Motorola Backflip Offers Unique Design, Great Music And Performance Issues

Sometimes, a unique design may be all you need to sell a new handset.  That could be what they're banking on with the Motorola Backflip, a smartphone with various physical innovations that you might find enticing (or retarded, whichever the case may be).

Physically, the unique flip design definitely makes it a noteworthy device.  While it looks like the Motorola Cliq at first glance, look closer and you'll see the huge differences.  When closed, the keyboard sits in the back of the phone, such that it flips open to the bottom of the horizontal 3.1-inch display.  Sure, it's a novel way to implement a clamshell for a touchscreen device, but the fact that your keys are exposed 100% of the time definitely doesn't inspire confidence.  They also added trackpads behind the display, which are supposed to allow you to navigate the UI without your hands getting in the way.  It works well, although, it's hard to see a real need for it.

As a phone, the Backflip manages average call quality.  It was good on our end, although callers sometimes reported issues on theirs.  We're not sure if it was their phone or ours causing it, however.  The speakerphone was excellent, definitely better than average.  Battery is rated at 6 hours, which should be good for at least two days of normal use.

Positioned as more of an entry-level smartphone, it's equipped with a rather underpowered 528MHz Qualcomm processor.  It only runs Android 1.5 too and performance wasn't the best - there were definite lags even with simpler tasks, such as opening your inbox and scrolling through lists.  As such, it might be a good idea to forget ever upgrading the OS here to a newer version.

It comes with Motoblur and you can read our reviews of other similarly-equipped Motorola phones (Cliq, Devour) to get the skinny on that.  Features are around what you'd expect.  You get the usual Android fare (Google's software suite and read-only QuickOffice), Webkit-based HTML browser (very fast page loads over 3G, by the way), aGPS, WiFi and Bluetooth.

While it continues to use Android's lackluster music player, the Backflip comes with excellent sound quality.  The onboard speakers manage gorgeous sounds, definitely a notch above what you normally get from a phone.  Camera appeared great at 5 megapixels of resolution, but the quality of shots left plenty to be desired.

Overall, the Motorola Backflip is a decent choice for an entry-level Android smartphone.  There are definite performance issues, but it covers the range of features well and it's an excellent music phone.  Price sounds good too - $99 with a two-year contract from AT&T (not sure how much for unlocked versions elsewhere).

Phone ReviewsMotorola Backflip Offers Unique Design, Great Music And Performance Issues
Sometimes, a unique design may be all you need to sell a new handset.  That could be what they're banking on with the Motorola Backflip, a smartpho...

Motorola Backflip Announced, Features Unique Controls And Design

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Motorola launched its third Android handset at CES and, from the looks of it, has got the whole smartphone thing fairly figured out.  This latest device is called the Backflip and, like the company's earlier efforts, is running Google's Android OS.

Like the Motorola Cliq from last year, the new phone will come with the Motoblur service, which aggregates social networking feeds, emails and contacts into the interface.  While that previous phone stood out because of the software changes, this new one sets itself apart with an interesting hardware design.

The Motorola Backflip features a full QWERTY keyboard and a touchscreen, similar to the Motorola Droid, also from last year.   It uses a surprising, reverse flip motion (hence the name) to reveal the keypad, which can also act as a stand (in case you want to use it as an alarm clock or a tabletop display).  They also added a touch panel around the back of the screen (called Backtrack), which you can use to navigate the UI (in case dirtying up the touchscreen doesn't sound like your cup of tea).

Handset features include a 3.1-inch capacitive display with 480 x 320 resolution, a 5.0 megapixel camera module (with flash and autofocus), 2GB of onboard storage, stereo Bluetooth and Wi-Fi.  It comes with support for quad-band GSM (850/900/1800/1900) and tri-band 3G (850/1900/2100).  It will ship with Android 1.5, but will be updated with 2.1 at a later time.

North America, Latin America, Europe and Asia will all get the Motorola Backflip in the first quarter of 2010.  Neither official pricing nor carriers have been disclosed.

[via Gizmag]