Motorola C290 (Sprint)
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CNET Editors' Review
The good: The Motorola C290 offers quality performance, a speakerphone, and analog roaming.
The bad: The Motorola C290 has irregularly shaped keypad buttons and limited messaging options; it also lacks an external display.
The bottom line: Though it lacks an external display, the functional Motorola C290 is a quality Sprint phone for making calls.
There's not much to say about the C290's exterior design. Measuring 3.4 by 1.9 by 0.9 inches and weighing 3.6 ounces, it's neither big nor small. The stubby antenna is extendable, but like most antennas of this type, it suffers from flimsy construction. As mentioned earlier, the C290 doesn't have an external display, which means you must open the phone to see your caller's identity. Also, the large Sprint and Motorola logos on the front flap add up to a dull effect. On the upside, however, we like the black coloring and the rubberized covering on the edges of the front flap. The material continues to the back of the mobile, where you'll find a small speakerphone. On the left spine, there's a shortcut key to the speakerphone and a rocker control for changing the call/ring volume and scrolling thorough the menus.
Inside the C290 is a serviceable but low-resolution display. With support for 65,000 colors, the 1.75-inch-diagonal screen is quite a step down from displays with 262,000 colors, but it's fine for scrolling through the menus. Gamers, however, will be disappointed by the washed-out effect and the rudimentary graphics. You can set the backlighting time, but there are no brightness or contrast controls, and you can't change the font size.
Below this display are the spacious, user-friendly navigation controls. Unlike most Motorola phones, the C290 doesn't have a dedicated menu key marked by the familiar three lines. Instead, you access the menu via the OK button in the middle of the four-way navigation toggle. When in standby mode, the toggle provides one-touch access to four user-defined features, while the two soft keys open the phone book and the messaging menu. Above the toggle is a dedicated Web browser button; below it are a Back key and the dedicated Talk and End/power buttons. Though the controls are set flat with the surface of the phone, their large size--they take up almost half of the phone--make them easy to use.
In contrast, however, the keypad buttons are somewhat tricky. Since the navigation keys are so large, the dial-pad buttons suffer as a result. Not only are they small and flat, they're also irregularly shaped. Granted, it's not a huge problem, but we had a few misdials in our first hour with the phone. They're backlit in bright orange when the phone is active.
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As a senior managing editor for CNET, Kent German heads up the CNET Reviews team in San Francisco. Formerly a cell phone reviewer, he still blogs about wireless news and offers his take on the wireless industry. When not at work, he's planning his next trip to Australia, going for a run, or watching planes land at the airport (yes, really).
User Reviews
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stars 3 of 3 users found this review helpful
"Great phone for price" By Nick Benedetto
Pros speakerphone, great display, clear reception, long battery life
Cons no camera, or external caller id display, no internal antenna
Summary This phone is everything someone who just makes phone calls wants. It is a more stylish way to make phone calls, then the users who still have "The nokia, black and white screen, <b> "brick. </b>" Very clear screen to text, and to play Java enabled ... Expand full review
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