Featured 

HTC One

Nokia Lumia 620

Samsung ATIV S

Acer W700 Windows 8 tablet

Amazon Kindle Paperwhite

BlackBerry Z10

HTC One X +

Samsung Galaxy Note II

Nexus 4 smartphone

Sony Xperia T

BlackBerry OS 10 Preview

Nokia Lumia 920 Windows Phone

Apple iPad mini

Microsoft Surface Windows RT

iPod Touch (2012)

LG Optimus G

Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon

iOS 6

iPhone 5


Search

Poll


Reviews
 

MacBook Pro with Retina Display

Phosphor World e-Ink Watch

Nexus 7 Tablet

Dell XPS 13 Ultrabook

OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion

Bento 4 for iPad

Nokia Lumia 610

Sony Xperia Ion 

Toshiba Excite 7.7-inch tablet

BlackBerry PlayBook 4G-LTE

Motorola RAZR V

Motorola Atrix HD

Sandisk 64GB Extreme USB Flash Drive

Apple iPad (2012)

ioSafe SoloPro Disaster Proof hard drive

Cygnett Apollo Hybrid iPhone 4 case

Dell XPS 14Z Notebook

OlloClip Quick Connect Lens for iPhone 4

Kogeto dot 360' iPhone lens

FujiFilm X10 Camera

ClamCase Keyboard Case for iPad 2 

Toshiba Satellite Z830 Ultrabook

Nikon CoolPix S1200pj camera

Evolution Robotics Mint Plus Robot Cleaner

Acer S3 Ultrabook 

Freehand Powerstretch 5 Gloves

Kobo Vox Reader

Sony NEX-7 camera

Freehand Powerstretch 5 gloves

Toshiba Satellite Z830 Ultrabook

Acer S3 Ultrabook

Mint Plus Robotic Cleaner

Samsung Galaxy Nexus

HTC Raider

HTC Jetstream Tablet with LTE

LG Optimus LTE smartphone

Panasonic Lumix GF3 M43 Camera

Sandisk Memory Vault 16GB

Forza Motorsport 4

GarageBand for iPhone/iPod

Apple iPhone 4S

Olympus E-PL3 Micro Four Thirds camera

Nokia X7 Symbian Smartphone

Samsung Galaxy S II X Hercules

LG Optimus 2X Android smartphone

16GB Lexar Echo USB ZX backup drive

Kobo Reader Touch Edition

Apple MacBook Air 11-Inch (2011)

Bracketron Back-It iPad Case

Sony Ericsson Xperia mini pro

Samsung Galaxy S II 4G 

Fujifilm XP20 camera

Samsung NPQX411 Notebook

LG Optimus Black Skype Edition

HP TouchPad Tablet

Kobo Reader Touch Edition

Toshiba Camileo BW10 video camera

Otterbox Defender Series 

21" inch iMac with Quad Core i5 processors

HTC Wildfire S

Aviiq SmartCase for iPad 2

Blaq Twitter app for RIM PlayBook

Motorola DEFY smartphone

Samsung Series 9 Notebook

HTC Flyer 7" inch Android Tablet

Fujifilm F550EXR 16 Megapixel GPS camera

Lapdock notebook dock for ATRIX

Motorola ATRIX smartphone

Casio TRYX Camera

BlackBerry PlayBook

Motorola XOOM WiFi Android Tablet

3 Canadian TV iPad apps

Samsung SH100 WiFi enabled camera

Nokia C7 Symbian smartphone

HTC Incredible S smartphone

Samsung NX100 digital camera

TomTom GO 2505 GPS

Kodak Pulse W1030 digital frame

Google Nexus S smartphone

Apple iPad 2

Samsung 650 Series 55-inch HDTV

Samsung Galaxy S Fascinate smartphone

iSkin ProTouch Classic keyboard protector

Lexmark Genesis all-in-one printer

Toshiba Libretto W100 subnotebook

HTC HD7 Windows Phone

Mac App Store

Kinect Adventures on Xbox 360

Toshiba 46WX800U LED 3D HDTV

Incipio Feather Case for MacBook Air

Samsung SF510 Notebook

HP Photosmart eStation C510

Microsoft Kinect

HP Palm Pre 2

MacBook Air 13-inch (2010)

Boomphones headphones

Mophie Juice Pack Air for iPhone 4

Incipio hard case for Samsung Galaxy Tab

Victorinox Flash Flight Alox drive

Kindle 3 Leather Cover

Samsung EX1 10 Megapixel camera

Acer Aspire 13.3 inch notebook

Sony Alpha A55 DSLR

Gran Turismo 5 (PS3)

Sony Bloggie Touch 

XM SkyDock iPod/iPhone adapter

Apple TV (2010)

iPad apps: Aweditorium

HTC Desire Z Android smartphone

Nokia N8 Symbian smartphone

RIM BlackBerry Torch

Motorola i1 push-to-talk Android Phone

LG Optimus 7 Windows Phone

Samsung Galaxy Tab Android Tablet

Toshiba Tecra R700 notebook

Kobo Wireless eReader

HTC Surround

Windows Phone 7 smartphone OS

Netflix streaming video service

 

« Apple to open new retail store in Quebec City | Main | Review: Toshiba Tecra R700 thin and light notebook »
Thursday
Nov112010

Review: Motorola i1 Android powered Push-to-Talk phone

Text and photos by Gadjo Cardenas Sevilla

The Motorola i1 is more rugged that your average celfone, it is clad in tough plastic and the screen is the same industrial grade scratch-proof Gorilla Glass that we’ve seen on premium smartphones. It is  also a military spec handset certified to withstand dust, shock, vibration and blowing rain. All this and it is powered by the Google Android OS.

Push-To-Talk handsets cater to a very specific type of user. Enabling quick communication between workers on the field or businesses that need the flexibility of a phone and the benefits of a closed-frequency network, Motorola’s i1 handheld is a suitably rugged solution that sports Android functionality to boot.

With the i1 handset, Motorola seems to be outfitting even its basic celfones with Android capability. Of course, with a 3.1′ inch screen and the very basic (and very old) Android 1.5 OS variant doesn’t really classify it as a smartphone specially if you consider that 70% of Android handsets sport larger (3.7′ to 4-inch screens and the newer Android 2.1 or 2.2 OS).

The top and bottom of the phone is outfitted with hard, shock absorbent rubber while the back is made of a grippy hard plastic. Still, this isn’t a phone you’d want to drop, the majority (the screen) is covered in glass and asphalt or concrete will shatter it with substantial impact.

Noticeably missing is Motorola’s MotoBlur overlay which has been present in almost all its Android handsets of late, but this isn’t a typical consumer phone so that’s likely why Moto decided to hold back on its Blur initiative this time around.

What the i1 has, however, is a large button on the left side for Push-To-Talk functionality on the iDEN network.

Telus, which sells the Motorola i1 for $150 on a three-year contract or $399 for no contract,  operates three  varied cell phone systems – the iDEN network, the classic CDMA format network, and its newest HSP+ format network that it shares with Bell.

Demand for the iDEN network is consistent and the Telus is committed to supporting it

“We have seen continued success with the introduction of the BlackBerry Curve 8350i and based on the market anticipation and interest, we believe the rugged Motorola i1 will see similar successes,” explains Puja Subrun, Telus’ director of SMB & mobility solutions marketing.

The i1 also offers a 5 Megapixel camera that’s capable of video recording, users also get the benefit of downloading and using older Android apps in the market. There’s also a built-in GPS and  an expansion port for MicroSD card.

Perhaps, PTT users won’t be as particular and will welcome the no-frills yet functional feature set of the Motorola i1 and that’s fine.

We just think that most users will want to get the most bang for their buck and Android 1.5 is the bare minimum. Still, the i1 built tough, runs Android and is a reliable PTT device which will suit its niche market.

Rating: 3 out of 5

References (1)

References allow you to track sources for this article, as well as articles that were written in response to this article.
  • Response
    Response: lukasschool.nl
    I genuinely understand the sort of matters you publicize on your blog, I feel this can be be appropriate in lots of uncommon ways. Thanks for communicating this kind information.

Reader Comments (2)

replica oakley watches|
So good! I like it very much,but If you can add more video and pictures can be much better, I have never read such a lovely article and I am coming back tomorrow to continue reading.

December 1, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterSea D. Craig

Two problems that I've been told about by my Telus dealer is that the 1.5 OS can't be upgraded to a newer version and secondly older iDen #s aren't recognized and therefore won't be able to communicate with newer addresses in my group. Any thoughts?

February 4, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterMichele

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
Some HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>