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Motorola L7 Unlocked Quadband Camera Phone (Gold) MOTOROLA

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  • Regular Price: $199.00
  • Special Price: $59.99
  • Stock: In stock
  • Availability:Same Day Shipping
  • Condition: Brand New, Unlocked
  • Item Code:MOT-L7-GD
  • Model:MOTL7
  • Band:GSM 850/900/1800/1900
  • Compatibility :
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View FileMotorola L7 User Manual Guide    Size: (3 MB)

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Product Description

After the phenomenal success of the Motorola Razr, slim is definitely in. The trendy phone was the top-selling mobile in 2005, and it spawned both a long-awaited successor for Verizon, the Razr V3c, and a near-identical imitator, the Samsung MM-A900. But don't think Motorola is content with just one good year. The company is now aiming at a total cell phone design revolution with the new candy bar version of the Razr, the Motorola Slvr L7. Resembling an open Razr that has been hammered flat, the Slvr L7's sexy profile speaks for itself, but its brains and brawn don't quite measure up to its beauty. The Slvr L7 has a VGA camera, the integrated memory is low, and there's no support for EDGE. Also, though the Slvr sports iTunes, as found on the ho-hum Motorola Rokr E1, it's held to the same annoying restrictions found on the previous handset. Available exclusively through Cingular, the Motorola Slvr L7 is well priced at $199. Although the design of the original iTunes phone (the Rokr E1) was decidedly dull, the Motorola Slvr L7 sports a form factor that's just the opposite. Stylish and amazingly thin, the Slvr L7 sports a soothing black and dark-gray color scheme that should please even the most ardent slave to fashion. At 1.9 by 4.5 by 0.45 inches, it's just a hair slimmer than the Razr, but the candy bar design makes it nominally taller. Also, at 3.4 ounces (compared with the 2.5-ounce Razr), the Slvr L7 is easily portable, but it feels more solidly built than its sibling. The trim form factor does have one drawback, however. It can be difficult to get a good grip on the Slvr L7, which makes it somewhat awkward to hold against your ear for long periods of time.

The Motorola Slvr L7's 262,000-color, 176x122-pixel display measures 1.8 inches diagonally, making it large enough for the phone's size. It's great for scrolling through the menus, viewing photos, and playing games, yet it does disappear in direct light. Be warned that it also catches finger smudges easily.

The navigation toggles below the Motorola Slvr L7's display are adequately sized but sparse in number, with just two soft keys, a five-way toggle, a menu control, and dedicated Talk and End buttons. Unlike with the Razr, there are no shortcuts for the camera or Web browser next to the toggle, nor is there a dedicated Back button--an annoying omission. The toggle can be set as a shortcut to four user-defined functions, but it would have been nice to have more options. What's more, there's no dedicated iTunes button, as there was on the Rokr. Instead, one of the soft keys serves this function but only when you're in standby mode.

Since the toggle and all other navigation controls are set flush with the surface of the Motorola Slvr L7, using them did take some practice. Our finger slipped around a few times, but we got the hang of it eventually. The small, blue-backlit keypad buttons also took acclimation. Closely similar to the Razr family in that they resemble a single flat touch pad, they lack the Motorola Razr V3c's textured lines separating the individual rows. The numbers are raised ever so slightly, but it's not enough to dial by feel. What's more, not only are the keys slippery, but there's also no satisfying click when pressing a button. So if you're thinking of buying the Slvr L7, you may want to give it a test-drive first.

On the back of the Motorola Slvr L7, you'll find the camera lens (sans a flash or a self-portrait mirror), as well as the single speaker for music and speakerphone calls. The lack of stereo speakers on a music phone is puzzling, and its placement on the handset's rear face means you'll want to place the phone facedown for best results when using the speaker; however, be careful not to scratch the display. On the left spine are a volume rocker and a camera button. Unlike with many other camera phones, the latter control opens the camera menu rather than activating the camera itself. On the right spine, you'll find a voice-dialing control, as well as the USB port for the included headset and cable needed to load music on the phone. By utilizing the included adapter, you can use your own 3.5mm headset if you wish. Farther down is the TransFlash card slot--an especially welcome addition to such a slim phone--and a 512MB card is included.
Motorola was clear that the Slvr L7 is a "design first" phone. Granted, the design alone should win the Slvr many fans, but we're not letting Motorola off the hook so easily. In fact, the feature set doesn't complement the Slvr L7's flashy form factor, and it left us a bit disappointed overall. But before we get to the show offerings, first things first. The phone book holds 1,000 contacts, each of which can take six phone numbers, an e-mail address, a postal address, and a birthdate; the SIM card holds an additional 250 names. You can assign contacts to caller groups, pair them with a picture for photo caller ID, or assign them a ring tone from the phone's small collection--just 7 polyphonic and 10 monophonic tones. Other features include a vibrate mode, voice dialing, a calculator, a datebook, an alarm clock, text and multimedia messaging, PC syncing, and a WAP 2.0 wireless Web browser. Like the Rokr E1, the Slvr L7 comes with Bluetooth and a speakerphone, but these extras quickly lose their luster. The Bluetooth functionality is limited to voice calls, and you can activate the speakerphone only after you've made a call. Another downside is you still don't get an FM radio--a strange omission for a music phone.

The iTunes experience on the Motorola Slvr L7 is nearly identical to that of the Rokr. iPod owners will instantly recognize the overall interface. Opening the player takes you straight to the music library, where you can organize songs by playlist, artist, album, and name. When playing music, the phone goes into standby mode while displaying onscreen soft controls and album art. Settings include shuffling of songs or albums, as well as repeating one or all but no equalizers. Transferring between the cell phone and the music player is seamless, as music automatically stops when you receive a call. Hang up and press the dedicated iTunes key, and your song picks up again from the point you left off. There's also an airplane mode that lets you listen to your tunes in flight with the cell phone turned off.

The Motorola Slvr L7 is the second iTunes phone, so we were hoping we wouldn't see any of the irritating limitations found on the Rokr. Yet to our disappointment, they're still here. You can download songs only through the included USB cable. There's no way to transfer iTunes music wirelessly, you can't listen to music through a Bluetooth headset, and you can't use iTunes tracks as ring tones. The strict 100-song storage limit hasn't changed either, and all songs must be saved on the TransFlash card, assuming you haven't filled it up with a lot of other data. And forget the idea of storing more music on the phone's skimpy 5MB of integrated memory--it just isn't possible. So in other words, don't get too excited about circumventing the inadequate 100-song cap. Like the Rokr, the Slvr L7 also connects with only one computer at a time. When we tried connecting to a second computer, the Slvr L7, like the Rokr E1, erased all our previously loaded songs.

In addition to the iTunes player, the Motorola Slvr L7 has a separate, generic Motorola-designed MP3 player that supports MP3, MIDI, WAV, AAC, and DRM AAC files. The interface is as bare bones as players get, but it accepts downloads via Bluetooth, or you can buy tunes from Cingular for around $2.49 each. You can use stored tracks as ring tones, but since this second player isn't connected to the iTunes player in any way, you can't transfer files back and forth. Once again, the Slvr L7's meager integrated memory will limit you to about 20 songs.

The Motorola SLVR L7 is Motorola's candybar-style incarnate of the massively popular RAZR. Pronounced "sliver", it is actually thinner than the RAZR! The directional control key also has a much more satisfying click. This is a Quad-Band GSM phone that works internationally. (North American customers please note: you must be a Cingular, T-mobile, Rogers, or Fido subscriber to use GSM phones.)

       There is integrated Bluetooth and a VGA camera. The SLVR L7 has an integrated miniSD-slot, so you can record photos and short videos to a miniSD card for easy transfer to a PC. The SLVR L7 comes in black. (There is a related phone, called SLVR L6, that has no miniSD slot.)








 



Features:

GSM: 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
Technologies: GSM Unlocked: Yes
Bluetooth Enabled: Yes
GPRS: Yes
Dimensions & Weight: Width: 1.93 inches
Height: 4.47 inches
Thickness: 0.45 inches
Weight: 3.03 oz.
Display Type: Large - Color
Power: Talk Time: Up to 6 hrs
Standby Time: Up to 420 hrs
Phonebook Entries: 1000
Extras: Games, Calendar, Alarm, Calculator
Internal Display: 176 x 220 pixel, Up to 260k TFT display and 9 Lines of
Text
Integrated VGA camera with 4x zoom and video capture and playback
Camera resolution: VGA (640 x 480)
Auto-timed option & Self Portrait Viewfinder
22 Khz Polyphonic Speaker (support MIDI, MP3 ringtone)
MOTOMIXERâ„¢ (Remixable MIDI ringtones)
Preload 3-in-1 Themes
(wallpapers, screensavers, ringtones) & download slot
Preload games & downloadable space for 3D Java game
User-customisable Softkey Functions, Main Menu and Shortcuts
Video and audio player (MP3/MPEG4)
Motorola Digital Audio Player
Video capture (Max. Length: 30 seconds using memory card)
Voice-Memo
Picture ID and Ringer ID
Ringer Profiles
Caller Group Profiling (Ringer & Icon)
Picture Phonebook: 3D Quick Contact
Time and Date Stamp
VibraCall®
Voice-activated Dialling
Built-In Hands-Free Speakerphone
Bluetooth® Compatible
MMS (Picture / photo + text + sound)
EMS 5.0
SMS Chat one-to-one
Predictive Text: iTapâ„¢ with T9 emulation
Quick Messages
Group SMS
Instant Messaging Support: (Wireless Village) 1.1 embedded client
Email: Pop3, SMTP, IMAP4
PC Sync
EDGE for high speed data exchange (177 kbps)
High-Speed Data Technology
GPRS class 10 (32 - 48 kbps)
WAP Browser: WAP 2.0
Connectivity: CE bus (USB / Bluetooth®)
Handsfree speaker
PTT with icon presence indicators for one-touch connections
Nickel plated copper alloy chemically etched keypad
Internal Memory: 5MB (Up to an additional 512 MB with a removable memory card)
Expansion Card Type: TransFlash / microSD
Colour: Gold

 

 









Motorola Phone Support


Support Home Download the latest software and manuals, view interactive training and find answers to your FAQs.


Software Update: Keep your device at its best.


Connect my Bluetooth: Find how to pair your device with your handset and get answers to your Bluetooth questions.


Software & Drivers: Get USB drivers for your phone, access to software and Downloads FAQ's and information.


Manuals:  Download the manual for your phone here.


FAQs:  Motorola  customers' most Frequently Asked Questions.


Product Safety: Helping to keep you safe!


Contact Us: Contact the Motorola Helpdesk on 0870 9010555 for Mobile Device and Accessory support.


Operator (Internet & MMS Setting): Need to get access to WAP or MMS settings? Get them sent directly to your phone.


Repair Information: How and where to get your Motorola phone repaired.




Specification

Manufacturer MOTOROLA
Model MOTL7
Availability Same Day Shipping
Condition Brand New, Unlocked
Form Factor Candybar
GSM Network Edge, GPRS, GSM
Service 900, 1800, 1900, 850
Bluetooth v1.2
Infrared Without Infrared
Wi-Fi (WLAN) Without Wi-Fi (WLAN)
USB With USB
Fax/Data Without Fax/Data
Main Display Color TFT
Color Display 262.144 colors
Resolution 176x220 pixels
External Display Without External Display
Internal Memory 11mb
Storage Types MicroSD
External Memory (UPTO) 1gb
Memory Slots 1
Battery Lithium ion 820 mah
Standby Time 350 hours
Talk Time 6.5 hours
Vibrate Alert With Vibrate Alert
Photo ID Without Photo ID
Ringtones mp3, polyfone
Camera With Camera
Megapixels 0.3 megapixels
Maximum Photo Resolution 640x480 pixels
Digital Zoom Without Digital Zoom
Optical Zoom Without Optical Zoom
Auto Focus Without Auto Focus
Flash Without Flash
Recording Video With Recording Video
Second (front) Camera Without Second (front) Camera
FM Radio Without FM Radio
Java With Java
Video Player n/a
Add Ringtones With Add Ringtones
Organiser Calculator, Calendar, Reminders
Video Call Without Video Call
SMS With SMS
MMS With MMS
T9 Text Function With T9 Text Function
E-mail With E-mail
Internet Browsing Without Internet Browsing
Package Contents
Motorola SLVR L7 Gold
OEM Data Cable
Headset
Lithium Ion Battery
AC Travel Charger
User Manual  
Dimensions 4.5x1.9x0.5 in.
Color Gold
GPS Without GPS

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Motorola SLVR L7 Gold
OEM Data Cable
Headset
Lithium Ion Battery
AC Travel Charger
User Manual  

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