Sprint unveils Motorola XPRT and Motorola Titanium Android phones

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Sprint on Thursday unveiled two new Android smartphones from Motorola — the Motorola XPRT and the Motorola Titanium. The XPRT is a dual-mode smartphone capable of roaming internationally on GSM networks, and it’s also the first Android phone from Sprint to feature enterprise-class security. Spec highlights include Android 2.2 (Froyo) with MOTOBLUR, a 3.1-inch touchscreen display, a 5-megapixel camera, a full QWERTY keyboard with BlackBerry-style buttons, a 1GHz processor and Adobe Flash 10 support. The Motorola Titanium is Sprint’s successor to the i1, and it will be a military-grade ruggedized smartphone running Android 2.1 (Eclair). Other highlights include a full BlackBerry-style QWERTY keypad, a 3.1-inch touchscreen display, a 5-megapixel camera, Push to Talk support and dust, shock, vibration, low pressure, solar radiation, high temperature and low temperature resistance. The Motorola XPRT launches on June 5th for $129.99 on contract. Pricing and availability details are not yet available for the Titanium. Hit the break for Sprint’s full press release.

Sprint and Motorola Unveil Two Android Devices for Business:
Motorola XPRT and Motorola Titanium

New Android smartphones target professionals with enhanced business-class experiences; Motorola XPRT offers enterprise-grade security and enhanced MOTOBLUR experience on an Android World Phone; and Motorola Titanium pairs

best-in-class Nextel Direct Connect with Android

OVERLAND PARK, Kan. – May 5, 2011 – To meet the growing demand for mobile devices with industry-leading enterprise features, Sprint (NYSE: S) and Motorola Mobility, Inc. (NYSE: MMI) will launch two new smartphones with enhanced business-ready capabilities, built on the Android™ platform. Motorola XPRT™ is the first Android smartphone from Sprint to deliver enterprise-class security, personal productivity enhancements and international roaming. Motorola Titanium™ leverages Sprint’s industry-leading Push-to-Talk capabilities as the first Nextel Direct Connect® smartphone built on Android 2.1.

“We are pleased to extend our portfolio of products directed at business-users with these two powerful and versatile Android devices,” said Paget L. Alves, president – Sprint Business. “Motorola XPRT delivers the security features enterprise customers demand without scrimping on the latest in technology, while Motorola Titanium is a rugged Android smartphone with Nextel Direct Connect’s sub-second Push-to-Talk.”

Motorola XPRT will be available on Sunday, June 5, in Sprint Stores, Business Sales, Web sales (www.sprint.com) and Telesales (1-800-SPRINT1), for $129.99 with a new line or eligible upgrade and two-year service agreement. Pricing and availability for Motorola Titanium will be announced at a later date.

“Motorola XPRT and Motorola Titanium blend feature-packed consumer experiences with an optimal set of productivity and security tools,” said Jeff Miller, corporate vice president of sales, Motorola Mobility. “We are pleased to partner with Sprint to deliver each of these unique business-ready devices to their continuously growing enterprise customer base.”

Packed with Productivity Tools

Designed for business users, Motorola XPRT offers a sleek, compact design built on Android 2.2, Froyo. This full-feature world phone is equipped with a pinch-to-zoom capable touchscreen, 3.1-inch HVGA display, full QWERTY keyboard and 1GHz processor with Adobe Flash 10 web browsing.

Enterprise managers and workforces across field service, field sales, healthcare, retail, utilities, manufacturing and transportation/distribution industries will benefit from its feature-rich capabilities, enterprise-class security and data encryption. Motorola XPRT delivers business-class security features with 256-bit AES data encryption and controls the IT department will appreciate, including the ability to remotely handle functions like enabling pin or password lock, password recovery and data wipe on both the phone and SD card if lost or stolen.

Motorola XPRT comes loaded with MOTOBLUR™ offering personalized content, including email and social media updates, delivered right to the user’s home screen. It enables convenient viewing of news feeds, updates and messages from social media sites from a single screen.

Additional key features of Motorola XPRT include:

  • Android Market™ for access to more than 150,000 applications, widgets and games available for download
  • Google™ mobile services, such as Google Maps™ with Navigation, Google Talk™, Gmail™ and YouTube™
  • Corporate email (Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync®) and personal (POP & IMAP) email
  • Worldmode – CDMA (EVDO Rev. A), GSM/UMTS (HSPA) – international roaming service available in more than 200 countries
  • 3G Mobile Hotspot capability, supporting up to five Wi-Fi enabled devices simultaneously
  • 5-megapixel camera with camcorder and dual LED flash for low-light performance
  • microSD slot, with a 2GB memory card included, supporting up to 32GB
  • Bluetooth® 2.1 + EDR
  • Wi-Fi® b/g/n
  • 1860 mAh Lithium-ion battery

Motorola XPRT requires activation on one of Sprint’s Everything Data plans, plus a required $10 Premium Data add-on charge for smartphones. Sprint’s Everything Data plan with Any Mobile, AnytimeSM includes unlimited web, texting and calling to and from any mobile in America while on the Sprint Network, starting at just $69.99 per month plus required $10 Premium Data add-on charge (pricing excludes surcharges and taxes).

Sprint also offers great value with international service add-ons for Motorola XPRT.

For just $4.99 per month, the Sprint Worldwide Voice Add on offers discounted rates while traveling in more than 100 countries. For only $2.99 per month, you can make local calls in Canada, call back to the United States and even receive calls in Canada for just $0.20 per minute. That’s a savings of $0.39 per minute over standard roaming charges. While roaming in Canada, Mexico, China, and other destinations data rates start as low as $0.002 per KB (on CDMA networks).

To sign up to learn more about Motorola XPRT, please visit http://www.motorola.com/XPRT.

Leading in Push-to-Talk

As the successor to the popular Motorola i1 launched by Sprint last year, Motorola Titanium is sleek and attractive, yet durable. It is the first iDEN device to combine Sprint’s best-in-class Nextel Direct Connect and Android 2.1, Éclair, for a feature rich business-class experience. It features a full QWERTY keyboard and 3.1-inch touchscreen display. Built military-grade tough, Motorola Titanium is certified to Military Specification 810G for dust, shock, vibration, low pressure, solar radiation, high temperature and low temperature.

With more than 17 years of expertise, Sprint is the industry leader in Push-to-Talk, serving the world’s largest Push-to-Talk community with millions of Nextel Direct Connect subscribers on the fastest national Push-to-Talk network. Nextel Direct Connect has set the industry standard for Push-to-Talk worldwide. More U.S. workers communicate in less than a second with Nextel Direct Connect than with any other Push-to-Talk service.

Additional key features of Motorola Titanium include:

  • Support for Nextel Direct Connect Services, including Direct Connect, Group Connect®, International Direct Connect®, DirectSendSM, Group Messaging and NextMail®
  • Android Market for access to more than 150,000 applications, widgets and games available for download
  • Google mobile services such as Google Search, Gmail, Google Talk, Google Maps with Navigation, syncing with Google Calendar™ and YouTube
  • Corporate email (Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync) and personal (POP3 & IMAP) email
  • 5-megapixel camera with camcorder, 4x zoom and flash
  • Wi-Fi b/g
  • Stereo Bluetooth
  • GPS navigation
  • microSD slot, with a 2GB memory card included, supporting up to 32GB
  • 1820 mAh Lithium-ion battery

To learn more about Motorola Titanium, please visit http://www.motorola.com/titanium.

Sprint has earned top honors in the competitive business marketplace – winning the #1 ranking for overall satisfaction for wireless voice service providers and a matching #1 ranking in overall satisfaction for wireless data service providers in a survey of large business decision makers, according to a comprehensive study by Yankee Group and Mobile Enterprise Magazine (www.mobileenterprisemag.com).1 The study indicated that Sprint ranked first in overall satisfaction in wireless voice and data, and in voice services, ranked first or second in nine of the 10 categories among large business customers.

27 Comments
  • Bullet Tooth Tony

    The Droid Pro and what appears to be the Droid Semi-Pro…

  • Anonymous

    They’re ugly on Verizon and equally ugly on Sprint! EVO 3D on June 3rd (June 10th, latest)!!

  • Monicaialuner

    Why is it that Motorola always makes stupid phones for Sprint and awesome phones for Verizon?

    • Anonymous

      Because Verizon spends more money to get them.

    • Sin City

      Like this stupid Motorola phone that’s the same as the stupid Verizon phones? Motorola and Verizon are joined at the hip, how is this breaking news? Motorola devices appearing on Sprint, is a step in the right direction, even if it’s old news. This is not even the high end Moto phone that will appear to them this year. Patience.

    • Anonymous

      I’m not just sayiing this because I’ve got Big Red, remember, I also had the EVO and Sprint; Verizon and Sprint (about 2.5 years ago and prior) used to stock almost exactly the same phone line-up, everything began to change with the launch of the carrier’s first Motorola DROID (A855). But, NOW, their current phones, as well as their much anticipated upcoming phones, BLOW the other carriers out of the water. Proud to be a RED BLOODED subscriber.

      • Anonymous

        Your proud to give a company making Billions your hard earned cash? Are you proud to fill up at BP too….

      • Anonymous

        I would normally agree with you on Verizon earning Gazillions, except they’re definitely not getting it from me, I was one of the smart subscribers about eight years ago who opted for the, then new, Unlimited Data Plan for PDA Smartphone first offered on the XV6600 for $49.99 with voice calling at 0.25 cents per minute (no voice allowance); with my corporate discount, I pay roughly $42.00 for unlimited data (no data cap or throttle). Works for me since I seldomly make calls.

        If I were a new subscriber, however, I would probably resent having to pay a minimum of $39.99 + $29.99 (voice and data) just to have one line of service, especially when I would never use 450 “Anytime” minutes in any given month.

  • mikeD

    Really 2.1 on the Motorola Titanium? Epic fail. There should be no excuse why anything released doesn’t have 2.3 on it.

    • Anonymous

      Sure there is. Every phone can not support it because of its hardware. But i understand your feelings on this issue though.

      • Ab

        Business class phones targeted to a certain sector of the market. Sounds like Sprint is finally going to use the Nextel arm of the business. And if u don’t work in a company that uses Direct Connect services u wouldn’t understand.

      • Anonymous

        LOL

      • Anonymous

        LOL

      • Dejan Jancevski

        Sadly, it doesn’t matter. No company that used Nextel iDEN currently still uses iDEN. Most have dropped iDEN (because of Sprint’s epic, never ending ineptitude) and gone over to Verizon or AT&T. Sprint releasing this phone is piss pour timing. Both phones suck. They are both barely decent for every day use, but no business user or true iDEN user would touch either of these devices.

    • Dale

      @ mikeD,

      Not everyone needs the latest Android version. These phones seem to be aimed at the adult business world and not at the “boy cave ” dwellers that occupy the BGR.forums.

      There’s more to life than the latest version of Android…

  • Anonymous

    These things make Blackberry’s look like fine art.

    • Kevin

      These things make a turd look like fine art, actually. :)

    • Rdrage73

      What does that even mean?

  • Anonymous

    Actually quite excited to get these in to test at work. We currently deploy the i1 for people that need exchange email as well as direct connect. Overall the i1 is pretty meh. Slow and running Android 1.5. Plus while quite a few people love the EVO 4G, which we deploy as well, there is still a big chunk of people that want a physical keyboard and don’t like landscape. I include myself in this, I love my Pre because of the portrait keyboard, plus we also still use the Samsung Intrepid that people like because of the BBish portrait. The tiny screen on the i1 makes it hard for a lot of peopl to be able to type accurately. Giving people DC and a keyboard will relieve a lot of my issues being the person who manages and deploys the smartphones for my company.

    • http://twitter.com/WhyCantMyPhone Neal Elward

      I think there’s definitely a market for these, but the fact that the phone will launch with an OS two versions old is pretty weak. I’m guessing the software quality isn’t going to be any better for all the time they had to work on it, either, which will lower the value proposition. I would like to see more rugged smartphones, and more smartphones that are usable as telephones. The titanium will most likely deliver on those promises, but it be comparatively awful as a smartphone.

      • Anonymous

        I do agree on the software part. Looking at it from a business sense and not my own consumer sense, I have no glaring issues. Anything that is 2.X is good enough. With the i1 using 1.5, that gives me all sorts of headaches. With the slight changes in versions now in Android, I am not too worried about being a tad behind. While 2.2 brought more enterprise and EAS googies, I will be happy with something that runs a little snappier than 1.5. I know people like to talk up the consumer side of things, but enterprise, regardless of the consumer push, is always slightly behind due to testing and security things. As the phone person this pains me but I have to do what the big wigs want.

  • Rpadula

    Awesome moto, now… what’s your excuse to NOT update the i1?

  • Pete

    Wow these kill the new Blackberry 9900

    • Anonymous

      HAHA! yeah right…

  • Anonymous

    These are Palm Pixi’s for Android.

  • LookLively

    Hey look. Its the phone that RIM refuses to make. Sweet.

  • matthew gardner

    Love this phone.

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