Today Motorola unveiled 4 new Android based devices during their press conference at CES today; three smartphones and 1 tablet.  We were able to get some limited hands on time with these devices at the end of the conference. 

The first device, the Atrix 4G was announced earlier this morning during AT&T's press event but we do have a few more details about this smartphone and its "webtop" peripherals. Here are the detailed specs from Motorola's press kit:

Motorola Atrix 4G
Talk and Standby Time1 Usage Time/Talk Time: 3G = 9 hrs; GSM = 8.8 hrs
Standby Time: 3G = 250 hrs; GSM = 264 hrs
Bands/Modes WCDMA 850/1900/2100,
GSM 850/900/1900/1800
Weight 135g
Dimensions 63.50mm wide x 117.75mm long x  10.95mm thin
OS Android 2.2 - upgrade to 2.3 is planned for later this year
Processor 2 ARM Cortex A9 cores running at 1GHz each
Battery 1930.00 mAh
Connectivity 3.5mm, micro USB 2.0 HS, Corporate Sync,  BOTA,  Wi-Fi 2.4GHz & 5GHz 802.11b/g/n  Bluetooth2 2.1 EDR
Display 4.0” qHD (Quarter High Definition) (960 x 540)
Messaging/Web/Apps MMS,  SMS, Email (Corporate Sync,  Google Mail,  POP3/IMAP embedded,  Push Email)
Audio AAC,  AAC+,  AAC+ Enhanced,  AMR NB,  MP3,  WMA v10
Video HD 1020 p capable
Capture – 720p MPEG4 and H.264 at 30 fps
(1020p will be supported via SW upgrade post-launch)
Playback – 1020p MPEG4, H.264, WMV, Xvid/DivX at 30 fps 
(Playback through HDMI is 720p at launch and will be upgraded to 1020p via SW upgrade post-launch)
Streaming – VGA in MPEG4, H.264, H.263 at 30 fps
Camera 5 MP AF, Digital Zoom with LED Flash , 2nd VGA imager for video chat self image capture
Storage 16GB on board – supports up to 32GB microSD
Memory 1GB LP DDR2 RAM
Form Factor Touch screen
Sensors Accelerometer, Ambient Light, Proximity
Antenna Internal
Address Book/Calendar MOTOBLUR aggregates Facebook®, MySpace, TwitterTM and GmailTM messages and contacts as well as syncs and merges your work contacts, email and calendar
Browsers Android Web Kit with Adobe® Flash® Player, Mozilla 3.6.13 in Webtop Application
Location Services eCompass, aGPS with Google Maps™, Google Latitude™, Google Maps Street View

The Atrix sports a 4.0” qHD (960 x 540) LCD display.  Motorola stated the Atrix as well as the Driod Bionic do not use OLED screens.

Two docking peripherals were also showcased for the Atrix; a desktop dock with HDMI out and a laptop dock with 36Whr battery and 11.6” display.  The Atrix can seamlessly move between these docks.  There was no discernable lag when going between the desktop dock to standalone, and then to the laptop.

When docked in the laptop you run a webtop app that runs on top of Android that lets you spawn other Android apps in tabs as well as browse in Firefox. Unfortunately we were not able to run any benchmarks on these phones after the press event, we can comment on its performance subjectively.  The UI was pleasantly smooth and responsive.  We didn’t notice any slowdown in performance while web browsing or during general usage of the phone.  When docked, performance of the Firefox browser (full desktop version 3.6.13, Motorola proudly states) was also quite snappy for a mobile device.   The web browsing experience was surprisingly good.

The build quality of the laptop dock was very good.  The chiclet style keyboard was comfortable and easy to type on.  Not quite as good as the 11” Macbook Air, but definitely more than adequate.  Surprisingly the laptop dock is heavier than expected given that it really only contains the screen, keyboard and battery.  We do not have official weight figures for it yet.

No official release date was given for the Atrix 4G however Motorola states it will be available sometime in Q1 2011.

The next device announced is the Driod Bionic.  This looks to be another dual-core 1GHz smartphone, however Motorola wouldn't clarify whether or not it was based on NVIDIA's Tegra 2. Here are the detailed specs:

Motorola Droid Bionic
Software Platform: Android 2.2 WLAN: 802.11b, 802.11g, 802.11n
Messaging/web/apps: MMS,  SMS, Email (Google Mail,  POP3/IMAP embedded) IM (GTalk), WebKit w/ Flash Location Services: eCompass,  sGPS (simultaneous) with Google Maps™, Google Latitude™, Google Maps Street View
Audio: AAC,  AAC+,  AAC+ Enhanced,  MIDI,  MP3 Form Factor: Smartphone
Video: Capture/Playback/Streaming,  HD Video (1080p decode/playback, 720p encode/capture), H.263,  H.264,  MPEG4 Processor: 2 processor cores running at 1GHz each
Camera: 8 MP, VGA P2P Video, Digital Zoom, Auto Focus, LED Weight: 158.00 g
Memory: 512MB DDR2 RAM Dimensions:  66.90(x) 125.90(y) 13.30(z)
Storage: 16GB on board – supports up to 32GB microSD (Total 48GB) Display: 4.3” qHD (Quarter High Definition) (960 x 540)
Connectivity: 3.5mm, USB 2.0 HS, Corporate Sync,  DLNA,  Motosync,  OMA DM, HDMI (with Mirror Mode) Baseband: Motorola 4G LTE (Band 13)
Bluetooth1: Stereo  Bluetooth Class 2, Version 2.1+EDR, HID (Keyboard, mouse) Battery: 1930.00 mAh

The Droid Bionic will be a Verizon LTE device wth a 4.3” qHD (960 x 540) LCD display and 1930mAh battery. Physically this phone is a bit larger in all dimensions and heavier than the Atrix 4G.  It also has half the memory (512GB vs 1GB on the Atrix) and doesn’t feature any of the webtop capabilities. 

The final product announced today was the Xoom tablet.  Motorola states this is the “world’s first” device to run Honeycomb (Android 3.0).  Unfortunately Motorola wouldn’t let us get our hands on the Xoom since its still not production ready.  They had the Xoom running a few demo videos that honestly did not seem very impressive.  Maybe it was the framerate of the video, but the UI demonstration looked pretty choppy.  Hopefully they’ll have the performance kinks worked out closer to launch.  Motorola says the Xoom is scheduled to launch sometime in Q1 2011. 

Here are the detailed specs for the Xoom:

Motorola XOOM Tablet
OS Android 3.0 Honeycomb
Differentiation Larger display in smaller form-factor, 1080p HD support, first tablet with Honeycomb software, dual-core 1GHz processor, and a wide range of docking options
Dimensions 249.1mm (h) x 167.8mm (w) x 12.9mm (d)
Display 10.1” 1280x800 
Weight 730 g
Processor NVIDIA® Tegra™ 2: 1GHz dual-core processor
Battery Up to 10 hour video playback 
Connectivity 3.5mm, micro USB 2.0 HS, Corporate Sync, Wi-Fi 2.4GHz & 5GHz 802.11b/g/n,  Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR + HID
Network EvDO Rev.A - Verizon 800/1900
Messaging/Web/Apps Email (Corporate Sync,  Google Mail,  POP3/IMAP embedded,  Push Email,  Yahoo Mail) , WebKit w/ Flash
Audio AAC,  AAC+,  AMR NB,  AMR WB,  MP3, XMF
Video 720p capture/1080p playback/streaming, H.263,  H.264,  MPEG4
Camera 5 MP rear-facing camera with dual LED flash/2MP front-facing camera
Memory 32GB on board user memory, SD card support after software update, 1GB DDR2 RAM 

Highlights include a 10.1” 1280x800 screen, 5MP rear-facing camera and 2MP front camera with 720p video capture capability, 3G (upgradeable to LTE) radio, and up to 10 hrs video playback.    Dimensions are very similar to the iPad (243mm (h) x 190mm (w) x 13mm (d) for the iPad vs 249mm (h) x 167.8mm (w) x 12.9mm (d) for the Xoom).  The Xoom also weighs the same as an iPad with 3G support (730g).

Surprisingly Motorola wasn’t definitive about using the Tegra 2 in the Xoom in its press release.  We couldn’t find Tegra 2 mentioned anywhere else in Motorola’s press releases.

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  • TareX - Thursday, January 6, 2011 - link

    The fact they didn't mention Tegra 2 is the most worrying to me.

    Let alone the fact they didn't mention it can capture 1080p video, which Tegra 2 is capable of. You're the only ones who mentioned that "not Tegra 2" tidbit.
  • tester123 - Sunday, January 9, 2011 - link

    I signed up just so i could respond to your post.

    It is a Tegra 2 processor. Please see http://developer.motorola.com/products/atrix-mb860... for confirmation that it is a NVIDIA Tegra 2 AP20H Dual Core processor.

    You scared me - hopefully this will prevent from scaring others.
  • NJoy - Thursday, January 6, 2011 - link

    How can you turn such an exciting hardware into such a boring piece of crap? This is what I hate about smartphones (even though I myself am using WM devices since 2006) - what happened to design? they all look the same
  • TareX - Thursday, January 6, 2011 - link

    It looks nice, IMO. At the beginning I wasn't digging the thick bezel around the Atrix 4G's screen (compared to the HTC Infuse 4G and the Samsung announced next to it; both were almost edge-to-edge), but I think it makes the device more "uniform".

    I would have loved a next-gen phone that looks like the Xperia Arc, but you can't have it all...
  • TareX - Thursday, January 6, 2011 - link

    Why not 1080p? Could that be a Moto typo?
  • ImSpartacus - Thursday, January 6, 2011 - link

    yeah, 1020p would be 1813.33 x 1020. I'm not familiar with that resolution.

    I do think the qHD screen is neat though. Didn't the Zune HD have an eighth-HD screen?

    Perfect pixel scaling FTW!
  • deputc26 - Thursday, January 6, 2011 - link

    This is the first thing I noticed as well. That has got to be a typo, it should be 1080p.
  • Tanclearas - Thursday, January 6, 2011 - link

    This is the feature I've been waiting for. I've had various devices including smartphones and Internet tablets, and have tried various VGA adapters, bluetooth keyboards and mice to try to simulate this feature. It has never been a great experience.
  • strikeback03 - Thursday, January 6, 2011 - link

    Was there a front facing camera on the Droid Bionic? If so that will be all the features I wanted in my next phone (though launching with Gingerbread would have been nice). Now we just need availability.
  • TareX - Thursday, January 6, 2011 - link

    YEP -also came with a Skype Video Call demo.

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