Audience’s involvement in improving voice quality before getting a super-brief glimpse at three docks. One of them is already available — the desktop dock — but the other two appear to be a standard desktop dock with an integrated spare battery charger and the nav-friendly car dock on the left and right, respectively. The video gives no clues when we might actually see these available for purchase — but since they’ve finally shown them off here, it can’t be long, right? Follow the break to check out episode one in full.

Continue reading Google waxes poetic on Nexus One’s design in video series, new docks shown off

Google waxes poetic on Nexus One’s design in video series, new docks shown off originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 05 Feb 2010 00:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Motorola Devour has Flash support, makes Pixi look like an underachiever

Motorola’s official spec sheet for the Devour reveals that there’ll be a Flash Lite runtime on board — presumably version 3.1, which offers support for a variety of video codecs and Flash 9 content — and more importantly, it’ll work in the browser. That’s pretty cool — it gives the Devour one small leg up on its Droid big brother and matches capabilities that HTC has rolled out in the past on the Hero, but what’s more interesting is that the Devour allegedly uses the same next-gen low-cost smartphone processor from Qualcomm, the MSM7627, as the Pixi. Palm has elected not to roll out the Pre’s upcoming Flash support to the Pixi on account of its lower-end specs, which begs the question: is Android’s Flash Lite 3.1 player significantly more efficient than webOS’ Flash 10.1 player, does the Devour have more horsepower packed in there than it’s letting on, or does Palm just have higher performance standards for annoying ads than Moto does?

[Thanks, StevenQ]

Motorola Devour has Flash support, makes Pixi look like an underachiever originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Feb 2010 15:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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