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Motorola Slvr L6 - silver (AT&T)

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Product Summary

The good: The Motorola Slvr L6 has a slim, sexy design, Bluetooth, and quality performance.

The bad: The Motorola Slvr L6 has a low-resolution display and a poorly designed keypad. It also suffers from blurry picture quality and an average speakerphone. Plus, Cingular has deactivated some important features.

The bottom line: If you can get it at a bargain price, the Motorola Slvr L6 is a solid option for users who want a functional phone with sexy looks, but true phone fanatics will be disappointed.

Specs: Combined with: With digital camera; Weight: 2.8 oz  See full specs >>

Price range: $105.95

See all products in the Motorola Slvr series

CNET editors' review

  • Reviewed by: Kent German
  • Edited by: Nicole Lee
  • Reviewed on: 04/26/2006
  • Updated on:05/10/2006
When its slim Razr flip phone rocketed to popularity last year, Motorola knew it was on to something, so it's not surprise the company went to work on a candy bar version soon after. But rather than be satisfied with just one Slvr, as the resulting model came to be known, Motorola designed three that spanned the mobile spectrum. Cingular first introduced the higher-end model, the iTunes-equipped Motorola Slvr L7, in February, and it quickly became as popular as the Razr. And now Cingular rolls out the midtier version of the phone, the Slvr L6 (the low-tier Slvr L2 is a Cingular phone as well). Equally skinny but bearing a different coat and an improved Web browser, the L6 keeps the Bluetooth support, the speakerphone, and the VGA camera found in its sibling but ditches the iTunes compatibility, the MP3 player, and the TransFlash card slot. Also, while the phone is capable of supporting push-to-talk (PTT) services, Cingular has not activated the L6 for its PTT network. Overall, the L6 is an attractive and handy cell phone, but we weren't impressed by the keypad design, the low-resolution screen, and the blurry photo quality. Available exclusively at RadioShack for Cingular, the Slvr L6 is way too expensive if you pay full price ($300), but service-plan rebates knock it down to a more respectable $100. Alternatively, unlocked versions average around $150. There's no escaping it--the Motorola Slvr L6 is all about design. Though it largely resembles the L7 in shape, it's marginally shorter and slimmer than its sibling, making it the skinniest handset we've reviewed thus far (4.4 by 1.9 by 0.43 inches). At 3.3 ounces, it also weighs slightly less than the L7, so you should have no trouble slipping it in a pocket or a bag. Keep in mind, however, that the small size has its drawbacks. It's difficult to feel the phone vibrate when it's in your pocket, and it can be uncomfortable to hold the phone against your ear for long periods of time. The construction seemed mostly solid--we tried dropping the phone a few times--but as with the Razr, we're worried about long-term durability.

Motorola Slvr L6
The Motorola Slvr L6 has a sleek style.

We were disappointed that Motorola chose to downgrade the L6's display from 262,000 colors on the L7 to 65,536 colors, or 128x160 pixels. Though it's large enough (1.75 inches diagonally), the difference in resolution on the display is clearly noticeable. Graphics had a washed-out effect, so the screen isn't the best for viewing photos, browsing the Web, or playing games. It was fine, however, for scrolling through the standard Motorola menus. You can change the backlighting time and the brightness, but you can't alter the contrast or the font size. Also, be warned that the glossy display shows finger smudges easily.

The L6's navigation controls are nearly identical to those on the L7 save for some minor cosmetic changes. There's a five-way toggle, two soft keys, the Talk and End/power buttons, and a dedicated menu control below the screen. There's no dedicated Back button, which we'd prefer, but the toggle can act as a shortcut to four user-defined functions. Also, hitting the center toggle in standby mode opens the Web browser automatically. The controls are large and easy to manipulate, and in a nice design touch, the toggle is raised ever so slightly above the surface of the phone. However, it was a different story with the keypad buttons. As on the L7 and the Razr models, the keypad buttons are completely flat against the surface of the phone, but instead of being metal, they're a cheap-feeling plastic. The individual buttons are smaller and more scrunched together than on the L7. As a result, we had trouble dialing by feel. On the upside, the keys have a tactile feel due to raised numbers and ridges between the horizontal rows, and they're brightly backlit.

Completing the exterior of the phone are just two unmarked controls. On the left spine is a "smart key" that functions as a user-defined shortcut, while a camera button sits on the right spine just below the mini-USB charger port. In a bad move, Motorola decided to design the L6 without an external volume rocker. It's a bit annoying to have to remove the phone from your ear when on a call in order to change the volume. Finally, on the back of the phone are the camera lens (though no flash or self-portrait mirror) and the speaker.

As we stated earlier, the Motorola Slvr L6 has a comfortable selection of midrange features. Casual cell phones users will appreciate the Bluetooth, speakerphone, and Motorola Screen3 technology, but more hard-core users will lament the lack of a music player and a high-resolution camera. We'll review the essentials first, however. The 500-contact phone book is adequate, and there's room in each entry for six phone numbers, an e-mail address, a postal address, and a birth date; the SIM card holds an additional 250 names. You can assign contacts to caller groups, pair them with a picture for photo caller ID, or assign them any of 24 polyphonic ring tones. The phone also supports MP3 ring tones. Other basic features include a vibrate mode, a mini-USB port, a calculator, a date book, and an alarm clock. Messaging features are plentiful, with support for text, enhanced, and multimedia messaging. You also get instant messaging for AOL, Yahoo, and ICQ platforms. The Slvr L6 isn't a business phone by any means, but it has a couple of offerings that road warriors should find useful. Not only is there full Bluetooth, a speakerphone, and voice dialing, the Slvr L6 also supports PC syncing and e-mail. And as we said earlier, while the phone is capable of supporting PTT services, Cingular has not activated the L6 for its PTT network.

Like the Motorola V557, the Slvr L6 features Motorola's Screen3 Web-browsing technology (see the V557 review for a full description), which greatly improves the WAP 2.0 browsing experience.

Motorola Slvr L6
The Slvr L6 lacks a flash or self-portrait mirror.

Like the Slvr L7, the L6 has a VGA camera. Though we were disappointed it was on the L7, we're more willing to accept a VGA camera on such a lower-tier phone. It takes pictures in 640x480, 320x240, and 160x120 resolution. On the upside, we liked the useful camera options. A meter keeps track of how much storage space is left, and there's a fair assortment of photo-editing features. You get a choice of six color tones and six lighting conditions, an adjustable brightness control, a 4X zoom, a 5- or 10-second autotimer, and a selection of five shutter sounds, as well as a silent option. The MPEG-4 video recorder takes clips with sound in two resolutions (176x144 and 128x96), and you can choose a lighting setting or color tone. Video length is limited to 30 seconds on clips meant for multimedia messages, but you can record longer videos depending on how much space is available in the phone's 10MB of shared memory. Photos and video were below par even for a VGA camera; objects were fuzzy, colors were washed out, and videos appeared blocky and blurry.

Motorola Slvr L6
The Motorola Slvr L6 has below-average photo quality.

You can personalize the Slvr L6 with a variety of wallpaper, menu styles, color schemes, screensavers, and alert tones. As always, you can buy more options from Cingular if you want them. You can also get more ring tones via download. Gamers get demo versions of three Java (J2ME) titles: Tetris, Texas Hold 'em, and BlockBreaker Deluxe. We know demos are the norm these days, but you'd think we'd get at least one full game.

We tested the triband, dual-mode (GSM 850/1800/1900; GPRS) Motorola Slvr L6 in San Francisco using Cingular service. Call quality was generally good, with sharp reception and loud volume. Occasionally, we could hear a background hiss, but it wasn't too bothersome. Callers said they could tell we were using a cell phone but reported no significant problems. We encountered more problems when using the speakerphone. Though we could hear callers plainly, they had trouble understanding us clearly at times. We had no trouble connecting the Slvr L7 to the Plantronics Explorer 320 Bluetooth headset for acceptable call quality.

While the unlocked Slvr L6 is a quad-band world phone (GSM 850.1900/1800/1900), Cingular removed the 900 band in its version. It's a disappointing change, to say the least, as globe-trotters won't get the best coverage worldwide with this phone. Also, the GPRS data speeds mean downloads are pretty poky at 30Kbps to 40Kbps.

The Motorola Slvr L6 has a rated talk time of 5.15 hours and a promised standby time of 15.5 days. In our tests, we beat the talk time by an hour and got 8 days of standby time. According to FCC radiation tests, the Slvr L6 has a digital SAR rating of 1.58 watts per kilogram.

See more CNET content tagged:
Motorola Inc.,
GPRS,
Cingular Wireless,
GSM

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