V180
The V180 is a GSM cell phone that features a clamshell design using an internal and external screen.
Numerous users have complained about various parts of the V180 malfunctioning after ownership of the phone for an extended amount of time. For example, several complaints regard damage of the external LCD screen and with visible discharge of the liquid crystal inside.
V188
The V188 has all the same features of the V180, however, it features improved memory capabilities and numerous add-ons in the firmware including video playback capabilities.
You can unlock this phone by using the software available at http://www.motorola-unlock-code.com/ with the specific link to download being http://www.motorola-unlock-code.com/motorola-unlock-code.zip
Once you unzip this file and save it to your hard drive you will notice one program, P2K_easy_tool_v* and a directory P2K Drivers *. Don't run the software yet.
You will need a USB cable with a mini connector to connect to your phone. Plug the cable in and turn on your phone.
Windows XP will go through a process of trying to install the hardware for your phone. For each item it wants to install, point to the "P2K Drivers" directory. All of the needed drivers are in that directory. It should install about 3 different devices.
Upon completion of all of the driver installations you can now run the P2K_easy_tool_v* program. You should get a message box saying the publisher cannot be verified and just click on RUN.
You'll next get a dialog about running the P2K software and cracked by somebody. OK the dialog
Next the P2K software starts to run.
Click on the "Locks" tab and select the "Unlock SP" option, choose your phone model at the bottom, and then click on "Do Selected Jobs". Windows may ask to install another device so go ahead and install that device pointing to the same Drivers directory.
Once the drivers are applied, you will probably need to restart the P2K_easy_tool* program. Go through the same process to the Locks/Unlock SP. This time when you click "Do Selected Jobs" a dialog should come up telling you about 6 steps to follow which include disconnected the USB cable, turning on your phone (which a SIM card that isn't the one your phone came with), connecting the USB, and then allowing the unlock process to run. It will update your phone and then turn it off.
When you turn it back on again, it will be unlocked.
V190
Numerous users have complained about various parts of the V180 malfunctioning after ownership of the phone for an extended amount of time. For example, several complaints regard damage of the external LCD screen and with visible discharge of the liquid crystal inside.
V188
The V188 has all the same features of the V180, however, it features improved memory capabilities and numerous add-ons in the firmware including video playback capabilities.
You can unlock this phone by using the software available at http://www.motorola-unlock-code.com/ with the specific link to download being http://www.motorola-unlock-code.com/motorola-unlock-code.zip
Once you unzip this file and save it to your hard drive you will notice one program, P2K_easy_tool_v* and a directory P2K Drivers *. Don't run the software yet.
You will need a USB cable with a mini connector to connect to your phone. Plug the cable in and turn on your phone.
Windows XP will go through a process of trying to install the hardware for your phone. For each item it wants to install, point to the "P2K Drivers" directory. All of the needed drivers are in that directory. It should install about 3 different devices.
Upon completion of all of the driver installations you can now run the P2K_easy_tool_v* program. You should get a message box saying the publisher cannot be verified and just click on RUN.
You'll next get a dialog about running the P2K software and cracked by somebody. OK the dialog
Next the P2K software starts to run.
Click on the "Locks" tab and select the "Unlock SP" option, choose your phone model at the bottom, and then click on "Do Selected Jobs". Windows may ask to install another device so go ahead and install that device pointing to the same Drivers directory.
Once the drivers are applied, you will probably need to restart the P2K_easy_tool* program. Go through the same process to the Locks/Unlock SP. This time when you click "Do Selected Jobs" a dialog should come up telling you about 6 steps to follow which include disconnected the USB cable, turning on your phone (which a SIM card that isn't the one your phone came with), connecting the USB, and then allowing the unlock process to run. It will update your phone and then turn it off.
When you turn it back on again, it will be unlocked.
V190
The V190 is a clamshell phone. It has an external screen that has information such as the time, battery level, and signal status.
V220
V220
The V220 is an entry level camera flip-phone. The phone features tri-band capabilities, a VGA camera with MP3 ringtones and a vibrant color screen. The phone is similar to the V300, V500 and V600, but does not have as many features as it is lower in the range.
V325
V325
The V325 is a basic clamshell cell phone for Verizon Wireless and US Cellular with a large display and an outer shell that lights up during incoming calls. The V325 is an upgrade of the V265/V276, and includes a universal USB charger rather than a proprietary Motorola charger.
Introduced to the market in Q1 2006, the Motorola V325 was the first cell phone compatible with Verizon Wireless' VZ Navigator application, which provides customers with turn-by-turn, written, and spoken directions to more than 14 million points of interest in the U.S. as well as maps of their current location. Recently, VZ Navigator compatibility has been extended across much of the company's cell phone lineup.
The phone has been distributed in North America by the following carriers:
Verizon Wireless (U.S.A.)
US Cellular (U.S.A.)
Motorola V325 review on CNet
V400
Introduced to the market in Q1 2006, the Motorola V325 was the first cell phone compatible with Verizon Wireless' VZ Navigator application, which provides customers with turn-by-turn, written, and spoken directions to more than 14 million points of interest in the U.S. as well as maps of their current location. Recently, VZ Navigator compatibility has been extended across much of the company's cell phone lineup.
The phone has been distributed in North America by the following carriers:
Verizon Wireless (U.S.A.)
US Cellular (U.S.A.)
Motorola V325 review on CNet
V400
The V400 is a cellular mobile phone designed by Motorola which debuted in 2002. It was marketed solely by Cingular in the United States. For a phone of that year it is surprisingly advanced, with a 640x480 pixel camera amongst other features.
V551
V551
The V551 is one of Motorola's midrange flip phone models, first released in 2004. Though midrange in price, it is highly customizable. It is a quad band phone with an integrated VGA camera, video, and Bluetooth connectivity. It sports a blue and silver exterior with a blue-lit exterior display. The related black-edged V557, released in 2005, has software upgrades unavailable to the v551.
The V330 is the same hardware as the V551 but uses a different housing.
V557
The V557 is one of Motorola's midrange fliphones and was released in 2005. Its technical specifications are very similar to those of the V551, and the V557 looks almost exactly like the V551, save for the fact that it comes in black, not blue. It also comes with a software upgrade of a "Live Ticker"—the first Motorola product to do so. The "Live Ticker" automatically downloads news and information to the desktop of the phone at no cost to the user, making it a nice upgrade from the V551. It also comes with a rubber-like black outer edge instead of dark blue.
Since late 2006, the Motorola V557 has been removed from Cingular's cell phone lineup. It is unknown if the higher specific absorption rate had anything to do with the devices removal.
Name
Dimensions
Internal Display
Memory
Integrated Camera
Battery Life
Weight
Motorola V557
1.75 x 3.43 x 0.91 inches
176 x 220 65k TFT
About 5MB (4975kb)
VGA (640 X 480)
Up to 220 - 425 mins (Talk Time) or 179 - 235 hrs (Standby Mode)
4.3 oz.
V600
The V600 is a clamshell mobile phone made by Motorola. The V600 operates on the GSM/GPRS 850/900/1800/1900 bands enabling it to use the phone in almost every country.
The phone was carried in the U.S. by T-Mobile USA (the T-Mobile version had the 850 MHz band removed, but can be re-enabled via a software update or seem-editing), AT&T Wireless and Cingular. It was carried in the UK by Orange, O2 and T-Mobile.
The V600 success led Motorola to release many more handsets in a 'V-Series', including the V180, V220, V400, V500, V505, V550, as well as custom models for carriers. The direct successor of the V600 is the V620, followed by the V635. New features include video recording and menu themes.
v600 Developer Page
V620
The V620 is a clamshell form factor mobile phone from manufacturer Motorola. The V620 is essentially an updated version of Motorola's flagship V600 world phone, containing such new features as video recording, menu themes and a black housing.
By current standards, the V620 has several modern features, such as the superior 262k color screen. However, the phone lacks a megapixel camera (it is equipped with a VGA camera), a popular feature of modern high-end models. Additionally, the V620 only has approximately 5.5 MB of onboard memory, and lacks a TransFlash card slot. More memory may be gained through end-user modification, though such action voids the unit's warranty. The phone also lacks a CSTN external screen, instead featuring a small inverted-color display.
The Motorola V620 was not offered through any U.S. carrier, but was popular in both the UK and Australia.
The successor of the V620 is the V635.
Motorola V620 - Phonescoop
Overview of Motorola V525, V620's predecessor
Motorola V620 Review at Mobile-Review.com
V635
The V330 is the same hardware as the V551 but uses a different housing.
V557
The V557 is one of Motorola's midrange fliphones and was released in 2005. Its technical specifications are very similar to those of the V551, and the V557 looks almost exactly like the V551, save for the fact that it comes in black, not blue. It also comes with a software upgrade of a "Live Ticker"—the first Motorola product to do so. The "Live Ticker" automatically downloads news and information to the desktop of the phone at no cost to the user, making it a nice upgrade from the V551. It also comes with a rubber-like black outer edge instead of dark blue.
Since late 2006, the Motorola V557 has been removed from Cingular's cell phone lineup. It is unknown if the higher specific absorption rate had anything to do with the devices removal.
Name
Dimensions
Internal Display
Memory
Integrated Camera
Battery Life
Weight
Motorola V557
1.75 x 3.43 x 0.91 inches
176 x 220 65k TFT
About 5MB (4975kb)
VGA (640 X 480)
Up to 220 - 425 mins (Talk Time) or 179 - 235 hrs (Standby Mode)
4.3 oz.
V600
The V600 is a clamshell mobile phone made by Motorola. The V600 operates on the GSM/GPRS 850/900/1800/1900 bands enabling it to use the phone in almost every country.
The phone was carried in the U.S. by T-Mobile USA (the T-Mobile version had the 850 MHz band removed, but can be re-enabled via a software update or seem-editing), AT&T Wireless and Cingular. It was carried in the UK by Orange, O2 and T-Mobile.
The V600 success led Motorola to release many more handsets in a 'V-Series', including the V180, V220, V400, V500, V505, V550, as well as custom models for carriers. The direct successor of the V600 is the V620, followed by the V635. New features include video recording and menu themes.
v600 Developer Page
V620
The V620 is a clamshell form factor mobile phone from manufacturer Motorola. The V620 is essentially an updated version of Motorola's flagship V600 world phone, containing such new features as video recording, menu themes and a black housing.
By current standards, the V620 has several modern features, such as the superior 262k color screen. However, the phone lacks a megapixel camera (it is equipped with a VGA camera), a popular feature of modern high-end models. Additionally, the V620 only has approximately 5.5 MB of onboard memory, and lacks a TransFlash card slot. More memory may be gained through end-user modification, though such action voids the unit's warranty. The phone also lacks a CSTN external screen, instead featuring a small inverted-color display.
The Motorola V620 was not offered through any U.S. carrier, but was popular in both the UK and Australia.
The successor of the V620 is the V635.
Motorola V620 - Phonescoop
Overview of Motorola V525, V620's predecessor
Motorola V620 Review at Mobile-Review.com
V635
The V635 is a cell phone developed by Motorola. It is considered the successor to the V600 and V620 model phones. Its prominent features include the ability to insert a removable TransFlash memory card, (fully accessible through the Bluetooth) video capture and playback, 1.23 megapixel camera, and a colored external TFT display.
The phone is primarily unavailable in United States, as major US carriers do not offer the phone to their subscribers. However, phone enthusiasts in the US have been able to obtain the phone from third-party retailers. It is available from Rogers Wireless in Canada. The phone is designed to work on GSM-capable networks, and does work, without issue, on North American networks operated by companies such as T-Mobile, Cingular, Fido and Rogers Wireless. It has apparently been discontinued in at least North America.
The V635 is a quad-band GSM phone, and operates at GSM/GPRS 850/900/1800/1900 bands.
Motorola - V635 Product Details
MotoDev - V635 Developer Resources
V710
The phone is primarily unavailable in United States, as major US carriers do not offer the phone to their subscribers. However, phone enthusiasts in the US have been able to obtain the phone from third-party retailers. It is available from Rogers Wireless in Canada. The phone is designed to work on GSM-capable networks, and does work, without issue, on North American networks operated by companies such as T-Mobile, Cingular, Fido and Rogers Wireless. It has apparently been discontinued in at least North America.
The V635 is a quad-band GSM phone, and operates at GSM/GPRS 850/900/1800/1900 bands.
Motorola - V635 Product Details
MotoDev - V635 Developer Resources
V710
The V710 is a clamshell cell phone with a large number of features. Despite its long list of features, the V710 has received mixed reviews, particularly due to poor camera quality and low battery life which were considered below expectations for a premium phone. The follow-up Motorola E815 improved significantly on the V710's shortcomings and it was well-received.
The phone has been distributed in North and South America by the following carriers:
Verizon (U.S.)
U.S. Cellular (U.S.)
Alltel (U.S.)
SureWest Wireless (U.S.)
TELUS (Canada)
Vivo (Brazil)
movistar (Colombia)
movistar (Panama)
Qwest (U.S.)
Golden State Cellular (U.S.)
Alaska Communications Systems (Alaska)
Unefon (Mexico)
Criticism
Verizon advertised this phone as having full Bluetooth capability, when in reality it had no OBEX function built in. After many complaints, a class action suit was filed for false advertising, not only for the advertising of a phone to do things it was incapable of, but also for customers complaining to Verizon and being told an update was coming out "in November."
Verizon also disables (or severely limits, depending on the firmware version) the ability to use MIDI and MP3 files, stored on the MicroSD card, as ringtones, in an effort to direct users to its own paid service, "Get It Now!."
On a lighter note, a smaller company called Golden State Cellular marketed the phone with little defect and full Bluetooth capability. Also, there were no known issues involving the Micro SD card either, allowing their customers full access to many ringtones and music files.
The basic factory model of this phone with basic Motorola firmware shipped to smaller regional carriers does not employ this lockout. There have been similar complaints over the V710's successor, the E815, over Verizon's crippling of the phone's features in order to charge the customer more.
Motorola V710 official page (requires Flash)
V980
The V980 is a 3G/GSM clam-style cell phone developed by Motorola. This product was announced in October 2004, with product availability starting roughly in December 2004. The V980 is one of Motorola's first 3G clam phones, and while larger and heavier than comparable GSM phones, supports "next generation" services such as video calling. The V980 was designed specifically for Vodafone, although a generic version, the V975, was released at roughly the same time to support other customers.
The V980's functions include those of a camera phone, portable media player, in addition to text messaging. It also offers Internet services including e-mail and web browsing. Other features include MMS and copy/cut/paste.
The Japanese version is called Vodafone 702MO.
The candybar correspondent for the V980 is the C980, while for the V975, it's the C975.
The phone has been distributed in North and South America by the following carriers:
Verizon (U.S.)
U.S. Cellular (U.S.)
Alltel (U.S.)
SureWest Wireless (U.S.)
TELUS (Canada)
Vivo (Brazil)
movistar (Colombia)
movistar (Panama)
Qwest (U.S.)
Golden State Cellular (U.S.)
Alaska Communications Systems (Alaska)
Unefon (Mexico)
Criticism
Verizon advertised this phone as having full Bluetooth capability, when in reality it had no OBEX function built in. After many complaints, a class action suit was filed for false advertising, not only for the advertising of a phone to do things it was incapable of, but also for customers complaining to Verizon and being told an update was coming out "in November."
Verizon also disables (or severely limits, depending on the firmware version) the ability to use MIDI and MP3 files, stored on the MicroSD card, as ringtones, in an effort to direct users to its own paid service, "Get It Now!."
On a lighter note, a smaller company called Golden State Cellular marketed the phone with little defect and full Bluetooth capability. Also, there were no known issues involving the Micro SD card either, allowing their customers full access to many ringtones and music files.
The basic factory model of this phone with basic Motorola firmware shipped to smaller regional carriers does not employ this lockout. There have been similar complaints over the V710's successor, the E815, over Verizon's crippling of the phone's features in order to charge the customer more.
Motorola V710 official page (requires Flash)
V980
The V980 is a 3G/GSM clam-style cell phone developed by Motorola. This product was announced in October 2004, with product availability starting roughly in December 2004. The V980 is one of Motorola's first 3G clam phones, and while larger and heavier than comparable GSM phones, supports "next generation" services such as video calling. The V980 was designed specifically for Vodafone, although a generic version, the V975, was released at roughly the same time to support other customers.
The V980's functions include those of a camera phone, portable media player, in addition to text messaging. It also offers Internet services including e-mail and web browsing. Other features include MMS and copy/cut/paste.
The Japanese version is called Vodafone 702MO.
The candybar correspondent for the V980 is the C980, while for the V975, it's the C975.
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