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Motorola ROKR

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(Redirected from Motorola ROKR E8)

The Motorola ROKR (/ˈrɒkər/), the first version of which was informally known as the iTunes phone, was a series of mobile phones from Motorola, part of a 4LTR line developed before the spin out of Motorola Mobility. ROKR models were released starting in September 2005 and ending in 2011, because of the dissolution of Motorola Inc.. They were notable for incorporating support of media player features.

E1

[edit]
Motorola ROKR E1
Compatible networksGPRS
Dimensions108 × 46 × 20.5 mm
Weight107 g
MemorymicroSD
Display176×220 pixels,
262,000 colors
ConnectivityBluetooth
A Rokr connecting to an Apple Powerbook G4

Launched on September 7, 2005, in San Francisco, California, the E1 is the first phone to be integrated with Apple's iTunes music player, the next phone being the first iPhone in 2007.[1] The phone had been widely expected, with technology sites reporting on collaborations between Motorola and Apple as far back as December 2004.

Description and acceptance

[edit]

The ROKR E1 is a re-badged Motorola E398 candybar style phone (it was originally called the E790) with Apple-licensed technology to play back iTunes Music Store purchased music. It features a music player with an interface similar to that of Apple's iPod music players. Since hardware on the Motorola E398 and ROKR E1 phones are the same, it is possible to crossflash the Motorola ROKR E1's firmware to the Motorola E398 using phone flashing software like flash & backup.

While the phone equipped an upgradeable 512 MB microSD memory card (Max. 1 GB), its firmware allowed only up to 100 songs to be loaded at any time.[2] The limit hurt the ROKR's appeal. Many users also discovered that transferring music to the phone was slow compared to dedicated players, due to lack of support for Hi-Speed USB, and the E1 lacked wireless transfer.[3] The Rokr was also criticized for being too much like the preceding E398. As a result, the Rokr E1 sold below expectations despite a high-profile marketing campaign.[4]

Because of the iPod Nano unveiling on the same day, relations between Motorola and Apple were strained and Motorola CEO Ed Zander later accused Apple of purposely undercutting the Rokr.[5]

The Rokr E1 was replaced by the E2 (see below), which lacked iTunes support and was superseded by the iTunes-enabled SLVR L7.

E2

[edit]
Motorola Rokr E2
Availability by regionEl Salvador Digicel
Peru Claro
Compatible networksGSM 900/1800/1900 with GPRS Class 10 (2U/4D)
Dimensions106 × 49.5 × 18 mm
Weight115 g
CPUIntel XScale PXA270
Storage11 MB
Removable storageSD expansion card slot for up to 2 GB (or 4 GB, if flashed with modded firmware)
Rear camera1.3-megapixel, video at 15 fps for 2 hours maximum
Display30 × 40 mm TFT LCD,
240×320 pixels, 262K colours
Connectivity
  • Bluetooth 2.0 + EDR (supports A2DP)
  • USB 2.0 by mini-USB

The E2 was released in January 2006. Instead of iTunes, the phone came bundled with RealPlayer, supporting a larger variety of formats. It also featured a music control panel on the left side of the phone. Users can also listen to stereo FM radio with Motorola Rokr E2. By using iRadio, FM radio programs can also be downloaded into the phone through internet, letting users listen to the radio at any time. The first public release occurred on June 22, 2006, in China.[6][7]

Features

[edit]
  • Talk time: up to 9 hours
  • Standby time: up to 8 days
  • Multimedia playback: MP3, AMR, MID, MIDI, SMF, MMF, XMF, IMY, WAV, RA, WMA, AAC, AWB, MPGA, M4A, 3GA, RM, RMVB, 3GP, MP4 by RealPlayer
  • Audio connector: 3.5 mm headset jack
  • Java support: MIDP 2.0, CLDC 1.1, HEAP 2mb
  • Browser: Opera 8.50 with e-mail support
  • Local connectivity:

As a Linux-based phone, the open source community developed numerous modifications to the phone's software, such as quad band, EDGE, and support for a 4 GB SD card. [citation needed] Some have overclocked the processor.

E6

[edit]
Motorola Rokr E6
ManufacturerMotorola
SeriesMotorola Rokr
Availability by regionNovember 14, 2006 (China)
December 4, 2006 (Worldwide)
Compatible networksGSM Tri-band (900/1800/1900, hackable to Quad-band)
Dimensions111 × 51.5 × 14 mm (82 cc)
Weight122 g
Operating systemMontaVista Linux OS (not MOTOMAGX)
CPUIntel XScale-PXA27x rev 7 (v5l)
Memory46 MB RAM (50% free after boot-up)
Storage120 MB
Removable storageSD/MMC expandable to 4 GB (New patch)
BatteryLi-ion 1000 mAh
Rear camera2 megapixels + Macro Mode
Display2.4 in diagonal touch TFT LCD,
262k colors, 240×320 pixels
Connectivity
Data inputsTouchscreen with stylus

The E6 was released in China on November 14, 2006, and subsequently worldwide on December 4, 2006.

The Rokr E6 is a direct descendant of the E680 and the MING, sharing the same Montavista Linux operating system, Intel XScale PXA270 series processors, and the RealPlayer media player instead of the iTunes player installed on the first Rokr phone. The E6 features a built-in FM radio, (but no radio recording). It also inherited the 2-megapixel camera with manual macro-switching and business card recognition from MING, enhanced with QR Code recognition functions. Additionally, the phone features a 3.5 mm headphone jack, allowing use of a standard-sized headphone plug.

It comes installed with Picsel Viewer with the ability to read Microsoft Office and PDF file formats.

Details

[edit]

The phone is part of Motorola's line of phones running Linux, this one using a modified 2.4.20 kernel. This has upset some, as they broke the GPL in not releasing the kernel source code.[8] The software is an updated version of MING (Motorola A1200), with a different file system. Most of the apps that work on the MING work on the E6, but some may not due to the file system. Normally the phone only runs on tri-band GSM networks, though some have found an exploit to get it to run on Quad Band networks and over Edge.[9] The radio channel frequency can also be modified beyond 88 MHz to 65 MHz, and the preset number of channels can also be modified.

Technical specifications

[edit]
Battery Life Up to 7 hours talk time - about 235 hours standby
Web Camera Yes, via USB
Voice Recording Yes (.amr)
Video Recording Yes, up to CIF 352×288 (.3gp)
Maximum number of Sockets 10
Browsers Opera Mini with support for HTTP, HTTPS, Socket, Secure Socket, UDP
Image Support .PNG, .GIF, .BMP, .JPEG, .EMS, .WMP
Encoding schemes USASCII, UTF-8 (Unicode), UTF-16 with explicit Byte Order Mark (Part of IOP), UCS-2
Messaging SMS, MMS
E-mail POP3, IMAP4, SMTP
Java Yes, CLDC v1.1 and MIDP v2.0 compliant
FCC ID Yes[10]

Z6

[edit]
Motorola Rokr Z6
ManufacturerMotorola
PredecessorMotorola Rizr Z3
SuccessorMotorola Rizr Z8
Compatible networksGSM quad-band with EDGE
Dimensions105.5 × 45.5 × 16 mm
Weight115g / 4.06 ounces
Operating systemMOTOMAGX
CPUFreescale MXC275-30
32-bit 528 MHz ARM11
Memory64 MB available to user, 96 MB ROM, 64 MB SDRAM
Removable storagemicroSD (TransFlash) card up to 2 GB
BatteryBC50 3.7V at 750mah
Rear camera2.0 MPix with LED flash
Display2.1 in diagonal TFT LCD,
320×240 px, 262,000 colors
Connectivity

The Z6, originally known as the Rizr Z6, was released on July 7, 2007. The Z6 features Motorola's new version of the embedded Linux-based operating system, MOTOMAGX. It also supports stereo Bluetooth technology (A2DP) and features a 2-megapixel digital camera. The Z6 also supports synchronisation with Windows Media Player 11, allowing playlists and audio to be transferred to the phone's internal memory, which can in turn be transferred onto a compatible microSD memory card. The phone does not support 3G or HSDPA, relying on EDGE for data.

Audio format support

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The Z6 supports the following audio formats:[citation needed]

Video format support

[edit]

The Z6 supports the following video formats:[citation needed]

Z6m

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Motorola Rokr Z6m
Compatible networksCDMA 800/1900 1xEV-DO r0 data speed
Dimensions105.5 × 45.5 × 16 mm
Weight115 g / 4.06 ounces
Operating systemBREW, Paragon 2005 (P2K05) Internal Filesystem
Memory14 MB
Removable storageSupports microSD (TransFlash) memory cards:
  • 512 Mb card included;
  • Upgradeable to 2 GB.
Display2 in diagonal TFT LCD,
320×240 px, 65,536 colors
Connectivitymini-USB,
Bluetooth (Class 2),
EV-DO

The Z6m is the CDMA version of the Rokr Z6. The Rokr Z6m comes with an integrated music player, 3.5 mm headset jack, stereo Bluetooth, a 512 MB MicroSD card in its respective slot, a key lock switch, and a 2-megapixel digital camera. The phone supports up to 2 GB of removable storage.

Unlike the Z6, the Z6m does not run MotoMagx, a version of Linux, but instead runs the Binary Runtime Environment for Wireless operating system, also known as BREW.

U.S. Cellular was the first carrier to release the Rokr Z6m on October 14, 2007, alongside their Napster-to-Go service's launch.[citation needed]

Technical information

[edit]

When connected to a computer via USB and the connection type is set to "Modem/COM", the phone acts like a USB serial peripheral, allowing Motorola Phone AT Commands to be sent. In this mode, sending "AT+MODE=8" will put the phone into a different state, in which it no longer accepts AT commands but its P2K05 functionality is accessible.

W5

[edit]
Motorola Rokr W5
Weight107 g
Memory20 MB internal
microSD up to 2 GB
Rear camera1.3 MP
Display176x220, 256K colors

The W5 was released in September 2007.[citation needed] The phone features up to 2 GB through a microSD slot, a 1.3-megapixel camera, Motorola's P2K OS, and a music player.

E8

[edit]
Motorola Rokr E8
ManufacturerMotorola
Availability by regionJuly 2008
PredecessorRokr E6
SuccessorRokr EM30
Compatible networksGPRS
Dimensions115 mm × 53 mm × 10.6 mm
Weight100 g
CPU500MHz CPU with Freescale SCM-A11 baseband processor
Memory2 GB internal memory and microSD(up to 10 GB with SDHC)
BatteryLi-ion 970 mAh
Rear camera2 megapixel, 8x zoom
DisplayType: TFT; Colors: 250K; Size: 320 x 240 pixels (2 inches)
Connectivitymini-USB, 3.5 mm headphone jack, Bluetooth Class 2

The E8 was released in July 2008. It features a new keypad interface called ModeShift, which automatically changes the context of the keypad depending on the current function of the device. It also features a localized touch feedback system with haptic technology that gives the feeling of real buttons, though the keyboard surface is smooth. It will sync with Microsoft Outlook, but not with Web or Mac based calendars.

Both E8 and EM30 uses the ModeShift technology and this enables the phone to switch from talk to music with one touch (special music keys light up when playing music) Coupled with in-build CrystalTalk technology (a Motorola patent), crisp and clear conversations is possible in noisy environments.

Carriers

[edit]

Specifications

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The complete Motorola Rokr E8 list of specifications are:[11]

Type Specification
Battery Life Talk: 7 hours; Standby: 300 hours
Phone Book Capacity Unlimited (limited only by memory capacity)
Video Capture .MOV 176*144 @15 frame/s
Email Client Protocols Supported: POP3, IMAP4, SMTP
EMS / Picture Messaging EMS 5.0
Java ME Version: MIDP 2.0
Predictive Text Entry Technology: iTAP
Text Messaging 2-Way
Voice Dialing speaker-independent
Wireless Internet WAP 2.0, xHTML, HTML
FM Radio Yes
Alarm Yes
Calculator Yes
Calendar Yes
Custom Graphics Yes
Data-Capable Yes
Digital TTY/TDD Yes
Games Yes
MMS Yes
Multiple Languages Yes (English, French, Chinese, Spanish)
Multiple Numbers per Name Yes
PC Sync Yes
Picture ID Yes
Polyphonic Ringtones Yes
Ringer ID Yes
Side Keys Yes
Speaker Phone Yes
Text Messaging Templates Yes
Vibrate Yes
Voice Memo Yes

EM30

[edit]
Motorola Rokr EM30
ManufacturerMotorola
Availability by regionAugust 5, 2008
PredecessorMotorola Rokr E8
SuccessorAura
Compatible networksGSM 850/ 900/ 1800/ 1900
Dimensions115 mm × 53 mm × 10.6 mm
Weight100 g
Memory18.5 MB RAM
BatteryLi-ion 970 mAh
Rear camera2 megapixel, 8x zoom
DisplayType: TFT; Colors: 250K; Size: 240 x 320 pixels (2 inches)
Connectivitymini-USB, 3.5 mm headphone jack, Bluetooth Class 2

The EM30, releasing in August 2008, was the lower-end version of the E8 (see above), without the FastScroll navigation wheel and the haptics feel.

EM30 is running on LiMo Platform, a Linux-based operating system for mobile devices. It is the 22nd LiMo Handset.[12]

Both E8 and EM30 uses the ModeShift technology and this enables the phone to switch from talk to music with one touch (special music keys get lighted up when playing music) The phone incorporated Motorola's patented CrystalTalk technology, providing clear conversations in noisy environments.[citation needed]

Specifications

[edit]
  • Messaging: MMS, EMS 5.0, email (POP3, SMTP, IMAP4), Motosync for corporate email support
  • Connectivity method: Stereo Bluetooth Class 2, 3.5mm, USB 2.0 HS, Mobile Phone Tools, Over the Air Sync (OTA), PC Sync
  • Dual Transfer Mode (DTM): Enables GPRS during call; operator dependent
  • Camera: 2 MP, Digital Zoom, Fixed Focus, take up to 8 multi shot pictures
  • Capture/Playback/Streaming: H.263, MPEG4, WMV v9
  • Audio: MIDI, MP3, AAC, AAC+, Enhanced AAC+, WMA, WAV, AMR-NB, Real Audio (RA) v10
  • FM Radio: with Radio Data System (RDS) 3
  • Keypad: Backlight morphing keypad that changes color from phone mode to music mode
  • Airplane Mode: Uninterrupted music up in the plane/play music
  • 3.5mm headset
  • 3D Stereo Sound
  • Memory: 30 MB internal memory, optional 8 GB microSDHC support
  • Microsoft Music Ecosystem Support (sync music with Windows Media Player)
  • Audio Playback: Target 16 hours (Airplane Mode)
  • Crystal Talk technology for noise cancellation
  • Text to speech recognition

Technical specifications

[edit]
  • Bands/Modes: Quad Band
  • Dimensions: 115x53x10.6mm
  • Display: 2.0˝ QVGA 240x320 262K TFT
  • Form Factor: Bar with internal antenna
  • GPRS Class 12: EDGE class 12
  • Audio Playback Time: up to approximately 16 hours
  • Size: 60cc
  • Standby Time: up to approximately 300 hours
  • Talk Time: up to approximately 360 minutes
  • Weight: 100g
  • Airplane Mode: listen to music, take pictures, play games on the plane, with the RF off

EM326g

[edit]
Motorola Rokr EM326g
MemorymicroSD(up to 2 GB)
Rear camera1.3 MP

The EM326g was released in January 2009. It is the first ROKR phone to be available pre-configured for use with a prepaid network (Net10).

EM35

[edit]
Motorola Rokr EM35
ManufacturerMotorola
Availability by regionQ1 2009
PredecessorRokr EM30
Weight116 g
Memory110 MB RAM
Rear camera3.15 megapixel
Display320x240 pixels, TFT LCD, 256K colours

The EM35 was released in Q1 2009. It had a 3.15 MP camera, 110 MB internal memory, and a microSD card slot supporting up to 16 GB.

W6

[edit]
Motorola Rokr W6
Weight107 g
Memory20 MB internal
microSD up to 2 GB
Rear camera1.3 MP
Display176x220, 256K colors

The W6 was released in April 2009. The W6 includes a stopwatch and FM Radio among other sports-related features.[13][14]

ZN50/ZN500

[edit]
Motorola Rokr ZN50/ZN500
Weight143 g
MemorymicroSD up to 16 GB
Rear camera3.15 MP with auto-focus
Display240x427, 256K colors, TFT LCD touchscreen

The ZN50 was released in July 2009 as a high-end phone in the Rokr series. It featured a 3.15 MP camera with auto-focus, improved screen resolution, a touchscreen and storage expandable up to 16 GB.

EM25/EM325

[edit]
Motorola Rokr EM25
Weight90g
MemorymicroSD up to 2 GB
Rear camera1.3 MP
Display128x160, 65K colors, TFT LCD

The EM25/EM325 was released in July 2009, at the same time as the ZN50 (see above).

EM28/EM330

[edit]
Motorola EM28/EM330
ManufacturerMotorola
Availability by regionJuly 2009
Form factorClam / Flip
Dimensions4.1 x 2.1 x 0.6 inches
Weight90g (with battery)
Memory30MB
Removable storagemicroSD (up to 2 GB)
BatteryLithium ion battery, Talk time: Up to 7 hrs, Stand-by: Up to 23 days
Rear camera1.3 MP
Display65K color, 128 x 160 pixels
ConnectivityBluetooth

The Motorola EM28/EM330 was released in July 2009, at the same time as the ZN50 and EM25/EM325 (see above).

Specifications

[edit]
  • 1.3-megapixel camera
  • Bluetooth
  • Video Playback & Streaming Video
  • Voice Recorder (60seconds limited)
  • Calculator, Calendar, and Alarm Clock
  • Vibrating, Games and Sync
  • Volume Control
  • Cellular Video
  • SMS, MMS, EMS, and Chat
  • Dual band GSM 850/1800/1900 MHz
  • Weight: 90g (with battery)
  • 65K colour, 128fg
  • MMS
  • Video Recorder
  • FM Radio: RDS Radio
  • MP3 Player (AT&T Mobile Music / MusicID)
  • SMS text messages
  • MMS messaging with pictures
  • EMS
  • Photo and data sharing with Bluetooth 2.0
  • Mini-USB port for connection with PC
  • WAP 2.0 web browser
  • Battery: Lithium-ion
  • Talk time: Up to 7 hours
  • Stand-by: Up to 23 days

References

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  1. ^ "Apple, Motorola & Cingular Launch World's First Mobile Phone with iTunes". Apple Newsroom. Retrieved 2021-01-22.
  2. ^ "It's official: ROKR E1 iTunes phone can only store max. 100 tracks". Engadget. Sep 8, 2005. Retrieved 2010-11-17.
  3. ^ Tynan, Dan (2006-05-26). "The 25 Worst Tech Products of All Time". PC World. Archived from the original on 2008-07-03. Retrieved 2013-03-22.
  4. ^ "Moto Blasts iRadio". Red Herring. 2 January 2006. Archived from the original on 2011-06-07. Retrieved 2013-03-22.
  5. ^ Andreescu, Alex (27 September 2005). "iPod nano: The End of the Motorola-Apple Story - Ed Zander, Motorola CEO: "Screw the nano"". Softpedia. Retrieved 2010-06-05.
  6. ^ Ziegler, Chris (2006-06-23). "China first to get Motorola Rokr E2". Engadgetmobile.com. Archived from the original on 2008-06-21. Retrieved 2013-03-22.
  7. ^ "Music to Retailer's Ears: Motorola Next Generation Music Device Rokr E2 Makes Smash Debut at GOME". Prnewswire.com. 2006-06-21. Retrieved 2013-03-22.
  8. ^ "First Release of Rokr E6 Source Available". opensource.motorola.com.[dead link]
  9. ^ "EDGE and Quad-Band". Rokitrokr-edge.blogspot.com. 2006-07-11. Retrieved 2013-03-22.
  10. ^ Ziegler, Chris (Oct 19, 2006). "Motorola ROKR E6 gets FCC blessing". engadgetmobile.com. Archived from the original on 2009-07-18. Retrieved 2013-03-22.
  11. ^ "Motorola E8 specifications". Gsmarena.com. Retrieved 2013-03-22.
  12. ^ "Motorola's New Rokr EM30 Becomes 22nd LiMo Handset". limofoundation.org. Archived from the original on 2008-12-05.
  13. ^ "Wayback Machine". 2013-09-01. Archived from the original on 2013-09-01. Retrieved 2024-06-07.
  14. ^ "Все для Motorola, программы для Motorola, бесплатные java игры". 2008-08-20. Archived from the original on 2008-08-20. Retrieved 2024-06-07.