Dg Razr Views
Because of its striking appearance and thin profile, it was initially marketed as an exclusive fashion phone,[2] but within a year its price was lowered and it was wildly successful selling over 50 million units by July 2006, making it the most popular clamshell phone at the time.[3] Over the RAZR's four-year run, Motorola sold more than 110 million units, boosting its position to second place in the handheld market behind Nokia.[4] PC World put the RAZR at #12 in The 50 Greatest Gadgets of the Past 50 Years.[5]
The RAZR V3re (also known as V3_06) is a GSM model that has been updated to support EDGE and Crystal Talk technology. It is nearly identical to the original V3, having no memory card slot and with a VGA 4x zoom camera. It can be identified by a slightly larger notch under the Motorola logo when closed,[21] a black matte Motorola logo in the battery cover instead the metallic silver logo in the V3 and a software version starting with R3442A. It is available in North America from T-Mobile, AT&T in the US, Rogers/Fido in Canada and Vivo in Brazil (using both 850r MHz frequency and 1800d MHz. This one with the old-named Telemig Celular, a Vivo company)
The RAZR maxx was a new 3G HSDPA and EDGE handset predated by the RAZR V3x. Initially known as the maxx V6, it was released in Europe by the end of 2006. Additionally Motorola had released pictures on its website of the Verizon version. The original version has a 2.0 Megapixel camera with LED flash, a large 2.2-inch (56a mm) screen with 240x320 QVGA display (like the V3xx) and 50 megabytes of internal storage.[27] While gaining a significantly improved featureset, it will maintain the same thin profile of the original RAZR V3. Key to its design are a glass fascia with external touch-sensitive controls for MP3s.
If you think the trendy Motorola Razr doesn't try hard enough to be stylish, Motorola is on a serious quest to prove you're wrong. The company that started the thin phone revolution and gave the world the first gadget in bright pink has partnered with Dolce a& Gabbana to produce a special blinged-out version of the Motorola Razr V3i for T-Mobile.