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Motorola i776 - silver (Sprint) review: Motorola i776 - silver (Sprint)

Motorola i776 - silver (Sprint)

Kent German Former senior managing editor / features
Kent was a senior managing editor at CNET News. A veteran of CNET since 2003, he reviewed the first iPhone and worked in both the London and San Francisco offices. When not working, he's planning his next vacation, walking his dog or watching planes land at the airport (yes, really).
Kent German
5 min read

7.0

Motorola i776 - silver (Sprint)

The Good

The Motorola i776 offers satisfying call quality and the full slate of Nextel features in a compact, easy-to-use design.

The Bad

The Motorola i776's volume level is rather low and its camera is low grade.

The Bottom Line

Though its volume could be just a bit louder, the Motorola i776 is a decent Nextel phone. Just don't buy it for its camera.

At the fall CTIA show in September, Sprint assured us that it was not forgetting its Nextel fans. The carrier promised that by the end of the year it would release four iDEN-only phones for the push-to-talk-loving masses. We've already reviewed the Motorola i365, we're still waiting for the already announced Motorola i576, and we know that an iDEN BlackBerry is on the way. That leaves the new Motorola i776 as the final model in the quarter. Offering an attractive silver-and-burgundy design, the i776 offers all the usual Nextel refinements even if it's not encased in rubber. As with many previous Nextel handsets, the displays aren't the sharpest around, but the i776 remains an easy-to-use phone with decent performance.

Design
On one hand, the Motorola i776 has the same extendable antenna and tiny external display that you'd find on almost any other Nextel handset. But on the other hand, it strikes new design ground by sporting a slick surface and a silver-and-burgundy design. It's also compact (3.39 inches tall by 1.8 inches wide by 0.8 inch thick) as Nextel phones go and relatively lightweight (3.56 ounces).Of course, the trade-off is that the i776 lacks the rubber sidings that are a Nextel trademark. But even so, it manages to have a nice feeling in the hand.

The i776's display is small and rectangular. Though we're used to such a display from Nextel, it doesn't mean that we approve of it. It shows the date, time, battery life, signal strength, and numeric caller ID, but the onscreen text is tiny. Also, while it supports 64,000 colors (96x40 pixels) it won't work as a viewfinder for the camera and it won't support photo caller ID. Two indicator lights for the Bluetooth feature and new messages sit above the display. They're almost invisible when unlit. The camera lens sits at the top of the phone minus a flash and a self-portrait mirror.

On the right spine you'll find a volume rocker and the push-to-talk button. On the top of the phone are the speakerphone key and a button for sending calls to voice mail and accessing the recent calls list when the phone is closed.

The i776's internal display measures 1.75 inches and supports 64,000 colors (480x240 pixels). Like most Nextel displays, it is rather small and it isn't the highest resolution. As such, graphics and photos weren't very sharp. You can change the font size and the backlighting time only. The menus are intuitive and come in list and icon views. Like on other Nextel phones, both menu views require you to scroll through multiple pages.

The keypad and controls are spacious but also relatively flush; we could dial and text quickly and comfortably. In the navigation array there are a four-way toggle with a central OK button, two soft keys, a dedicated menu control, a camera shortcut, and the Talk and End/power keys. The toggle also doubles as a shortcut to four user-defined functions.

Features
The i776 has a 600-contact phone book with room in each entry for seven phone numbers, an e-mail address, an IP address, and a Direct Connect number. Contacts can be organized further into a variety of groups, for regular or push-to-talk calls, and you can pair contacts with one of 22 polyphonic ringtones. Other features include a vibrate mode, text and multimedia messaging, a calendar, a voice recorder, a speakerphone, a notepad, call timers, Bluetooth, voice dialing, and call forwarding.

The i776 offers the full set of Nextel Direct Connect PTT services. International Direct Connect connects you with PTT users in other countries; Group Connect enables you to chat with up to 20 others via PTT at once; and Direct Talk gives you out-of-network PTT-chat capabilities with another Direct Talk handset within a range of up to 6 miles. You'll also find NextMail, which sends voice messages to any e-mail address, and Direct Send, which transmits your contact information to other compatible phones.

An especially nifty feature is Nextel's second line service, which allows you to add a second line to the phone with a different phone number. It's perfect for users who want separate digits for personal and business use. Nextel was one of the first U.S. carriers to offer the functionality. It will cost extra, of course, but you can have separate ringtones, separate billing statements, and even phone numbers with different area codes.


The i776 lacks both a flash and a self-portrait mirror.

The i776's VGA camera takes pictures in five resolutions, from 640x480 down to 160x128. Other editing options include two quality settings, two shutter sounds, and a self-timer. The camera doesn't offer a flash but it does have a low-light setting. The i776 does not record video. Photo quality was poor, even for a VGA camera. There was a lot of image noise and colors were washed out. The i776 has about 6MB of shared internal; a handy meter tells you how much room you have left.


The i776 has mediocre photo quality.

You can personalize the i776 with a variety of wallpaper, themes, and alert sounds. You can download more options and more ringtones with the wireless Web browser. You get a fair choice of Java (J2ME) applications, including a Nascar Sprint Cup game, Alarm Clock Plus, Calculator Suite, Sprint Mobile e-mail, and a TeleNav 3.8 subscription-based navigation service that takes advantage of the i776's GPS support.

Performance
We tested the dual-band (iDEN 800/900) Motorola i776 using Sprint Nextel's service. Call quality was satisfying overall. The signal was strong in and out of buildings and we didn't encounter any static or interference. During calls, voices sounded natural but the volume was rather soft. Indeed, when we were talking in noisy environments we had some trouble hearing.

On their end, callers said we sounded fine. They didn't report any significant problems aside from a little background noise. Speakerphone calls were relatively clear, but here again the volume was too low.

The i776 has a rated battery life of 3.1 hours talk time. We had a talk time of 4 hours and 5 minutes in our tests. According to FCC radiation tests, the i776 has a digital SAR of 1.45 watts per kilogram.

7.0

Motorola i776 - silver (Sprint)

Score Breakdown

Design 7Features 7Performance 7