Motorola’s RAZR2 Debuts in North America
RAZR2, the successor to Motorola’s RAZR, has made its North American debut and will be available from Alltel, AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile USA, US Cellular, and Verizon Wireless.  

RAZR 2 includes new features and technologies such as CrystalTalk technology, up to 2GB of on-board memory, Web browsing, real-time point-to-point video and ultra-fast menu navigation, all packed into a slimmer, stronger, sleeker design.

The new RAZR 2 is built using a new range of materials. The device is built using steel for the internal frame; aluminum, magnesium and plastic parts are visible to the eye on the outside. The company claims that the casing of the phone is scratch-resistant, with the lens cover being made with chemically hardened glass.

According to Motorola, the RAZR2 family's will include three new handsets V9 (3G HSDPA), V9m (EVDO CDMA) and V8 (GSM). The RAZR2 V8 has a completely redesigned User Interface (UI) so consumers can search contacts even faster. This eliminates duplicate entries for the same person while allowing contacts to have multiple numbers. The main menu is customizable, so consumers are never more than 2-3 clicks away from favorite applications, and even messaging is easier as RAZR2 automatically recognizes what type of message consumers are sending.

"The Motorola RAZR2 delivers the sharpest mobile experiences available - and customers of every national carrier in the U.S can now own one," said Stu Reed, Executive Vice President, Motorola, Inc. and President, Mobile Devices Business.

RAZR2 also supports the most popular music formats and media services and has built-in stereo Bluetooth wireless technology so the users can enjoy a wire-free music experience.

With RAZR2, Motorola hopes to regain some market share. According to the lastest research published by IDG, in 2Q 2007, with only 35.5 million units sold, Motorola is now on the third amongst the mobile phone makers and was the only vendor to post a year-on-year decrease among the leading vendors.

RAZR3 will cost $300 at AT&T and $250 at Sprint, including a two-year contract at both carriers and $300, after a $50 mail-in rebate at Verizon. Sprint will be the first carrier to sell RAZR2 as early as August 22.