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iPhone, Meet Razr: The Ten Most Popular Phones in the Country
I have to admit I was surprised at the iPhone and BlackBerry 8300 series did so well here—the two most popular handsets in the country, going into 2010, are full-fledged smartphones. Also surprising: people still buy Razrs. Razrs! More »First Smartphones, Now Feature Phones: Motorola Leaks More 2009 Handsets
Yesterday's purported renders of Motorola's 2009 smartphone line seemed plausible, but these less adventurous feature phone renders are almost too safe to be fake. Behold, the Son of Razr! More »Moto RAZR Stops Bullet, Saves Man's Life
This may be the first good news Motorola's had in a long while: A feller named RJ Richard down in the New Orleans suburb of St. Tammany Parish was on his lawnmower in his backyard when something struck him hard on the chest. When he pulled his Moto RAZR out of his breast pocket to see if it had been damaged by what he presumed to be a pebble, a damn .45 caliber bullet fell out! Having saved the man's life, the phone fell apart. More »iPhone Passes the RAZR to Become Best Selling Phone in the US This Quarter
Motorola Insider Blame Game: Engineers Shoved Designers Aside
These days, most in-the-know folks would sooner eat glass than carry a Motorola phone. The company has shredded its reputation by failing to address basic interface design issues: freeze-prone software, head-scratching menus, keys that demand Herculean strength. It's baffling that such a venerable company could build such frustrating phones, considering the zillions presumably spent on development. How did Motorola make such a bollocks of its wireless division? Now that the company has annointed new wireless division chief Sanjay Jha, we surveyed former staffers for the inside scoop, as well as their advice on how to right the ship. More »Sprint's New Flip Phones: Sanyo Katana Eclipse and Motorola RAZR VE20
Blurred Photos Show Latest Motorola RAZR VE20 Coming to Sprint
Moto Sues Former Exec For Jumping Ship To Apple
Wired Editor Drops, Destroys RAZR on Live TV
Alas, Poor RAZR, I Knew You Well
Motorola Firing Half its Designers at a UK Facility
Say you're a company that had a hit design about three years ago and have been banking on variations of that spec ever since. What's the best way to improve your designs so that people will buy them and turn your company around? Is it firing half of them at one of your UK facilities? Actually, it probably is. What better way to loosen up entrenched ideas than to get rid of half the people responsible for them, shocking the other half into thinking up something new or face the axe as well? Motorola says in addition to laying off these 50%, it might even close the facility altogether. [The Register]Moto Knocked Out of Handset Business?
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