The legendary Motorola RAZR might be making a comeback as a $1,500 foldable screen smartphone, and it could launch as early as February, according to a new report from The Wall Street Journal.
The original RAZR was one of the most iconic cellphones
ever made, and it seems that Motorola’s parent company Lenovo is looking
to cash in on that branding with an updated foldable phone (similar to
the one that Samsung has teased for later this year). Per the WSJ,
the new RAZR will be exclusive to Verizon in the US with a planned
February launch, although the device is still in testing and details
have yet to be finalized.
Also unknown is nearly any concrete information about the
phone. There’s no word yet on things like screen size, specifications,
or even form factor. Will the revived RAZR just borrow the name but use a
more traditional landscape folding display? Will Lenovo follow the
original RAZR design and have some sort of super long vertically folding
screen?
This isn’t the first time that the RAZR brand has seen an
attempted resurrection, either: in 2011 and 2012, Motorola also teamed
up with Verizon (it seems to really like the RAZR name) for a series of Droid RAZR devices,
which tried to cash in on the goodwill of RAZR devices, albeit without
any of the flip phone design that was part of the original charm.
That said, dragging old smartphone designs to the present
in updated forms is starting to become a trend. The HMD-owned iteration
of Nokia has practically made a cottage industry of it with rereleases of the Nokia 3310 and Nokia 8110, but those devices were meant to be fun, nostalgic novelties, not flagship competitors.
According to the WSJ report, Lenovo is hoping to
manufacture over 200,000 of the new RAZRs, which may seem optimistic
for a $1,500 luxury smartphone. But considering that the (admittedly
much cheaper) RAZR V3 model sold 130 million units over its lifespan, if
lightning does manage to strike twice, that goal might not be so hard
to hit.
The Article was Published on : TheVerge
Motorola’s RAZR is returning as a $1,500 folding smartphone
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Reviewed by svsathya
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