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Hardware

Motorola's Legendary RAZR Flip Phone Is Making a Comeback (engadget.com) 135

An anonymous reader shares an Engadget article: The year was 2004, and Motorola had just announced what was then an insanely thin flip phone, the RAZR V3. It was -- and still is -- a head-turner, and eventually over 130 million units were sold in total. Such were the glorious days of Motorola. Twelve years later, the now Lenovo-owned brand appears to be prepping a relaunch of this legendary model, according to its teaser video of a nostalgic walkthrough at a high school.The teaser is available on YouTube. Nice of Motorola to try doing something different from most of its rivals. However, a flip phone -- with a tiny display and those buttons (assumption) -- may not have much of practical case in 2016.
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Motorola's Legendary RAZR Flip Phone Is Making a Comeback

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  • I know the RAZR was far more popular but I thought the design of the RIZR was superior. With the RIZR I could always see all of the display, and the keypad slid out from underneath when I needed it. The biggest downside of it was that for some odd reason Motorola decided that the keys on the RIZR should literally be stickers, which would at times slip right off.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by SeaFox ( 739806 )

      One big advantage of a flip-phone is built-in screen protection for when you have it in your pocket with other objects potentially.
      I never used a flip-phone back in the day, because the audio quality was lower than candy bar handsets (because of the thinner speaker diaphragms needed to fit the thin earpiece area) and lower battery life (because the body didn't have to fold in half, a candy-bar could have a much longer battery cell on the back).

    • I don't know what phone I had at the time, but I recall being horrified at how poor the sound quality was on a RAZR phone when I borrowed one.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    those over 30, want a phone not a tease box iPhone.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Hipsters will snatch these up like they're going out of style.

      • by olsmeister ( 1488789 ) on Saturday May 21, 2016 @01:52PM (#52156241)
        Someone just needs to make a $25 gutless version of this that connects via bluetooth to the iPhone in the hipsters' pocket.
      • like they're going out of style

        and they will, really fast.

    • by WarJolt ( 990309 )

      You'd like to give your senile grandma a simple phone. What they call a phone doesn't have a screen. The thing is there are far better choices. At&t advertises the SpareOne Emergency Phone for this reason.

    • Re:Old people (Score:4, Interesting)

      by hey! ( 33014 ) on Saturday May 21, 2016 @01:52PM (#52156239) Homepage Journal

      Well, yes, because battery life trumps everything for us.

      What I'd really like is a flip phone with a replaceable battery that can also serve as a mobile access point.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Sounds about right. Then I can use whatever tablet I want when I want and still just carry the phone when I'm going light.

      • Well, yes, because battery life trumps everything for us.

        Sounds like you want an Android phone. In Ultra low power mode you can make and receive phone calls, text messages, and you get close to 2 weeks battery life.

        Best of all push a button and you get your mobile accesspoint, just don't expect the battery to make it through to the end of the day while doing so.

        • by hey! ( 33014 )

          That's indeed what I have, but (a) ultra low power mode doesn't allow you to use it as an access point, (b) you can't swap out batteries to ensure network connection and (c) it's actually inconvenient to carry a large converged device AND a tablet.

          • Sounds like a bad choice of device. There's no reason android devices need to be large, and there's no reason android devices don't have swappable batteries. Shop around a bit.

            But yes you won't get a mobile access point while in low power mode on any phone I've seen.

    • Well, there was that 'kid' in the video with an '06 varsity jacket on. Is 28 old enough?

  • by jddj ( 1085169 ) on Saturday May 21, 2016 @11:32AM (#52155637) Journal

    I'm tired of being distracted every minute of the day, and tracked endlessly by everyone.

    I'd think about one. And take the battery out when I don't want to be tracked at all.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I just switched back to using an old Nokia dumb phone, I have an ipad mini with 4g when I want data on the go. It's kind of a nice combo really

      • by sims 2 ( 994794 ) on Saturday May 21, 2016 @11:50AM (#52155705)

        I have a samsung convoy 3 and an ipad 2. I need my phone to work as a phone more than anything else.

        Verizon is planning on retiring their 2g and 3g networks in 2020-2021 yet its 2016 now and afaik they do not have a single dumb cellphone that works on their 4G network.

        • Why do you need a dumb phone when you need a phone to work as a phone?

          What's important to you, calls and battery life? Most modern android handsets come with ultra low power mode that give you all the features of your dumbphone including the multiple week battery life, and best of all if you get in a pickle where only the mighty internet can help you then you have access to that again at the push of a button.

          • by Reziac ( 43301 ) *

            What's important to me is that the hardware is small enough to not be distracting in a pocket, and that it's not vulnerable to the dings and dust of outdoor work. Hence I use a $12 flip phone. It has decent battery life and does the job, and if it does get busted it's cheap to replace.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I hear phones are starting to have RFID strips and readers in them; If so that makes it possible for a connected/powered phone to record when it walks by a phone w/o battery in it; and I suppose relay the phone w/o batteries position/ID.

      Best phone shape ever made, imo the motorola Droid3 xt862... slide out 4 row keyboard, USB, HDMI, removable battery and microSD slot.. The hardware was buggy forcing reboot every 24-96 hours but the perfect shape.. Would pay a fortune for the same "phone" with x86 processor

    • Heh, you and me both, friend.

      In all seriousness, I'm still using the RAZR V9 I bought years ago. The outside display has a dead spot in it just over one of the touchscreen buttons (this damage is recent), and the outside glass is cracked, and the rubber coating recently peeled off the battery cover, but it still works fine as a phone, and that's all I need. I still can't justify the expense to purchase or operate a smartphone, especially with what a swisscheese they are so far as security goes. I'd welcome
  • by Anonymous Coward

    My mom wants a cell phone that has decent battery life, makes and receives phone calls, is thin and nothing else. She loved her old Razr. Take a guess what she'll want when she sees this?

    • by unrtst ( 777550 )

      I'd agree but, assuming this thing isn't as dumb as the old phone (it'll probably be running android), it's probably going to have just as shitty a battery life as any other android phone, possibly worse.

      If they manage to do it right, I'll be tempted to get one, but I won't hold me breath.

      • by Etcetera ( 14711 ) on Saturday May 21, 2016 @12:15PM (#52155811) Homepage

        Strictly speaking, simply running Android doesn't mean it *has* to be the smartphone we all know and hate.

        Japan, for various reasons, caught on relatively late to the smartphone craze and has had a number of flip style phones that you'd swear are BREW, and look pretty close to the late-model LG feature phones (Voyager, etc) circa 2010, but actually use an Android OS -- simply without all the Google stuff actively on top of it.

        One example: http://www.kyoex.com/sharp-504sh-aquos-keitai-android-5-1-flip-phone-unlocked/ [kyoex.com]

      • by Anonymous Coward

        I use my Galaxy S1 as a dumbphone (2G standby only, no data/wifi/bt/gps), and get about 7-10 days from a charge. With the original 5 year old battery.
        If you want better, the Xperia Z3 Compact gets 38 days of 3G standby (according to Sony).
        You want battery life, then don't use the extra "smart" functions that drain the battery.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • How about you get any android phone with an ultra low power mode function. Then at least she can have everything she wants, and on the off chance that she may be stuck somewhere and need to do a quick google she has that ability too.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    My Palm Pre was perfect, but I cannot buy a decent phone like it any more.

    Why do manufacturers refuse to make capable "small" ( i.e. non-phablet, 4" or smaller screen ) phones ?

    The Sony Z3 Compact is almost the only player in this area, I do not understand why.

    • How about the Samsung S3 mini?
      • by erice ( 13380 )

        How about the Samsung S3 mini?

        It is not a modern small phone. It is mostly just an old phone.

        The screen resolution is several generations behind flag ship (800x480).
        The OS is stuck at 4.x, two generations below current.

    • I still have mine and my wife's Pre in a drawer. I keep it to remind me what has been lost.
      • What I liked most of mine (Palm Pre and HP Pre3) wasn't as mush the size as the physical keyboard and the wonderful card-based/touch-based UI.
        (apparently so good that even iOS and Android are currently attempting pale copies of it).

        I dont appreciate the Android UI, it mostly reminds me of a cluttered windows desktop (with dozens of icon).

        Jolla's SailfishOS (different kind of cards, and another way to do touch-based UI) is the closest thing to come nearly webOS's UI's usability.
        (My main gripe is that it stil

    • WHat about the iphone SE?

  • Why not add a touchscreen? For that matter, make the keypad a touchscreen too. Now that would be a head-turner.

  • Legend has it... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by jeffb (2.718) ( 1189693 ) on Saturday May 21, 2016 @11:49AM (#52155695)

    There was a time when several generations of people lived with phones that had no screens at all. In fact, some of those people still walk among us, although they may move more slowly than they once did.

    There are some people who prefer to use a phone just for talking (and, strange though it may seem, listening). Sure, they skew older, but you're kind of dumb to overlook the segment completely.

    • Re:Legend has it... (Score:4, Informative)

      by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Saturday May 21, 2016 @02:14PM (#52156337)

      >"There was a time when several generations of people lived with phones that had no screens at all. In fact, some of those people still walk among us,"

      You must be REALLY young. Just without screens??

      There are quite a few people walking around (and just fine too) who for many years had NO CELL PHONES AT ALL not just as children, but as adults. Yep. I had even graduated college before having one of those new-fangled, talk-only, screenless, pocket cell-phones.

      Imagine a world where you really could be untrackable and unreachable. Where you had no constant beeping or messages. Where there were no distractions while you were thinking or reading or lounging. Where you could eat dinner out without annoying phones ringing and text tones, and people taking photos of you without your permission. Where you could have a conversation, in person, with someone... without being rudely interrupted several times yourself or by them looking at a stupid device. Where you could drive a car and reasonably expect that other drivers were paying attention to only the road. It existed.

      In some ways it was bad. In others, it was quite good.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        I think you missed the point of the post you are replying to. How you got more upvotes than he did I will never understand.

      • You must be REALLY young. Just without screens??

        ...

        Imagine a world where you really could be untrackable and unreachable. ... Where you could drive a car and reasonably expect that other drivers were paying attention to only the road. It existed.

        You must be REALLY naive then. People stopped paying attention to the road as soon as they had anyone else around, or lipstick or razors or a crossword or a billboard... arguably the biggest lesson cars can teach us is that people are really distractible when doing incredibly dangerous activities that have become mundane.

        In some ways it was bad.

        Yeah, like the whole being out of touch in emergency situations thing...

      • Oh, you're good. Just dangling the notion of "untrackable and unreachable", ideas that will appeal to some modern readers. If you'd instead started talking about "telephone cords", everyone's eyes would have glazed over, and you'd have lost them.

  • I bet it's a full on re-imagining of the RAZR, which is sort of cool but mostly sad. The thing I miss most is the 10 day battery life, and I doubt a micro-thin Android rebake is gonna bring that back.
  • it was a quick and easy way to show folks (especially girls) that you could drop a ton of money on a phone. Basically a veblen good. Take that away and it's just outdated tech. Nostalgia maybe? I don't see that going very far.
    • by Junta ( 36770 )

      Well, we just have to see what in the world they are teasing (if anything). One *hopes* that if they are trying to declare a device as game changing as the RAZR was, they have something meaningfully interesting up their sleeve rather than something simply banking on nostalgia. Some technology is possible to make some interesting things, will see if motorola returns to leadership and actually releases something first.

  • by willoughby ( 1367773 ) on Saturday May 21, 2016 @12:05PM (#52155749)

    My old black Razr V3 still works fine but the main reason I don't use it anymore is the crappy, weird headset connection. Give me a new model with a 3.5mm headset jack, sell it to me unbranded & unlocked & I'll take it.

    • I had a V3xx with that wacky "through the USB port" headset. I wished it had a 3.5mm jack because it had a fairly nice MP3 player for the time.

      Yeah it has bluetooth...really the V3xx has bluetooth (and 3G), but back then stereo bluetooth headsets with reasonable quality sound for music were more pricey than they are now.

      • Yeah it has bluetooth...really the V3xx has bluetooth (and 3G), but back then stereo bluetooth headsets with reasonable quality sound for music were more pricey than they are now.

        All of those phones have shit bluetooth. I had a couple different RAZRs towards the end of their existence, V300 and V500 before that. All of them skipped while playing mp3s via bluetooth, and only via bluetooth (not via wired headset) where my newer phones all do fine.

    • by antdude ( 79039 )

      My colony's Motorola Razr v3t as well as 2/2015, until we got iPhones.

  • by OzPeter ( 195038 ) on Saturday May 21, 2016 @12:07PM (#52155763)

    I still use my original RAZR flip phone. So original in fact that it was pre-GPS chip (and yes, they do exist). It amuses me when I pull it out and use it and other people see it. And then I point out al the advantages:

    1. Its smaller and lighter than smart phones
    2. I don't have to charge it every day
    3. I can (and do) drop it onto hard surfaces with the only worry being trying to find where the #@$%# battery cover bounced off to

    And sure I could have a computer in my pocket, by why do I need one when I have 5 computers in arms reach and sit in front of one most of the working day? I also have a dedicated GPS in my car.

    • I'm with you. Still use my V750 that has MIL SPEC dust proofing. Charge it approx once a week unless I use it a fair amount. Have a protective case with a clip and drops are almost a non issue. I will be sad when I have to replace this. Hopefully the phone manufacturers AND carriers wise up that there are those of us out there who use their phones as a phone, strange as that may sound, and don't need a battery and data sucking appliance.
    • by dkh ( 125857 )

      Razr v3 was the best phone I've ever had - great form and function.

      Light, durable, easy to carry, a nice feel in your hand. Just a nice piece of engineering.

      I haven't used it in years but its still sitting here ready to go - it makes me question my move to other devices, and makes me a bit sad, every time I catch sight of it.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    The RAZR was good, but for me the most iconic phone has been the Nokia 7110. The thrill of pressing the slide release button was simply unrivalled. The almost dangerous speed that the spring loaded slide came down at clearly said "I'm the boss" to everyone around. Never has answering a phone been so exhilarating.

    While the slide was the main feature, lets not forget the two tone colouring that changed between green and magenta depending on the viewing angle. It was also the first phone with WAP, so you c

    • by Etcetera ( 14711 )

      The RAZR was good, but for me the most iconic phone has been the Nokia 7110. The thrill of pressing the slide release button was simply unrivalled. The almost dangerous speed that the spring loaded slide came down at clearly said "I'm the boss" to everyone around. Never has answering a phone been so exhilarating... At least give us a phone with a slide so I can once again feel the pure exhilaration of pressing that slide release button. I need that in my life!

      If they're smart, they'll do something like this for the 20th Anniversary release of The Matrix.

      Holy sh*t, we're old.

  • I'd rather see ... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by LuxuryYacht ( 229372 ) on Saturday May 21, 2016 @12:12PM (#52155783) Homepage

    a slider phone with:

    Touchscreen, bigger than the n900
    Full QWERTY
    Unlocked bootloader
    u-boot
    Large removable battery
    With all the usual sensors and IO
    As open a firmware stack as possible for the RF.
    FPGA for encryption/decryption

    • by pablo_max ( 626328 ) on Saturday May 21, 2016 @03:50PM (#52156825)

      Having an open RF stack is illegal for a licensed transmitter. The FCC does not allow any changes at all to the conditions to which the device was approved. Small changes can be made via a class 2 permissive change, but allowing you, the user access to change the RF properties is very illegal.
      And with good reason too. You would be surprised to know how much damage to a network just one fucked up phone can cause.

      • Open RF Stack ! = Changes to the conditions to which the device was approved.

        Open means that you can see the source.

        Changes means modifying the binary installed in the device after approval.

        • That would get shot down by an FCC lawyer quicker than you can type "RAZR" and their argument will be that it's like leaving the keys in the ignition. Everyone will have the tools they need to modify the radios and destroy cell networks with just a "do not touch" sticky note attached to it.
  • and that makes it good enough for me. LLAP
  • I bet you the new Moto X will actually be called either the "Moto Razr" or "Moto X Razr"
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Yessss... Tired of soap bar touch screen phones.

    Down side is flip phones will kill the aftermarket repairs for cracked gorilla glass screens on soap touch screen phones :)

  • I have a laptop, a camera, and a GPS, all of which are better stat wise than any smart phone. When I leave the house you can get a hold of me still, but I'm not distracted by my addiction to trolling Facebook political pages. Having the internet at every waking moment is often more of an inconvenience than it's worth, and if I REALLY have to look something up it can usually wait until I get home. The only thing I don't like about it is that everyone just assumes I'm poor, but with a hipster marketing cam

  • I owned one of these and it was great a great phone for its time. I still have it in a box somewhere.

    It had a slick marketing feature in the box design- you pulled a tab on the box and it unfolded up and back, popping the phone up like it was the Hope diamond. The box design probably sold a bunch of them all by itself. You'd pull the tab, the phone would pop up, and people would go, "Ooooh!"

    It was a good phone too, slim, durable, and worked great.

  • If it supports 3G/4G global standards. I'll be losing my (original) RAZR when AT&T drops 2G equipment later this year. I don't need all the garbage that iPhone/Androids have. Particularly with that 'must have data plan' bullshit that carriers pull with 'smartphones'.

  • may not have much of practical case in 2016.

    Submitters can't write, and the editors can't read.

  • see, it's a flip phone. it doesn't need a case.

    (doesn't anyone speak english anymore?)

  • This is great. My dad still uses his V3 and loves it. If it's still as simple to use but with more battery it would be a great "upgrade". I imagine it'll be some form of android, as long as it mimics the original OS it'll be perfect.
  • I took it out and charged it a few weeks ago - I was considering dropping my iPhone 6 plan and just going prepay (AT&T GoPhone $100/year) on the RAZR. It's hard to find a cheap, low data plan these days. But the iPhone 6 on Verizon is a very handy device. I just don't use much data (typically less than 10 mb/month).
  • ... and has a removeable battery. I had flip-phone for many years, and I'm so tired of these oversized "touch-display" bar-phones that are so much less ergonomic to handle.
  • ...why not carry a phone that's just a phone? And incidentally, as small as is practical.

  • I did a brief stint doing software development for Motorola back when the original RAZR was considered "state of the art" and without revealing any company secrets, I can tell you the software stack that ran on those things was garbage and a pain in the ass to work with.

    Lets hope any new RAZR runs on a sane software stack.

  • I carry a Samsung Gusto flip phone, and have for several years now. It does what I need it to do quietly and efficiently. I have to take a laptop and hot spot with me everywhere to cover for work so I don't need, or want a smart phone. I have an in car GPS system, and work pays for the laptop and hotspot so I do quite well with a small well protected flip phone in my pocket.

    http://www.samsung.com/us/mobi... [samsung.com]

  • The RAZR had a terrible habit of crashing the radio software stack while otherwise appearing to be working fine. If you hadn't received any calls or messages for a day or so restarting the phone would bring in a flood of messages and missed call notifications. My RAZR went through the crusher after missing too many important calls, then I bought a Palm Trëo 650 which was probably the best phone I've ever owned.

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