X
CNET logo Why You Can Trust CNET

Our expert, award-winning staff selects the products we cover and rigorously researches and tests our top picks. If you buy through our links, we may get a commission. How we test phones

Motorola Debut i856 review: Motorola Debut i856

Motorola Debut i856

Nicole Lee Former Editor
Nicole Lee is a senior associate editor for CNET, covering cell phones, Bluetooth headsets, and all things mobile. She's also a fan of comic books, video games, and of course, shiny gadgets.
Nicole Lee
6 min read

7.0

Motorola Debut i856

The Good

The Motorola Debut has a slim slider design, plus it comes with push-to-talk, GPS, a 1.3-megapixel camera, and a good music player. It also has very good call quality.

The Bad

The Motorola Debut suffers from poor keypad design and a low-resolution display.

The Bottom Line

If you can live with a few design quirks, the Motorola Debut is a decent, basic, multimedia phone for Boost Mobile.

Most iDEN push-to-talk phones are quite bulky, and come in either a clamshell or candy bar design. However, the Motorola Debut bucks that trend. It is the first ever iDEN push-to-talk phone to come in a slider design, which gives it a rather svelte appearance. Aside from push-to-talk, the Debut also has a few basic multimedia features. Though we had a few design issues with the Debut, it's overall a decent midtier offering from Boost Mobile. It's available for $170 without a contract. The Debut is also eligible for Boost Mobile's $50 monthly unlimited text, talk, data, and push-to-talk nationwide.

Design
Slider phones may be new to Boost Mobile, but they're definitely not new to Motorola. Indeed, the Motorola Debut reminds us a little of previous Motorola slider handsets, like the Motorola Rizr. Measuring 4.19 inches long by 2.0 inches wide by 0.59 inch thick, the Debut is slim and sleek, with a black coating and a silver trim border on the front. When you slide the phone open, the number keypad is coated in a very rich red. The Debut is 2.99 ounces and is thin enough to fit in a front pocket.


The Motorola Debut is the first iDEN push-to-talk phone with a slider design.

On the front of the phone is a 2.2-inch display. Like a lot of push-to-talk phones, the display doesn't have the best resolution--only 65,536 colors and a 176x220 pixel resolution--so the graphics look a little blocky and washed out. You can adjust the display's backlight time, the size of the menu dialing fonts, the menu layout, the clock format, and the display theme. Along the bottom row of the standby screen is a carousel of shortcuts for up to nine user-defined applications.

Underneath the display is the navigation array, which consists of two soft keys, a round navigation toggle with a middle confirmation key, a menu key, a music player key, and the Send and End/Power keys. You can show and hide the aforementioned carousel by pressing the middle key of the navigation toggle. When the carousel is hidden, the toggle can be used as shortcuts to four user-defined functions from the standby screen. When a slideshow or song is playing, the middle three keys of the toggle light up and take on the duties of previous track, play/pause, and next track keys. We weren't pleased with the feel of the navigation keys. They felt a little stiff and squishy with not a lot of give when pressed.

Slide the phone up and you'll reveal the number keypad. We're pleased to see it's quite roomy, as most slider keypads tend to be a little cramped. However, the number keys suffer the same problem as the navigation keys: they feel just a bit too spongy when pressed. Still, the keys are raised above the surface and it's easy enough to dial by feel.

On the left spine of the phone are the speakerphone key, the volume rocker, a large push-to-talk key, and the charger jack. On the right is a 3.5-millimeter headset jack, which we're always glad to see with a phone that has a music player so we have the freedom of using our own headphones. There's also a camera lens on the back, but it's only visible when you slide the phone open. The microSD card slot is inconveniently located behind the battery cover.

Features
The Debut has a 600-entry phone book with room in each entry for eight phone numbers, two e-mail addresses, and an IP address. You can save your contacts to caller groups or push-to-talk Talk Groups, a photo for caller ID, plus one of 21 polyphonic ringtones. Basic features include a vibrate mode, a speakerphone, a datebook, a memo pad, an alarm clock, and a voice recorder. You also get Boost Mobile's push-to-talk service, of course. More-advanced features include text and multimedia messaging with threaded messaging, a wireless Web browser, stereo Bluetooth, and GPS.

The built-in music player on the Debut is quite good. It organizes songs into albums, artists, genres, and it even supports podcasts. The player interface is pretty generic with the controls at the bottom and the visualizer taking up most of the screen. There are three different visualizers you can choose from, or you can turn it off altogether. Other settings include shuffle, repeat, album art view, and 13 preset equalizer settings. There's even a 3D music mode with 14 different 3D reverb effects. You'll need to wear headphones to really hear the difference. The music player supports AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, AMR-NB, AMR-WB, QCP, MP3, WAV, RA, and WMA files. You can load the songs to the Debut via a microSD card. You can also arrange it so that the music player plays in the background while you multitask in other parts of the phone.


The Motorola Debut has a 1.3-megapixel camera on the back.

The Motorola Debut has a 1.3-megapixel camera that can take pictures in six resolutions (1,280x1,024, 640x480, 320x240, 160x120, 128x96, AND 220X176), two quality settings, and six white balance presets, including a night mode. Other camera settings include a self-timer, adjustable exposure, five color effects, 2x zoom, two shutter sounds (with no silent option), and the capability to add geo-location tags to photos. You can also record video in three sizes (352x288, 176x144, and 128x96) in two different lengths--short ones for MMS and longer ones for storage. There's 70MB of phone memory, but you can load up to an 8GB microSD card for more storage.


The Motorola Debut takes decent photos.

Photo quality was not bad for a 1.3-megapixel camera. Though images weren't as sharp as we would like, colors looked bright and natural. Quality isn't so good in low light, however. Video quality was not that great: it seemed choppy and pixelated for the most part.

You can personalize the Motorola Debut with various graphics and sounds for wallpaper and ringtones. You can also play games on the Debut; our review phone came with a demo version of Virtual Villagers. To get more games, applications, and personalization options, you can purchase and download them via the wireless Web browser.

Performance
We tested the Motorola Debut i856 in San Francisco. As a subsidiary of Sprint Nextel, Boost Mobile uses Nextel's network for PTT and regular phone calls. We were very impressed with the call quality overall. We heard our callers loud and clear with hardly any static or background noise. The voice quality was clean and natural, as well.

On their end, callers said we sounded great, almost as if we were speaking on a landline. They didn't hear much static or echo, either. Also impressive were speakerphone calls. They could hardly tell when speakerphone mode was on, and they could hear us even when we spoke in a relatively soft voice several inches away from the mic. On our end, callers sounded a little harsh, but they still came through with plenty of volume.

Audio playback was decent from the external speakers, but nothing great. Music sounded rather thin and flat. We would recommend using a headset for a better audio experience. Indeed, we found that the 3D effects in the music player sounded pretty good with a decent pair of headphones.

The Debut has a rated battery life of 3.4 hours talk time and 3.95 days standby time. We saw a talk time of 3 hours and 34 minutes in our tests. According to FCC radiation tests, the Debut has a digital SAR of 0.88 watt per kilogram.

7.0

Motorola Debut i856

Score Breakdown

Design 6Features 7Performance 8