Motorola V400p
At first glance the Motorola V400p looks
a lot like other Motorola clamshell phones on the market,
but the twist is that the V400p is one of
the first phones to support
Push-To-Talk (PTT), which allows low-cost walkie-talkie
style calls to be made to individuals or groups over
the GPRS network.
PTT phones are pretty thin on the ground,
but Motorola have come up with a stylish
mainstream design very similar to their
other V-series clamshells.
Apart from PTT, the V400p is a
quad-band GPRS capable phone, meaning that
it will work pretty much anywhere you can
get a GSM signal.
There's a 176x220 pixel display in 65,000 colours, a
VGA-resolution camera, 5Mb of internal memory, MMS, email, WAP, Java support, MIDI, WAV
and MP3 polyphonic ringtones and a small external display.
You can connect to a PC via a USB cable.
The Motorola V400p measures 86x46x23 mm and
weighs 125 grams, talktime is 3.5 to 7 hours depending
on network, with 5 to 9 days standby. We think that the V400p with PTT will
make a great phone for businesses or where
people need to keep in touch on a regular
basis. Unlike some rival PTT phones, the
Motorola V400p is straightforward and stylish
in the looks department too, which should
widen it's appeal.
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Motorola
V400p Provisional Specifications
|
Available:
|
Q2
2004
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Network:
|
Quad-band
GSM + Push-to-Talk
|
Data:
|
GPRS
|
Screen:
|
176x2200,
65k colours
|
Camera:
|
640x480
pixels
|
Size:
|
Standard
clamshell 86x46x23
/ 125 grams
|
Bluetooth:
|
No
|
Infra-red:
|
Yo
|
Polyphonic:
|
Yes
|
Java:
|
Yes
|
Battery
life:
|
3.5-7
hours talk / 5-9 days standby
|
|
|