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Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Motorola Rapture VU30

The Rapture VU30 has the same curvaceous, appealing shape as the VU204. We like the rounded edges and the smooth lines. It replaces the VU204's soft touch skin with a glossy plastic surface, but the handset has a solid ,comfortable feel in the hand. The hinge has a sturdy construction as well it opens and closes with a solid click. In many ways the VU30 also resembles the Motorola Pebl U6.

The Rapture is of average size (3.9 inches tall by 1.9 inches wide by 0.67 inch deep) and it's relatively lightweight (3.4 ounces). The VU30 has a rather large 1.6 inch external display. It supports full color (160x120 pixels), so it will show photo caller ID in addition to the date, time, battery life, signal strength, and numeric caller ID. You can't change any of the options, however, which is too bad given the short back lighting.

The front face is a bit reflective, which means it shows smudges and fingerprints easily. The Rapture's display also has two touch controls for activating the camera and the music player with the phone closed. The controls have vibrating feedback and they're well placed at the bottom corners of the display. With the music control you can play songs, choose a playlist, and activate the shuffle mode.

Since the camera lens faces the rear of the phone, self-portraits are impossible. On the left spine of the VU30 there are a volume rocker, a speaker phone button, and a micro USB slot, which accommodates both USB cables and the charger.

On the right spine you'll find a camera shutter, a voice dialing button, and a handset locking switch. Unfortunately, the 2.5 mm headset jack is at the phone's bottom end, which is a rather inconvenient location when carrying the phone in a pocket while using the headset.

Besides the camera lens, the back of the phone holds the single speaker. You must remove the Rapture's battery cover to access the memory card slot, but you don't need to remove the actual battery.

The Rapture's 2.2 inch internal display shows 656.000 colors (320x240 pixels). It's bright and colorful, with sharp graphics. The menu interface is available in three styles, but each is relatively intuitive thanks to Verizon's refined menu design.

You can change the dialing font size, the brightness, and the back lighting time. The VU30's navigation array is spacious and easy to understand and use. There's a large circular toggle that has a comfortable, tactile feel, even though it is almost flat. It is a different color than the surrounding surface to give it better visibility. You can set it as a shortcut to four user defined functions.

Surrounding it are two soft keys, a dedicated music control, a clear control, and the Talk and End or power buttons. These controls are just about flush, as well, but small silver bumps make them tactile. The Rapture's keypad buttons have a similar design. They're spacious and clearly defined, so we could dial and text comfortably without making mistakes. The keys have a bright back lighting for dialing in dim situations.

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