Motorola Milestone to get Android 2.2 in Europe and Korea in late Q4, Dext 2.1 upgrade looking bleak
Posted on 22. Aug, 2010 by IBM.
Until now, Milestone owners could do nothing but to envy Droid users rocking the Froyo upgrade; however, according to Motorola’s recently published timeline, the former device is now slated for the same dessert party in Europe and Korea in Q4 — speci…
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Motorola Backflip gets a software update, still flips the wrong way
Posted on 08. Jul, 2010 by IBM.
If you were hoping sort of magical patch that made the Backflip flip normally, replaced Yahoo search with Google, and erased any trace of AT&T crapware, well… you can just keep on hoping, but all things considered, Motorola’s just-released updat…
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AT&T explains, basically ignores criticism for locking down Android handsets
Posted on 01. Jul, 2010 by IBM.
When the Moto Backflip launched we were a wee bit miffed that AT&T stuffed its ROM with what our esteemed Chris Ziegler referred to as “unremovable crapware.” But, even more annoying was the handset being locked down to only accept apps installed …
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AT&T explains, basically ignores criticism for locking down Android handsets
Posted on 01. Jul, 2010 by IBM.
When the Moto Backflip launched we were a wee bit miffed that AT&T stuffed its ROM with what our esteemed Chris Ziegler referred to as “unremovable crapware.” But, even more annoying was the handset being locked down to only accept apps installed …
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Motorola Backflip comes to Telus
Posted on 03. May, 2010 by IBM.
Moto promised the Backflip (among other Android-powered wares) to its Canadian fans back in March, and it’s now delivering thanks to an official launch on Telus. As you can clearly see, the phone isn’t quite the same thing that AT&T customers are grabbing — the outer bezel is a darker shade, something we suspect a good deal of users might prefer — but otherwise, it’s got the same processor, 5 megapixel camera, 3.1-inch HVGA display, and wacky hinge that we’re already well-accustomed with. Whether that’s a good thing or not… well, we’ll leave that for potential buyers to decide, but you can pick it up for CAD $100 (about $99) on a three-year deal.
Motorola Backflip comes to Telus originally appeared on Engadget Mobile on Mon, 03 May 2010 16:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Motorola Backflip now scheduled to get Android 2.1 update in Q3
Posted on 13. Apr, 2010 by IBM.
[Thanks, Tony]
Motorola Backflip now scheduled to get Android 2.1 update in Q3 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 13 Apr 2010 14:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Motorola Backflip doesn’t allow non-Market apps, proves AT&T doesn’t get Android
Posted on 08. Mar, 2010 by IBM.
Let’s step into the time warp, shall we? Specifically, we’d like to go back to our interview of AT&T Mobility CEO Ralph de la Vega at MWC last year when we asked him about the carrier’s support for Android (or lack thereof):
Chris: Okay, and expanding on that a little bit, I heard you speak at CTIA last year and you mentioned that… you mentioned basically the same comments about Android at that time. You said that you thought that it was promising, you liked what you saw, but that was at a time when there were a lot of questions about why AT&T wasn’t in the OHA. I’m wondering if your thoughts, your opinions have changed since then. Has AT&T’s direction with Android changed at all?Ralph: No, actually, I think that they have been somewhat validated in that… we like the Android as an operating system on its own, but we want to make sure that we have, and customers have the option, to put applications on that device that are not just Google applications, so when the G1 came out and T-Mobile launched it, it’s primarily a Google phone. And we want to give customers the choice of other applications on that device, not just the same Google applications.
Chris: So you’re basically waiting for Android to be de-branded, so to speak?
Ralph: Well, to be open. (Laughter.) Right? I mean, the whole idea behind Android is that it’s gonna be an open OS, and so I don’t wanna roll an open OS to market that has primarily Google apps on it, and I think that’s gonna happen. I mean, I see a lot of activity, I think it’s got a good future, and I think it makes a lot of sense that the OS is open-source, separate from Google apps that are also very good.
A year later, enter the Motorola Backflip — AT&T’s very first Android device. Does it hold true to de la Vega’s principles? Well, it depends on whose glasses you read the statements through. Yes, true, it definitely doesn’t have “primarily Google apps on it” thanks to the carrier’s questionable decision to remove Google search and replace it with Yahoo — but as for giving “customers the choice of other applications,” that’s another matter altogether. It seems that Backflips are being shipped without the ability to turn on non-Market installations, meaning that AT&T has effectively locked you into getting all of your content through the walled garden. Add in the Yahoo debacle and the egregious amount of unremovable crapware they’ve left in ROM, and we start to wonder: why did AT&T bother partnering up with Android if they weren’t going to take it seriously? Certainly doesn’t bode well for the Mini 3 and the rest of the pack, now, does it?
Motorola Backflip doesn’t allow non-Market apps, proves AT&T doesn’t get Android originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 08 Mar 2010 15:06:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Motorola Backflip now on sale at AT&T
Posted on 07. Mar, 2010 by IBM.
Heads-up, kids — AT&T’s first-ever slice of Android is now available. Just let that sink in a minute. Feels good, doesn’t it? Motorola’s Backflip has gone on sale just as promised, and that debatably awesome Blur action can be yours for $99.99 after mail-in rebate and a 2-year agreement. So, you pulling the trigger, or you are you waiting for whatever Dell and / or HTC are bringing to the party?
[Thanks, mittens]
Motorola Backflip now on sale at AT&T originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 07 Mar 2010 12:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Motorola Backflip now on sale at AT&T
Posted on 07. Mar, 2010 by IBM.
Heads-up, kids — AT&T’s first-ever slice of Android is now available. Just let that sink in a minute. Feels good, doesn’t it? Motorola’s Backflip has gone on sale just as promised, and that debatably awesome Blur action can be yours for $99.99 after mail-in rebate and a 2-year agreement. So, you pulling the trigger, or you are you waiting for whatever Dell and / or HTC are bringing to the party?
[Thanks, mittens]
Motorola Backflip now on sale at AT&T originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 07 Mar 2010 12:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Motorola Backflip now on sale at AT&T
Posted on 07. Mar, 2010 by IBM.
Heads-up, kids — AT&T’s first-ever slice of Android is now available. Just let that sink in a minute. Feels good, doesn’t it? Motorola’s Backflip has gone on sale just as promised, and that debatably awesome Blur action can be yours for $99.99 after mail-in rebate and a 2-year agreement. So, you pulling the trigger, or you are you waiting for whatever Dell and / or HTC are bringing to the party?
[Thanks, mittens]
Motorola Backflip now on sale at AT&T originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 07 Mar 2010 12:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Motorola Backflip, DEXT, and Quench all inbound for Canada in the first half of the year
Posted on 03. Mar, 2010 by IBM.
Without naming names, Motorola’s Canadian outpost dropped some teasers today that versions of all three of its midrange Blur-powered Android handsets for GSM networks — the Backflip, DEXT, and Quench — will be coming to the country in the first half of 2010. What’s more, they’ll be hitting “all three national wireless carriers” — a little bit of a slap for Mobilicity and WIND, yes, but generally good news for the overwhelming majority of subscribers. Perhaps the most interesting bit here is that they’ve called out the DEXT by name, continuing Moto’s tradition of going with European branding over American for its Canadian launches, a trend started by Telus’ Milestone. We don’t yet know which carrier will get which phone, what they’ll retail for, or precisely when they’ll be on shelves, but needless to say, the Google-powered situation north of the border just got a whole lot prettier.
Motorola Backflip, DEXT, and Quench all inbound for Canada in the first half of the year originally appeared on Engadget Mobile on Wed, 03 Mar 2010 13:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Motorola Backflip for AT&T unboxing and hands-on
Posted on 01. Mar, 2010 by IBM.
We’ve just taken delivery of an AT&T-branded Motorola Backflip — the carrier’s very first Android device — and we wanted to share with you our magical first moments putting the phone through its paces. Here’s a quick rundown of our first impressions:
- It feels solidly-built — probably a notch better than the CLIQ. There’s no wiggle or weirdness in the hinge whatsoever. Of course, we know from personal experience that “feels solidly-built” doesn’t necessarily mean it is solidly-built, so the jury’s still out on how it’ll hold up with regular use, especially with the keyboard exposed full-time.
- Opening and closing the phone isn’t a natural one-handed operation, unless you’re comfortable putting it at extreme risk of an unfortunate tumble.
- It’s laggy right out of the box, which doesn’t bode well for usability once you load it up with your own apps. Of course, it uses exactly the same processor as the CLIQ, so that doesn’t come as a surprise.
- It’s filled to the brim with pre-loaded AT&T stuff: AllSport GPS, AT&T Maps, AT&T Music (which takes the place of the standard Music app), AT&T Navigator, AT&T Wi-Fi Hotspots, Mobile Banking, MobiTV, MusicID, Where, and YPmobile. We strongly prefer the approach of offering a special branded Android Market portal where you can download your carrier’s recommended apps.
- Blur looks and feels the same as it does on the CLIQ, though the main Blur widgets — Social Status, Messages, and Happenings — have been moved one home screen left of the main one (we prefer this configuration anyhow).
- Yahoo has replaced Google as the default search provider throughout the phone. It’s crazy: the home screen widget, the browser, everything’s been programmed to use Yahoo. We love us some irony, but golly, we’d prefer Google searches most of the time.
It spontaneously rebooted for us once in about an hour of use — a concerning sign, particularly considering Motorola’s inability to pump out a solid firmware for the CLIQ — but we’ll need a little more time with it. Want more right now? Follow the break for some more impressions, video, and a sample shot from the camera.
Continue reading Motorola Backflip for AT&T unboxing and hands-on
Motorola Backflip for AT&T unboxing and hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Mar 2010 14:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Keepin’ it real fake, part CCLV: ME600 rips Motorola Backflip down to its shivering Blur skin
Posted on 24. Feb, 2010 by IBM.
There are many of us simple humans who “just don’t get” the Motorola Backflip. Their poor minds can’t fathom this oddest of twists on the QWERTY flip, and now here comes the “MOTOROIA” ME600 from Shenzhen to wrap their brain into ever more elaborate pretzel knots. The phone is a pretty faithful reproduction, but it’s a bit thicker, has a mere VGA camera, and doesn’t run Android — despite that hint of Blur on the home screen.
[Thanks, xleung]
Keepin’ it real fake, part CCLV: ME600 rips Motorola Backflip down to its shivering Blur skin originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 24 Feb 2010 19:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Android-powered Motorola Backflip headed to AT&T on March 7 for $100 on contract
Posted on 18. Feb, 2010 by IBM.

AT&T just got its first Android-powered smartphone (four more coming this year) in the HSPA 7.2-capable Motorola Backflip. The Motoblur device with reverse flip design and 3.1-inch touchscreen packs GPS, WiFi, and a 5 megapixel autofocus camera with flash and camcorder function that neatly integrates with social media sites like Facebook and Twitter or photo sharing sites like Picasa. It lands March 7th for $100 after $100 rebate and two-year contract with smartphone data plan. AT&T promo video after the break.
Continue reading Android-powered Motorola Backflip headed to AT&T on March 7 for $100 on contract
Android-powered Motorola Backflip headed to AT&T on March 7 for $100 on contract originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 18 Feb 2010 07:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Motorola Backflip spotted in the wilds of China
Posted on 31. Jan, 2010 by IBM.
Motorola’s Backflip has yet to springboard itself over to AT&T, but those who call China home can hop on the bandwagon right away. Said phone — which sports a full touchscreen and a physical QWERTY thanks to the horizontal clamshell design — is now available from Moto’s Chinese portal for 4,298 Chinese yuan (in unlocked form), which translates to right around $630. While the rest of the world awaits the phone’s launch later this quarter, you can hit up Mobile.163.com for a downright beautiful gallery of in the wild shots. Go on, it’s safe. We think.
[Thanks, Me]
Motorola Backflip spotted in the wilds of China originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 31 Jan 2010 23:14:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Motorola Backflip promo spot reminds us what rock and roll is all about
Posted on 14. Jan, 2010 by IBM.
Remember when men were men and guitar riffs were boring and mindless? Moto does. The company has thrown together a little animated spot demonstrating its new Backflip handset. If you’re the sort of person who has trouble conceptualizing objects in 3D space — particularly objects that run Moto Blur and have an oddly oriented keyboard that flips backwards to face out from the back of the device — this video should work wonders for you. If you’re the sort of person who burned your Big Muff fuzzbox in effigy on New Year’s Eve, you might want to rip your computer speakers out right about now. Video is after the break, and don’t forget to check out our hands-on with the phone for a deeper, more staid look.
Continue reading Motorola Backflip promo spot reminds us what rock and roll is all about
Motorola Backflip promo spot reminds us what rock and roll is all about originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 14 Jan 2010 10:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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A quick sitdown with Motorola co-CEO Sanjay Jha
Posted on 07. Jan, 2010 by IBM.
We had a chance to catch up for a minute with the man tasked with turning around Moto’s phone business, Mobile Devices CEO Sanjay Jha, just moments before he went on stage to introduce the Backflip this week at CES. With Android getting more attention than ever before, it’s never been a better time to sit down with a guy who’s gone all-in with the platform, right? He talks Nexus One, Google, firmware updates, Blur, and more, so don’t be shy — read on for the full transcript!
Continue reading A quick sitdown with Motorola co-CEO Sanjay Jha
A quick sitdown with Motorola co-CEO Sanjay Jha originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 07 Jan 2010 09:47:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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