
The 1-inch-square external display is bigger than the screen on the V360, but sadly, it remains monochrome so there's no support for photo caller ID. It shows the date, the time, battery life, signal strength, and the phone number called ID, but no display options are customizable. Above the display is the camera lens, but the V365 lacks a flash and a self-portrait mirror.

A small speaker sits on the rear face of the V365. It's not an ideal location, but we're more displeased that Moto stuck the MicroSD card slot behind the battery cover. Surely on such a beefy phone Motorola could have found a better place for it. The voice-command button sits on the right spine just above the mini USB/charger port, while the PTT button and a small volume rocker rest on the left spine above the headset jack. Thankfully, the V365 doesn't use a proprietary connection.
The 1.8-inch internal display (176x220 pixels) is typical Motorola. It supports 65,000 colors, which is quite adequate for most uses, but we wish Motorola would embrace 262,000-color resolutions on more of its midrange handsets. You can change the display's brightness and the backlight time, but the font size is fixed. Also, we hope Motorola updates its stodgy menu interface soon. The navigation array is set a good distance from the display due to the oversized hinge, but it's tactile and easy to use. A five-way toggle is your primary tool, and you also get two soft keys, a dedicated menu button, and the Talk and End/power controls. Both the toggle and the soft keys can be set as shortcuts to user-defined functions. Finishing the array are shortcut keys for the camera and Cingular's Internet service. The only thing missing is a dedicated back/clear key, but we're used to that omission on Moto phones. The keypad buttons are large and well spaced, and we like that they're raised above the surface of the phone. They also have a bright backlighting for dialing in the dark.

The VGA camera takes pictures in 640x480, 320x240, and 160x120 resolutions. As on most Motorola camera phones, a handy meter keeps track of how much storage space is left, but photo-editing features were slim. You get a choice of just six lighting conditions, an adjustable brightness control, a 4x zoom, an 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 here as well. Video length is limited to 45 seconds on clips meant for multimedia messages, but you can record longer videos depending on how much memory is available. Internal storage is a tiny 5MB of shared space, so we suggest you invest in a memory card. Photo quality was pretty decent for a VGA camera; the lighting was dark, but colors were distinct and objects weren't blurry.

You can personalize the V365 with a variety of wallpaper, screen savers, color themes, and sounds. As always, more choices and ring tones are available from Cingular with the AP 2.0 wireless Web browser. Gaming choices are limited--just one title, Skipping Stones, and a demo version of Bejewled--so you'll have to buy more options for extended play. The V365 also comes with a rudimentary MP3 player, but the spartan interface and mediocre sound quality is a turn-off.
The Motorola V365 has a rated battery life of 3.45 hours of talk time and 8.8 days of standby time. Our tests showed a talk time of 3.33 hours. According to FCC radiation tests, the V365 has a digital SAR rating of 1.51 watts per kilogram.
Smartphones Basic Specs:
Weight:
3.9 oz
Style:
Folder type phone
Messaging / Data Features:
Text messages
,
Multimedia messages (MMS)
,
WAP Push
Messaging Services:
MMS
Product Basic Spec:
Cellular technology:
GSM
Band / mode:
GSM 850/1800/1900 (Tri-Band)
Talk time:
Up to 550 min
Internet Browser:
Yes
Short Messaging Service (SMS):
Yes
Combined with:
With digital camera / digital player
Width:
1.9 in
Depth:
0.9 in
Height:
3.5 in