How much is motorola cliq




















Skip to main content. About this product. Make an offer:. Stock photo. Brand new: Lowest price The lowest-priced brand-new, unused, unopened, undamaged item in its original packaging where packaging is applicable.

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See all 9 - All listings for this product. Ratings and Reviews Write a review. The handset's memory card slot is only for saving for photos, music, and other attachment files the slot is compatible with cards up to 32GB. Music and video The Cliq's music options are standard for Android phones. You'll find album art, playlists, shuffle, repeat, and an airplane mode for in-flight media use.

The interface is simple and easy to navigate, and the player supports several file formats. You can view album art in a list format and you can instantly set any song as a ringtone directly from the music player by hitting the "Use as ringtone" button.

We used the last method to successfully load a few tunes. Video content is available through a YouTube app or clips that you load on the phone. It would be great if Google operated a movie purchase or rental option similar to iTunes, but perhaps that will come.

Both the YouTube app and the video gallery feature are easy to use. Video quality using the former is average--as with the MyTouch 3G, the picture was rather blurry, but videos stored on the phone were fine. Camera The 5-megapixel camera takes pictures in three resolutions. Fortunately, its image editing options are more extensive than on the G1. You get seven color effects, an auto-focus, a digital zoom, five white balance settings, and three quality choices. A handy meter tells you many photos you can store and we like the one-touch access to the appealing slideshow and photo gallery features.

The camcorder offers editing options similar to the still camera. Two quality choices are available: "low" for MMS messages and "high" for storing on the memory card. The Cliq's photo quality was pretty good. Colors were natural and there was little image noise, but images had a very slight yellowish tinge. The shutter delay is still a bit long, though it's improved over the MyTouch 3G. We ended up with far fewer blurry shots than we did on the other handset. Videos captured with the Cliq were fine, but not anything exceptional.

Movements in the video were blurry and there was an audible background hum. When finished editing videos, you can save them to the phone, forward them to friends, upload them to social media sites, or compose an audio postcard.

You're first greeted with T-Mobile Web2Go portal, which offers instant access your T-Mobile account, Gmail, Facebook, downloads, weather reports, news headlines, sports scores, and a several other content options. Amusingly, the default search on Web2Go is Yahoo rather than Google. The Cliq's Web browsing experience was intuitive and responsive. Scrolling around Web pages was fluid and we could easily select links.

The accelerometer makes for seamless switching between portrait and landscape mode and we like the onscreen icons that let you zoom without digging through too many menus. The Cliq supports copy and paste and tabs for your bookmarks, frequent sites, and history. You also can search on a page and open a new browser window. You can personalize the Cliq with wallpaper and animations. More personalization options and additional ringtones are available from T-Mobile via the Web browser.

Its call quality was good, overall, though we encountered a few issues. Its audio volume was fine and there was little static or interference; however, callers' voices had a slight metallic effect. It wasn't especially distracting, but was noticeable. The handset also gives off a bit of "GSM buzz" in the background, though we didn't encounter any static or interference from other electronic devices.

On the other end of the call, our friends told a similar story. They could hear us fine, but they also mentioned the metallic tone and a decent amount of wind noise. Most of our friends could tell we were using a cell phone, but that's a typical experience.

Automated calling systems and the voice-dialing feature could understand us as long as we were in a quiet location. Speakerphone calls on the Cliq were acceptable. Its volume could get quite loud and we didn't have to stand close to the phone. At the highest volume levels, there was a bit of distortion, but it wasn't distracting. In any case, we like the easy process of switching from standard to speakerphone calls. Downloads were zippy and Web pages loaded quickly.

The Web browser will default to mobile Web sites, but even when accessing full sites, we didn't have to wait too long for them to load.

One particularly graphics-heavy site, Airlines. The Cliq's music quality is admirable. Over the external speakers, our tunes didn't have a lot of warmth and the highest volume levels were bass-heavy, but it should be fine for short listening sessions.

Of course, a headset will offer a better experience. Unfortunately, the Google Maps location feature wasn't terribly accurate. It found our position quickly, but it could be off by a couple of blocks. It worked better than on the MyTouch 3G, but not by much. Directions over Google Maps are similar to a desktop experience.

You get just text directions, as opposed to real-time voice-guided directions. Also, make sure the Cliq pinpoints your location accurately before you start on your way.

We received the directions correctly, and it predicted the most efficient route accurately. It also made adjustments for traffic, though the suggested alternative routes were limited. Audible directions were clear and the speaker has enough volume.

The Cliq has a MHz processor and is occasionally sluggish when opening applications and shifting between menus. This seems to be typical of Android phones, as we've noticed on a few other supported handsets. There also was a noticeable pause when the accelerometer was shifting the display orientation. The delays weren't annoying, though, and we didn't have any system crashes. The Cliq has a rated battery life of 6 hours talk time and The status widget lets you update your "status" to any of your social networking sites, like Facebook or Twitter.

The happenings is a feed of other people's status updates on your social networks. Messaging Widget I don't know why, but it's very satisfying to be able to swipe through your emails directly from the home screen, quickly deleting or replying with just one tap.

The problem comes from the way it's implemented and the lack of screen space, because you can't see the recipients list to see if you're the only person address to in an email, nor can you do a reply all if there are multiple people. And it doesn't tell you if you have an attachment. Basically it's just a small window to your email, and you'll have to actually open up the traditional email app to do any communication beyond the basics. And there's also a full-blown Messaging APP, which consolidates all your accounts like the widget does.

Happenings Widget This is where your all your social networks are rolled into one big feed. Again, it's a time saver to have all these updates in one place and being able to swipe through them, though sometimes you get way too many updates to realistically do so. What we would like is if there was an option to customize which networks displayed in the widget, so we could, say, have only Twitter and leave out Facebook.

Right now it's an all or nothing affair, and you have to go into the Happenings app to see everything in list form and to be able to view only one network at a time. The widget does allow you to directly interact and respond to people's updates, so you can comment on people's walls or do an reply to someone's tweet.

All you have to do is start typing in a particular section and some menu option will pop up, prompting you with context-specific actions you can do. News Widget The RSS widget behaves pretty much the same way as the previous two, allowing you to swipe through news items like you would in a standard RSS reader. Motorola was kind enough to bundle a few types of RSS feeds together, and Gizmodo is part of the Technology one.

Good choice dudes. By avoiding the creation of an entire operation system from scratch, the Motorola engineers had time on their hands to really think about the user experience, and it definitely shows in all these small touches and shortcuts they put in.

You also get a contacts button instead of a end call button, since you don't need to hang up if you're not in a call. The software's not flawless, however, and you will run into some minor annoyances even with all the niceties. This most likely has to do with some deal or legal restriction, but it doesn't make the decision less annoying.

You can send movies and music and photos over the microUSB connection, but Motorola really wants you to put your contacts on either Gmail or a social network and pull them down that way. You don't get a lot of fine-grained control over accounts. Yes, I made you wait this long for a pun on the top photo. For example, you can't tell your phone to only pull down contacts from Gmail and not Facebook, or choose to display only your Twitter and MySpace contacts at once. It's basically all or just one.

More account customizability would be the number one software target we'd ask Motorola's team to aim for , and something we're eager to see in Blur version 1. Like we said in the hardware section, the major thing holding back the Cliq from being a fantastic phone is the processor. The animations are smooth, the UI touches are smart and the social networking stuff is useful; we just wish we could have a bit more account customization, do all of that on faster hardware.

Once Motorola gets the Blur platform onto a more powerful phone and works through some of the software quirks we noticed, they're going to have a really good Android phone on their hands. Is this the phone that Motorola needs to bring it back into the smartphone race?



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