Motorola A1000

By Ella Morton on 21 September 2005

For business users needing to keep in touch with the office on the road, the A1000 is a viable option. Others may find that life is too short to wait for applications to load.

3.8
  • Good: Enormous screen for Web browsing and video playback • Business messaging allows secure remote access to personal files • Picsel viewer makes it easy to view documents •
  • Bad: Most applications suffer from delays • Downloaded files tend to go missing • Large and heavy •
  • Specs: Bluetooth • 1-megapixel • Symbian • See more specifications
  • RRP: AU$779.00
It's a phone Jim, but not as we know it. The 162 gram PDA-esque form factor of the A1000, with its sprawling LCD, stylus and bottom-dwelling joystick, is, in the words of Kath and Kim, "nice, different, unusual".

Design
"Keypad? We don't need no keypad." Such is Motorola's confidence in the allure of the enormous (40 by 61 millimetres) touchscreen on the A1000 that they have done away with those pesky numbers all together. Instead, when you need to make a call, a finger-friendly virtual keypad appears on the screen. Seasoned texters may find the lack of a real keypad difficult to adapt to, as SMS input is done with a stylus and either a teeny onscreen keyboard or handwriting recognition. On the bright side, calloused thumbs are now an ailment of the past.

With such a heavy focus on touchscreen navigation, the design of the stylus becomes very important. Unlike the usual cylindrical designs, the A1000 version is flat and extendable. This makes it a little awkward to grip at first, but the ability to vary the stylus' length is quite cool.

The power switch on the side also functions as an iPod-esque lock button, giving more weight to the rumour that Apple design is quietly taking over the world.

Features
The A1000 is focused on taking care of business, with the main drawcards being 3's "Business Messaging" feature and the ability to view e-mail attachments in high resolution with the Picsel Viewer application.

Business Messaging takes mobile e-mail one step further by allowing access to files on the company LAN as well as IMAP and POP3 e-mail accounts, all behind a firewall to guard corporate secrets.

While this is definitely a business-focused phone, there is one game, "Shane Warne Cricket", which allows those still smarting from Australia's Ashes drubbing to seek revenge on England. The game is pretty dull and repetitive, but the impressive graphics should distract for long enough to prevent the sending of any mischievous Warnie-style texts.

There are two cameras: a 640 x 480 pixel lens above the screen and a 1.2 megapixel version on the back of the phone.

The A1000 is compatible with an alphabet soup of multimedia file names, including MIDI, MP3, AMR, WAV, AU, WMA, 3GA, MMA, MP4 and 3GP.

Internal memory is an acceptable 22MB, and can be beefed up with the addition of a 64- or 128MB TransFlash card.

Performance
The screen of the A1000 behaves like a rebellious teenager -- despite repeated pressing, it can take a while to get a response. Most applications -- from the text entry keyboard to the Web browser -- take around three seconds to load. That might not seem like much, but it did become frustrating for us during testing, and frequent users would definitely notice the lag.

Since being dazzled by the wondrous speakers of the Sony Ericsson Z800i, we have become as hard to please as Dicko when judging sound quality. When we played MP3 and video files, the speakers in the A1000 suffered from some tinniness at higher volumes and lacked that rich Sony sound, but true ringtones and alert sounds fared better.

The Picsel Viewer is a gem of an application, and one of the few that doesn't seem to suffer from a lag. PDF and Word files were a cinch to navigate, zoom in and out on and drag around the screen.

Like that eccentric uncle you only see at Christmas, the A1000 has some personality quirks that are just plain baffling. For instance, some downloaded files seem to vanish into the ether, and can only be located by connecting the phone to a computer via USB and perusing the contents using the Desktop Suite software. Then there's the strange internal reverberation that occurs when the phone is tapped -- even gently -- against a hard surface.

Whether you'll be impressed by the A1000 depends on whether you want a phone for work or leisure. For business users who need to view documents on the run, the Picsel Viewer and Business Messaging features are pretty impressive. For non-business users, the amount of time spent waiting for things to happen may be too much of an annoyance.

Topics: australia, a1000, 3, pda, phone, motorola, business, mobile, e-mail, messaging

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Comments (16)

  • aj64 gave 8/10 on 13/08/2007 23:53 Report abuse

    good smartphone (once you add extra software, memory and features). Handango.com is a great site to download extra software (like Media Maker to convert DVD's etc to compatible files to download onto external memory card). I have downloaded heaps of (very reasonably priced) software for this phone and even watch full feature movies on it regularly - on a 128Mb card (although I charge the battery almost as regularly - but hey, it's a phone and it has some great positives). I've had mine for two years and would only upgrade to a phone that has a 5MP camera - coz this one suits my business needs just fine with the extra $100 of software I've added.

    • Good: Big screen, great resolution... Pop3 Email, PDF, Excel, Word viewer. Easy to use and navigate. Easy drag and drop media files.
    • Bad: Can't set ring tone for sound and vibrate simultaneously (unless you make your own vibrating ringtone - software costs $10 from handango.com). Need two hands to SMS (one to hold phone, one to hold stylus). Video quality not the greatest, but ok for the phone that it is.
  • LimoGuy gave 3/10 on 03/05/2007 13:11 Report abuse

    No support for Vista OS, we have 16 and can't sync any to our PCs since upgrading to Vista - if nothing comes of a software upgrade in the next month we'll dump the lot!

  • tushar gave 10/10 on 19/11/2006 18:34 Report abuse

    best fone eva

  • TechNomads gave 2/10 on 21/10/2006 08:46 Report abuse

    JUST BAD NEWS

    BAD GO TO THE NOKIA E61 OR A BLACKBERRY OR A O2

    • Good: NONE
    • Bad: EVERYTHING
  • Zviki gave 9/10 on 22/09/2006 14:04 Report abuse

    This phone is old (4Q 2004)

    Common! This phone is old! It was made in 2004. It's a good phone and there is a lot apps for it. Look on the internet. You can install software for sony ericsson p910 on moto a1000.

    • Good: Opera browser,email,BIG screen,...
    • Bad: Unsupported WMV format
  • Ryan gave 3/10 on 18/09/2006 11:29 Report abuse

    Slow, bad interface, little software support

    • Good: Camera is good. Picsel viewer works well. Battery life is good for this sort of phone.
    • Bad: The interface is incredibly slow and awkward to use. It takes over a minute to start the phone. Difficult to check if the phone is off without accidentily turning it on.

      Very difficult to use without the stylus, even for simple tasks like using the address book. The only thing you can comfortably use your thumb for is typing numbers directly.

      Little software support. You're pretty much stuck with what is installed when you get it.
  • Anonymous gave 10/10 on 28/08/2006 22:00 Report abuse

    since updating the firmware, does everything I need it to

  • John gave 8/10 on 18/08/2006 18:07 Report abuse

    Great Phone

    I think ill investgate getting the Sony M600i or the Nokia E61 though in the near future.

    • Good: I like this phone, its not perfect by any means, but for what it does, Brilliant...... Buisness use that is. I love the email function, and the Viewer..... Cant wait for the next version.....I travel alot, I dont know how I did without it for so long. Easily worth the A$400 I paid for it.
    • Bad: USB Cable has a poorly designed connector that moves around and disconnects all the time. If I could get the bluetooth working, that might be better (probably MSN XP's foult though)....Battery life is not great.... Especially with Bluetooth Earpiece on..... I only really get 1 day out of the battery. Few minor bugs in the operation, but still like it.
  • Anonymous gave 1/10 on 21/04/2006 12:19 Report abuse

    Very Good Phone

    Ideal phone for the professional , easy to use, love using it.

  • Anonymous gave a review on 18/04/2006 11:12 Report abuse

    Locks up

    Phone constantly locks up. It will also shut down and restart. Battery life is terrible.

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