Motorola has announced the U.S. launch of two new smartphones equipped with the Android mobile operating system. They are Motorola XPRT and Motorola Titanium, and were designed for the corporate segment.
The first is a smartphone similar to the Blackberry from Research and Motion (RIM) that has a 3.1 inch touch screen size and security features for businesses.
The terminal has Froyo Android 2.2, 1 GHz processor, a physical QWERTY keyboard and a 5 megapixel camera. In addition, the Motorola XPRT has support for Flash 10 and comes with the user interface Motoblur, Motorola. Its U.S. launch is scheduled for June 5 and will be marketed by the operator Sprint.
For its part, Motorola smartphone Titanium is a rugged, built to withstand adverse conditions of temperature, pressure, dust and sunlight, among other things that tend to damage to mobile phones. Equipped with Push-totalk technology, the Titanium Motorola Motorola is the successor of i1.
This terminal has some characteristics similar to those of Motorola XPRT, as the physical QWERTY keyboard, 3.1-inch screen size and a 5 megapixel camera, but differs in that runs on Android 2.1 Eclair. The company has not yet reported the official launch date of Titanium Motorola smartphone.