Motorola A1000

Motorola A1000
Manufacturer Motorola
Compatible networks 3G: UMTS
2G: GSM (900, 1800, 1900 MHz) with GPRS
Predecessor Motorola A920
Dimensions 117 x 59.5 x 21.5 mm
Weight 168 g
Operating system Symbian OS 7.0 + UIQ 2.1
CPU ARM processor at 168 MHz
Memory 32 MB RAM, 32 MB ROM
Storage 24 MB
Removable storage microSD memory card, also known as Transflash. 1 GB tested, OK. 2 GB tested, not working.
Battery Talk time
2G: 280 minutes
3G: 120 minutes
Stand-by time: 200 hours
Video calling: 80 minutes
Data inputs Touchscreen
Handwriting recognition
Display Transmissive reflective TFT LCD 65,536 colors, 16-bit color depth, 208x320 pixels
Rear camera 1.2-megapixel and 640x480 video camera
Front camera 300,000 pixels
Connectivity Bluetooth 1.1
USB 2.0
Other A-GPS
Opera 7.5 web browser
Document viewer
etc.

The Motorola A1000 is a 3G smartphone from Motorola using the UIQ platform based upon Symbian OS. One of the most notable features is its built-in A-GPS. The A1000 is the successor to the A925 and A920.

A variant device, named the M1000, appeared in 2005 for the Japanese market, distributed by NTT DoCoMo. The M1000 has a similar spec to the A1000 but supports Wi-Fi instead of GPS/A-GPS.

A1000 history

The A1000 was released in Q4 2004, but was available only on contract through 3, in just a few countries (mostly Australia, Austria, Denmark, Italy, Singapore[SingTel], Sweden and the UK). Although it was presented in two colour schemes, the 3 network offered it only in the dull matte dark-grey / light gray combination. Also, the phone firmware was locked and branded for 3 and presented various limitations, like the impossibility of changing internet connectivity accounts.

Fortunately, the phone raised interest of enthusiasts due to its advanced capabilities, and a few dedicated forums appeared. A generic, unbranded firmware became available in these forums, but presented multiple problems and was considered by many as being in fact a leaked beta version. Also, various software was developed to overcome limitations of branded firmware (Application Picker , GPRS account editor , installation of software on external memory ).

When, after a whole year, the unlocked and unbranded A1000 appeared, its new firmware version made most of these applications obsolete, as it included their facilities. The phone was also available in its glossy black finish.

As it was among the very first phones to use the TransFlash (now microSD) memory format as external storage, it was limited to the small capacity of these cards. As this card is perfectly compatible to Secure Digital, it didn't take long for a Transflash-to-SD adapter to appear (free registration needed). In this way, a Transflash card of any available capacity could be used in the SD Card adapter, but the phone only supports Transflash I cards.

Presently, the latest available modded firmwares combine the stability of the first branded firmware with the facilities and speed of the generic one, and also include some pre-installed and ready-to-install third-party freeware applications.

A1000 features

Major bugs

Hardware known issues

Known limitations

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