
The Motorola V3i is basically a quad band GSM phone (GSM 850 / GSM 900 / GSM 1800 / GSM 1900.) The specifications of the phone remain as 98 x 53 x 13.9 mm even though it’s gold-platting all over it, it weighs just 96.7 grams.
This version of the RAZR also features an exterior 96 x 80 mm 65K CSTN screen and an internal display of 176 x 220 262 colors TFT screen display. The handset has a mini-USB port on the left side and the Profile and Volume buttons over it, which is actually attached to the flip. The right side of the handset only has the camera hotkey button. The RAZR DG has a 1.23 MP camera with 8x zoom. The handset comes with an internal memory of 12 MB and has a memory card slot that supports up to 1 GB of micro-SD (TransFlash) memory.
There are wall-papers, screensavers, ringtones, and the defaulting start-up and shut-down screens with DG smashed everywhere. The DG ringtones, I must add were very pleasant to hear. The camera quality of the 1.23 MP camera is still the same with the images captured being gritty. The night mode of the camera was completely offensive. The video quality of the camera was ok but as long as you are in a well-lit region. The camera with its all confusing moto-software makes it even harder to handle.
The Motorola RAZR V3i DOLCE & GABBANA sell for around Rs. 21,000 that is 11K over the standard V3i. At this price, you are not paying for the features of the phone you are in fact paying that extra 11K for the DG license and all the gold that the handset consumes. The phone has its individual set of accessories, which are also all in gold, so that they match the handset.
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