When a apparently great end cellphone comes in at $99 on agreement, our first believed is "something has to be missing". Yes, AT&T is very competitive with their agreement costs, but consider the charming Htc Lumia 900: amazing cellphone, but the components specifications aren't up there with the $199 mobile phone devices. The $99 Panasonic Xperia Ion has an stylish steel covering, a stand-out show and a 12MP photographic camera, but it's operating Android operating system 2.3 Gingerbread on a third rather than 4th creation CPU. So what's the tale with the deal cost Motorola Atrix HD?
--------
Despite the name, the Motorola Atrix HD is a GSM Motorola Android operating system RAZR rather than the reincarnation of the last two Atrix Android Smartphone operating system mobile phones on AT&T. It has the beveled Gorilla Cup front part and a Kevlar returning with the RAZR's unique top cap that homes the photographic camera, LED display, HDMI and USB slots. It's a good looking cellphone with a enclosed covering. That indicates you can't exchange the 1780 mAh Lithium Ion power supply since it's enclosed within. There is a microSD cards port on the part though, along with a small SIM cards port. The Atrix HD's sides are flat and have smoother shapes than the Android operating system RAZR, and we acknowledge to choose the RAZR's edgier and more personal style.
----------
I acknowledge to love the designed Kevlar returning for both looks and structure. The slightly rounded Gorilla Cup sides give the cellphone a more refined look and the dark on bright red stripe on our bright design gives graphic attention. There's a large presenter grill on the returning problem, and this is indeed a noisy cellphone with more amount than most mobile phones provide. The small power and amount manages on the right side are a bit hard to media, but we like having both small USB and small HDMI slots (no tracking for MHL adapters).
----------
Specs :
The Atrix HD seems to have it all: Android 4.0 ICS, a lovely 4.5" "ColorBoost" 720p display, the same 1.5GHz fourth gen Qualcomm Snapdragon dual core CPU as the Samsung Galaxy S III and HTC One X, an 8mp rear camera that can shoot 1080p video, dual band WiFi (nice), Bluetooth 4.0 and a GPS. The only thing missing is NFC, but that isn't a huge deal (yet) on AT&T since there's no way to use it for mobile payments.