Motorola L6
SPECIFICATIONS:-
General
2G Network GSM 900 / 1800 / 1900
GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 - US version Announced 2005, 1Q
Status Discontinued
Size
Dimensions 113 x 49 x 10.9 mm, 56 cc
Weight 86 g
Display
Type CSTN, 65K colors
Size 128 x 160 pixels, 2.0 inches
- Scratch
-resistant surface
- Downloadable screensavers, wallpapers
Sound
Alert types
-Vibration
-Downloadable polyphonic, MP3 ringtones
Speakerphone Yes
Memory
Phonebook 500 entries
Photo call Call records 10 dialed, 10 received, 10 missed calls
Internal 10 MB
Card slot No
Data
GPRS Class 10 (4+1/3+2 slots), 32 - 48 kbps
HSCSD No
EDGE No
3G No
WLAN No
Bluetooth Yes, v1.2
Infrared port No
USB Yes, miniUSB
Camera
Primary VGA, 640x480 pixels
Video Yes
Secondary No
Features
Messaging
-SMS
-EMS
-MMS
-Instant Messaging
Browser
WAP 2.0/xHTML
Radio No
Games Yes + downloadable
Colors Silver
GPS No
Java Yes, MIDP 2.0
- Push to Talk
- T9
- Organizer
Battery
Standard battery, Li-Ion 820 mAh
Stand-by Up to 345 h
Talk time Up to 5 h 50 min
REVIEWS:-
As we stated earlier, the Motorola Slvr L6 has a comfortable selection of midrange features. Casual cell phones users will appreciate the Bluetooth, speakerphone, and Motorola Screen3 technology, but more hard-core users will lament the lack of a music player and a high-resolution camera. We'll review the essentials first, however. The 500-contact phone book is adequate, and there's room in each entry for six phone numbers, an e-mail address, a postal address, and a birth date; 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 any of 24 polyphonic ring tones. The phone also supports MP3 ring tones. Other basic features include a vibrate mode, a mini-USB port, a calculator, a date book, and an alarm clock. Messaging features are plentiful, with support for text, enhanced, and multimedia messaging. You also get instant messaging for AOL, Yahoo, and ICQ platforms. The Slvr L6 isn't a business phone by any means, but it has a couple of offerings that road warriors should find useful. Not only is there full Bluetooth, a speakerphone, and voice dialing, the Slvr L6 also supports PC syncing and e-mail. And as we said earlier, while the phone is capable of supporting PTT services, Cingular has not activated the L6 for its PTT network.
Like the Motorola V557, the Slvr L6 features Motorola's Screen3 Web-browsing technology (see the V557 review for a full description), which greatly improves the WAP 2.0 browsing experience.
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
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