In the 20 years since Motorola launched the DynaTAC 8000X phone or ?brick phone,? the number of global wireless subscribers has grown from approximately 300,000 in 1984 to more than 1.2 billion today. As the industry has grown, Motorola has anticipated demand for emerging technologies ranging from wireless Internet access and gaming to text messaging and digital imaging. Motorola?s pedigree for achieving industry ?firsts? remains constant and includes one of the world?s first commercial CDMA cellular networks (1995), the first tri-band GSM world phone, the L7089 (1999), the first GPRS phone in North America, the Timeport T7382i (2001) and one of the first mobile handset to operate on UMTS/WCDMA networks, the model A830 (2002).
No matter what I've tried, I always keep coming back to Motorola. The conversation quality seems the most natural to me, and they tend to have good reception. (Motorola cons: some recent models don't seem as mechanically robust as older models, or other brands.)
My friend used to have a Samsung, and it served him well for 3+ years, as it survived numerous drops. His new Motorola Razr on the other hand, crapped out after 1 month and had to be replaced.
From my personal experience (I used to sell phones) I would go with Samsung.
I've had several Nokia's and Samsungs but about 3 weeks ago I got the Motorola V3. I'm very happy. So far I haven't had to charge it but once a week and I do talk a lot. With the others I had to charge daily. I don't have drop calls or no signal as I once did.
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