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Where can I download an instructional manual for the Motorola Droid Razr?

Instructional manual on the Droid Razr

  • Motorola DROID RAZRMotorola DROID RAZR



(Wireless Phone) A bit of coexntt, just so you know where I'm coming from on this - I upgraded from a Motorola Backflip. The best Android phone AT&T had to offer at the time, but I'd had enough of the ridiculously slow processor. - Rather than wait another 8 months to renew my contract, I took an exclusion renewal, so I got the Atrix for only about $100 under retail price. - I don't spend much time on social networking sites, so the Motoblur features aren't a selling point for me. - I've used iOS devices, and their UI design is excellent, but I'd never buy an Apple product (I find their walled-garden policy patronizing and their hardware restrictions unethical.) So when I looked into upgrading, I cross-checked the specs on a few different phones (Android's great, but I was willing to try Windows or Blackberry if the hardware was right). The dual 1ghz processor sold me on the Atrix. Remember when cell phone LCDs first went from black and white to color? Within the first five minutes, this phone completely changed my paradigm for mobile phones. Everything is fluid and responsive no more half-second delays between action and response, no more waiting for a window to load, it's all instantaneous. I won't waste your time with a glowing review (there are enough on here already), I'll just cover the questions I had when looking into upgrading my phone. And I'll start with the cons, because the Atrix is just that impressive: Cons: 1. Battery life is pathetic. While we've come to accept that with touchscreen smart phones, it's a shame that 8 hours of moderate use will suck down the whole battery. It's on par with other high performance phones, so plug it in to your car adapter, PC, or outlet whenever you get the chance. 2. Android 2.2 is almost a year old, and 2.3 s been out for a while now. It would be nice to have an ETA on when the 2.3 update will be pushed to these phones. 3. The usual Motorola/AT&T rebranding and lockdown of the OS. It's unnecessary restriction just to squeeze a bit of extra cash out of their customers, and they should be ashamed of themselves. 4. No physical keyboard. People that are used to touchscreen-only devices won't even raise an eyebrow about it, but this is the first phone I've owned that didn't have a keypad of some sort. 5. The accessories are gimmicky and overpriced. If you want a laptop, spend the $400 on a laptop. If you want to play media on your TV, use the Atrix's built-in DLNA to run it through your Xbox, HTPC, or any of the other DLNA devices you've already got connected. The dock is crazy expensive, and the phone comes with an HDMI cable, which is really all you need. 6. The battery gets a warm when charging scary warm, like it might not be healthy for the phone. Phone also charges slowly when connected to a PC. 7. The power button is about the same size and shape as the loudspeaker, and it's in about the same spot (only on the opposite side of the phone). I've caught myself pressing the speaker to turn on the phone, rather than the power button, at least 10 times this week. That can't be good for the speaker. Pros: 1. FAST. Insane fast. The responsiveness of this phone is like nothing I've seen before there is no noticeable delay in using any of the UI menus or features. 2. The screen is enormous, vivid, and crisp almost on par with a PC monitor. 3. All the I/O ports you need: micro USB, stereo miniplug, and mini HDMI. (And it comes with a free mini HDMI to HDMI cable, so you can plug it right into your TV or home theater receiver) 4. DLNA is fantastic I never considered how useful it would be on a phone until I saw it in the apps menu. Access all your Windows 7 shared libraries, media on your Xbox 360, or shared media on any other DLNA-enabled device on your network. Transferring files from your computer to your phone is as easy a tapping a few icons no cables required, and transfer speeds are quick ballpark, I'd say it was around 1 MB/s. 5. Voice recognition is excellent. For the first time, speaking a text message is actually faster and easier than typing it in. Accuracy is good, and my only complaint so far is that it automatically censors swear words. Which is bull****. 6. Very light for its size. 7. Front-facing camera and rear camera with a bright LED flash. 8. Six input buttons: Volume up/down, menu, home, back, and search (search was a new one for me) 9. The usual bonuses that come with buying non-Apple phones: you can take the battery out if it freezes or you keep a spare; microSD port allows you to expand your storage space up to 48GB; you can load and play DRM-free media without using any apps or programs; reasonable replacement plans for


You can download the user guide on Motorola Droid Razr phone page.

You can find the download link on the right side of the screen. Hope it helps. :)



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