Your Ad Here

Motorola ‘Calgary’ to bring BLUR to Verizon, Droid not looking worried

The Droid’s shaping up to be a beast of an Android phone — well played, Verizon — but Motorola’s banking much of its future on its MOTOBLUR platform, which the Droid curiously lacks (though Android 2.0 adds at least some of BLUR’s functionality back in). Don’t worry, though — Verizon hasn’t forgotten about BLUR altogether, and the rumored Calgary is looking to arrive as the carrier’s next Android phone from Moto featuring BLUR in all its social network-aggregating glory. It’s clearly positioned as a lower-end device than the Droid, stepping down to a 3 megapixel cam but still managing nifty features like an optical pad, 3.5mm jack, and naturally, a full QWERTY keyboard. Considering Rubin’s ties to Danger, you could think of this as the ill-fated Sidekick Slide all grow’d up. Word has it this might hit before the end of the year, so we’ll see just how much breathing room Verizon and Moto feel like giving the Droid before coming back for Round 2, eh?

Filed under: ,

Motorola ‘Calgary’ to bring BLUR to Verizon, Droid not looking worried originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 20 Oct 2009 14:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • email
  • PDF
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Google Bookmarks
  • RSS

This post is tagged: , , , , , , , , ,

Leave a Reply





  • FCC thinks ISPs should do a wiser job preventing fraud, theftFCC thinks ISPs should do a wiser job preventing fraud, theft

    Internet fraud and theft are major problems, there appears little question about that -- in accordance with FCC chairman Julius Genachowski , some 8.4 million bank card numbers are stolen yearly. The question, then, is who ought to be addressing the problem. Genachowski this week called for "smart, practical, voluntary solutions," asking internet service providers to position more… »
  • Robot navigates, reassembles truss structuresRobot navigates, reassembles truss structures

    Sick and bored with your boring old truss? This useful little robot might be just the answer you are looking for. It might navigate a truss structure using its 3D-printed bi-directional gear innards, unscrew a beam with its rotational mechanism and reattach it, transforming the structure right into a new shape. The structure itself is specially designed for the bot, with robot lockable… »

Categories

Subscribe

Enter your email address: