
Motorola MOTO VE66

Motorola MotoYuva W396

Motorola has launched its new entry-level mobile phone - MotoYuva W396 – in India. With a clamshell form factor, the new cell phone is stylish and sleek. It offers all the basic features required in a phone capable of playing MP3 music tracks and FM radio. With a VGA quality digital camera and enough memory to store images and music, the cell phone perfectly fits into the budget of middle-class Indian consumers, who look for functionality and style in a phone that they can easily afford as well. Motorola Motoyuva W396 comes fully loaded with a host of exciting features.
Motorola MotoYuva W396 is an entry-level clamshell, featuring a large 1.8-inch, 128 x 160 pixels color CSTN TFT display. It weighs 94g and is 95 mm long, 46 mm wide and 17 mm thick. Although the handset doesn’t have external display, the three bright LED-lit icons on the external casing let you know of missed calls, incoming messages and battery status. The keys located on the top of are especially dedicated for operating the inbuilt-MP3 player. These keys not only help you to adjust the volume for music, but also allow you to browse through the FM channels and MP3 music tracks, when the flap remains closed.
Motorola Krave ZN4

Motorola's presents The Next Big Thing in Cellphones with its new Krave ZN4 touchscreen phone, available starting today from Verizon for $150 (with a two-year deal plus rebate, of course). Krave's claim to fame: a clear flip front cover that's also touch-sensitive. In other words, touch the protective plastic top, which Motorola calls a "touch cover," and the actual LCD screen beneath reacts as if it's just been touched. It's all quite Criss Angel-y.
The issues don't stop there. Hit the Continue jump for more hands-on impressions, including which of the Krave's features got me to nearly throw the phone into a brick wall.
More on the plastic cover: It's completely in the way when using the QWERTY keypad. When the cover is open (the only way to use the keypad), there's no way to comfortably hold the phone and tap keys with your left thumb. This physical hindrance completely obliterates the advantage gained by splaying out the roomy haptic-enabled keyboard across the Krave's extra-long 2.8-inch screen.Finally, the standard Verizon cellphone operating system simply doesn't stretch far enough to encompass the Krave's touch capabilities. In fact, Krave's failure rests solely at the feet of Verizon, not Motorola. With its new technology, Krave should have been a showcase. Instead, Krave exemplifies the unreasonable power carriers have over manufacturers — curtailing their ability to truly innovate and deliver a consumer-friendly cellphone that can compete with iPhone.
Nokia 2626

Nokia 2626 Review - It is a phone designed for the style-conscious users. Nokia 2626 is a colourful phone, keeping up with the users in the emerging markets. It is available in quite ambitious colours of Fiery Red and Spatial Blue, and to go with the trend, it has a FM Radio for music on the go. The phone is constructed out of three different plastic materials, with the inset made of tinted glass, having mirror coating on the front.
Nokia 6102i

Nokia 6102i Review - Nokia 6102i can be considered a close relative of the Nokia 6102 and Nokia 6103. The Nokia 6102i is a flip phone with the much-appreciated addition of Bluetooth, which is missing from the previous two models. The 6102i retains the same striking clamshell design and is as simple to use as the Nokia 6102.





