Motorola Q improves on that experience, but like the other smart phones, lacks a basic text-editing feature: cut and paste. Motorola Q's a strange omission that for me severely limits the usefulness of the Q as an e-mail device. The BlackBerry, which has a similar button layout, does cut and paste.
Motorola Q is slim and fits easily in a pair of khakis or suit jacket without bulging or weighing you down. The keyboard feels a bit stiff and plasticky, but as you'll see in the video, you can type on it quickly and accurately.
The keyboard feels a bit stiff and plasticky, but as you'll see in the video, you can type on it quickly and accurately. Motorola Q's a strange omission that for me severely limits the usefulness of the Q as an e-mail device.
Motorola Q Smart phone is nearing its launch date. The phone was announced in Q3 of 2005, but has been MIA ever since. The latest reports peg its release for April of this year for Verizon networks and this is without AKU2. Considering how long Motorola has been sitting on this phone, that news is slightly disturbing.
The Motorola Q is based on Microsoft's Windows Mobile 5.0 platform, has a 2.4" color screen, Bluetooth, built-in 1.3 megapixel digital camera, audio (iMelody, MIDI, MP3, AAC, WAV, WMA, WAX, QCELP) and video (H.263, MPEG-4, GSM-AMR, AAC, WMV) playback and features a QWERTY keyboard with thumbwheel.