MotoKRZR K1
The MotoKRZR K1 sports a 2 megapixel camera as well as the following features:
* high gloss glass face
* display: 176×220 resolution
* Bluetooth 2.0 support with A2DP
* microSD memory expansion
* MotoSYNC support
* Screen 3 standby screen
* speaker independent voice command and dialing
The K1 is expected to be available later in 2006.
Via Mobileburn.
Motorola MotoKRZR K1 Reviews
Stuff reviews the Motorola Motokrzr K1 and writes, “Touching the scales at a scanty 95g, the Motokrzr K1, which uses the Vodafone network, is packed with features that would make other phones blush: video capture and playback, a music player that supports midi, MP3, AAC and AAC+ formats, speech-activated commands, a 2 megapixel camera with an 8x zoom, Bluetooth wireless technology, hands-free speakerphone, expandable memory using a microSD card. The phone isn’t 3G capable, but for me, that isn’t a problem.”
Pocket-lint reviews the Motorola MOTOKRZR K1 and writes, “And then you start using the phone and the Moto interface seems to let it all down again. While some effort has been put into improving the interface, Motorola still have a long way to get to reach the usability of Nokia, Sony Ericsson and Samsung. Graphics look like something seen on the Windows 3.1 operating system back in the early-90s before Windows 95 and there is no real dedicated music or camera buttons, so you are left fumbling around the menu system trying to find thm. In fact we only eventually found them by wrongly pressing the d-pad.”
CNET reviews the Motorola KRZR K1 and writes, “Unlike the Krzr, which supports Verizon’s 3G EV-DO network, the Krzr K1m taps out at 2.5G EDGEG networks. As a result, the phone is not optimized for streaming video or for downloading large files quickly. Also, instead of a full service music player capable of downloading tracks on the go, the K1 offers a rather generic Motorola music player instead. Though it works fine and supports MP3, AAC, and AAC+ files, the interface is a bit spartan, and the feature set is limited beyond playlist creation and repeat and shuffle modes. You must load music on the phone via Bluetooth or a USB cable.”