This phone is very nice, the screen is a very good size yet the buttons feel like your not actually touching them but you are. The only thing that I strongly dislike on most phones though is that, NO COMPANY EVER MAKES A CAMERA LENS PROTECTOR...its too sad.
Looks perfect but still missing lots to catch Nokia old phones even. I cannot imagine that you cannot get SMS report or MMS, I didn't expect to find a problem in assignning more than one phone number to the same name, this has been done ages ago by poor models of other brands even. I decided to keep it for celebrations or meeting or would sell it anyway if good price offered.
Overall great phone, good looking. I just bought one few days back. It has everything you need from a phone and extra as well. It works well when connected to the PC. Good value for money as well. The phone looks damn good. The design is absolutely amazing but it's not 3G. I just wished it was because if i were to change phones i would definitely get a 3G one.
Looking forward to its launch this month. Exceptionally slim and sleek, didn't go for a RAZR because it missed out on memory slot. Having a memory card powers up mp3 storage and pic albums plus loads of mini videos. Evrything rocks on this device except for the camera pixels which are a meager 0.3 (only). That's really sad. How i wish that one thing could be rectified.
With a sleek and thin design it looks wonderful. But hope Moto improves on the search for person name to dial. With present system on the V3 it's very inconvenient to dial from the phonebook. You can only press example "C", but you cannot press "CA" or even "CAT" to get closer to the name you need to dial.
The SLVR L6 is basically a cut-down version of the SLVR L7 with all functions except for iTunes and the use of external memory. A similar-looking model, the Motorola L2 is also available but not marketed specifically under the SLVR designation. The L2, which lacks a camera, external memory, and music features, is marketed specifically to corporate and government markets which generally prohibit their employees from using phones with the listed features.
The phones are thinner than their cousin, the RAZR, and the newest version of the phone (SLVR L7, formerly known as the V8) is one of a few phones currently out featuring Apple Computer's iTunes support, allowing the user to play up to 100 downloaded tunes that are stored on the phone. Its keypad is derived from the RAZR's, albeit without the dedicated web browser and text messaging buttons. The SLVR L7 also features Bluetooth connectivity, a digital camera with 4x digital zoom and has a speakerphone. Carried in the United States by Cingular Wireless, it superseded the earlier Motorola ROKR E1, which was withdrawn from the market due to lackluster sales. There is also a quad-band World Version of the L7 available internationally, which comes without the iTunes software. Instead, the standard Motorola Digital Audio Player is included.