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Motorola Android CLIQ

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Sep 10, 2009, 11:57 AM   by Eric M. Zeman
updated Sep 10, 2009, 8:42 PM

Today Motorola unveiled its Android strategy, encompassed by MOTOBLUR and the new CLIQ Android phone. Phone Scoop was on site and spent some quality time with the CLIQ. Read our full hands-on report here.

CLIQ 

This evening Motorola hosted an event for press where we were finally able to get some hands on time with the new Motorola CLIQ. I think it is safe to say that the CLIQ is the best phone that Motorola has made in recent memory.

I'd rate the hardware at a solid 7 out of 10. I am not the biggest fan of sideways sliders, but the demo units Motorola had on hand were solid. They felt well put together.

CLIQ Hardware  

The CLIQ is a sizable phone — any device that boasts a 3.1-inch touch screen ain't gonna be small. Even so, it feels pretty good in the hand. It is comfortable to hold, and the hardware certainly didn't get in the way of using the phone. The three buttons on the front (menu, select, back) all felt good and had decent travel and feedback. The volume toggle on the side felt ok, not super great.

The slider mechanism that controls the slide was perhaps the one real weak spot of the device. I am willing to give Motorola some wiggle room here, however, as we only got to see pre-production units.

The keyboard is wide and spacious, and the keys had plenty of contour so it was easy to tell as you moved your thumbs from key to key. I felt that the D-pad to the left of the keyboard was a bit superfluous, but it worked well. I am glad to note that the CLIQ has a 3.5mm headset jack and supports microSD cards up to 32GB.

In all, the hardware gets the basics right, and lets users interact with the phone with no issues.

The real news from Motorola isn't really the hardware, but the MOTOBLUR software and services that Motorola has developed on top of the Android platform.

Android has its strengths and weaknesses, but Motorola was able to really capitalize on the platforms strengths — which are deep integration with the mobile web.

CLIQ User Interface  

MOTOBLUR is similar to Palm's Synergy (on webOS), whereby it collects all the contact information that users have spread across multiple email systems and social networks and integrates it into one, powerful contact management application. But Motorola takes it all a step further. A big step further.

Rather than simply pile a person's multiple points of contact in one place, it brings all the power of social networking together in a way that allows users to interact with their friends, family and colleagues from practically any place on the phone.

What does this mean? Well, for example, if a person calls you, not only will you see their name and profile picture, but you'll also their most recent status updates and messages displayed on the screen. This gives you a flavor of what that person has been up to and reminds you of things they may have sent as they are calling.

Further, when scrolling through the contact application, you can sort by those who have most recently updated their status, alphabetically, or via the most recent communications they've sent you. From a contact card, it is easy to respond to a person through which whatever medium they most recently contacted you.

There is also the Happenings feed. Happenings collects all the updates submitted by your contacts — whether it be Facebook, MySpace, Twitter, etc. — and streams them in a live feed directly onto a homescreen widget. If social networking is your thing, this is the phone to get it done. I've seen no other platform rise to the challenge presented by multiple social networks so well.

Other things Motorola has brought to Android are new widgets for collected news, weather and other nuggets of information directly to the homescreen.

In using the CLIQ, we noticed no lag, and no other serious or minor performance issues. Everything flowed smoothly and launched faster than I've seen launch on other Android hardware.

In sum, Motorola has done a really good job here. The hardware may not be an absolute home run, but it's pretty good. Now that Motorola has proven that it still has some user interface chops, I think we can start to see light at the end of the dark tunnel that Motorola has been traveling through for so long.

Video Tour 

Here is an in-depth look at the MOTOROLA CLIQ and MOTOBLUR. You can watch the video here:

Or visit YouTube for more viewing and sharing options.

Motorola Liveblog 

Keynote  

1:13 PM: And that concludes the liveblog.

12:54 PM: Keynote over, time for fireside chat with Ohm, Jha and Google's Andy Rubin.

12:52 PM: It has a 3G, Wi-Fi, 5MP camera, autofocus, video capture at 30FPS, 3.5mm headset jack, html Google browser, and Google services.

12:50 PM: The Click is a sideways slider that has a full QWERTY keyboard.

12:49 PM: The Click will be available sometime during the fourth quarter. Two colors, black and white.

12:48 PM: Motorola Click - The First Phone with Social Skills.

12:47 PM: T-Mobile's CTO is on stage now, talking about how the Motorola Click is going to advance T-Mobile's Android line-up.

12:45 PM: T-Mobile to sell the Motorola Click, its first ANdroid phone. Barely any applause for the introduction.

12:45 PM: Incoming call for Jha, with the T-Mobile Ringtone. Gee, I wonder what that means.

12:43 PM: Can see name, phone number, picture, and recent social networking updates. Can tie it to mapping info.

12:43 PM: MotoBlur lets users post to Facebook, email, IM, SMS, any medium to send a message, however the user wishes.

12:42 PM: Jha pokes subtly at Steve Jobs: Do you think it is too cliche to wear a black turtleneck?

12:41 PM: Streams all incoming messages to the homescreen messaging widget. Lets users focus on what they want to say, not the medium through which it is said.

12:41 PM: MOTOBLUR acts similar to Palm's Synergy platform in that it combines the information from multiple social networks, address books and services into a single stream on the device. It will sync information in the cloud, allowing for seamless backups, even if phones are lost.

12:38 PM: It offers updates, backups, cloud storage, entire life in a single stream. MotoBlur, everything on a single phone. Syncs contacts, posts, streams, etc all together.

12:37 PM: Motorola announces MotoBlur, a new way to tie everything together in one stream: Facebook, MySpace, Twitter, etc.

12:37 PM: We have multiple address books, multiple networks, multiple services. Motorola wants to tie it all together.

12:36 PM: Jha says social networking is an important push. Twitter, Facebook, MySpace, etc. About 50% of Internet traffic is to social networking sites.

12:35 PM: Motorola to announce one Android phone today, and another phone in the coming weeks. They will be available by the holidays.

12:34 PM: Jha believes consumers are overwhelmed by choice. Too many features. Going to offer a portfolio of devices that are designed with the consumer in mind.

12:33 PM: Android is necessary to let Motorola give its customers all the functionality they want, these days.

12:33 PM: Jha says there's no common definition for smartphones. His definition includes a high rex display, 3G, 4G or Wifi, over the air software updates, media, messaging, html browser, good voice quality, graphical OS. Jha says that Android can deliver this.

12:31 PM: Mobilizing the Internet may present the biggest opportunity today in technology, according to Jha. Especially in emerging markets.

12:30 PM: Mobile internet access has increased 107% year-over-year. 4.7 billion people on earth are covered with mobile services.

12:29 PM: Jha starts talking about wireless broadband. It's about getting at least 500Kbps of connectivity to multiple devices across a region at once. What does that mean for users? Means a fast connection to information they want. News, friends, family, coworkers, network.

12:28 PM: Dr. Sanjay Jha is taking the stage. Warm applause.

Here is Phone Scoop's liveblog of the keynote given by Motorola CEO Sanjay Jha at the GigaOM Mobilize Conference in San Francisco. Jha is expected to announce Motorola's Android handset strategy and new devices.

view article organized across multiple pages

About the author, Eric M. Zeman:

Eric has been covering the mobile telecommunications industry for 17 years at various print and online publications. He studied at Rutgers Newark and University of Kentucky, and has a degree in writing. He likes playing guitar, attending concerts, listening to music, and driving sports cars.

Comments

This forum is closed.

This forum is closed.

coldsmoke

Sep 10, 2009, 3:01 PM

Wow... a "non-event" event

Maybe I don't understand something about the click, but it seems like another look alike Android phone. I was hoping they would step outside the box and do something exciting and riveting. I sure hope Motorola isn't depending too heavily on this phone pulling them out of the slump. 😳
Well, it's their first Android phone, which is a big deal, and it actually seems to be a nice one, with decent hardware, and software enhancements to rival HTC's widely-praised Sense and Palm's Synergy. For a first try, after a couple years of almost ...
(continues)
...
Seems like a pretty big deal to me.
Thats because it is another android phone. Like it or not the android OS the next gen operating system for moile phones and it's Motorola's only hope of turning things around. HTC, Samsung and Motorola are all getting rid of crappy windows mobile soft...
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X3R0B4R5

Sep 11, 2009, 1:18 AM

so hear is my question...

or questions...
first off, does it have an accelerometer? it was never mentioned and it seemed like the moto guy showing it off was sure to slide that bad boy out every time he put it on its side. while i'm on the side issue, what about a soft keyboard? i'm almost sure that him not using it was more an issue of showing off the full qwerty it comes with and the soft is just part of android and all, but still.
next question is, half vga? i know there was another soon-to-be android phone that was something along the lines of half vga and it caused issues with some of apps, in fact, it didn't even have a link to the app store due to it.
and, although i'm sure more will arise, my final question for the evening, internal memory, how much?
ove...
(continues)
As far as the accelerometer haven't heard anything about it but they would be stupid not to put one in. And I know Android 1.5 has an on screen keyboard so it will probably use that unless motorola made their own like HTC.
 
 
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