Introducing the latest in mobile technology


If you’re a fan of simplicity, then you’re most likely not an admirer of the latest mobile phones. The latest generation of phones is capable of downloading and playing videos and MP3s, playing Java video games, accessing the internet, and taking digital camera-quality photos, and we now expect even the cheaper phones given away free with contracts by companies to come with at least these features as standard. But some people just need their phone to be a phone, you know?

There are a lot of people out there who simply want something you can send and receive calls and texts with, and that they can occasionally check the time on. They want something that won’t connect itself to the internet, should it be bumped around the wrong way. They crave a mobile that’s still going to survive after you’ve dropped it for the umpteenth time, and that doesn’t need to be recharged halfway through every conversation.

Could it be that I’ve just described the phone of your dreams? Then read on. Motorola know that there is a world full of people just like you, and that is why they’ve just launched a product just for you. The MotoFone, as it is called, was designed with the developing mobile markets of China and India in mind.

It shares a lot of design features with Motorola’s signature model, the Razr, but lacks most of that model’s multimedia functionality – there’s no internet access, no megapixel camera, and the screen is a simple black and white.

However, the MotoFone’s humble appearance is more than made up for by its truly astounding battery life, and the simplicity of its operation. This telecommunications breakthrough can justifiably crow about being the most energy efficient phone on the market, and with the addition of a dynamo, it can be charged by pedal power!

The phone manages to achieve this level of energy efficiency by using a revolutionary type of display which can be best described as a kind of electronic paper. Unlike our old LCD screens, this type of display does not need any backlight .

Thanks to its simplicity, the MotoFone is one of the cheapest mobiles to produce, and consequently it is one of the cheapest handsets to buy in the world So if you accidentally drop it down the toilet during a particularly hairy night out, it’s likely to still work perfectly, and if not, it could cost you as little as 5 to replace!



About the Author

Vodafone stock a large mobile phone range, including Sony Ericsson for you to chose from.


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