Droid Razr

and includes a 4.3-inch (110 mm) super active-matrix organic light emitting diode (AMOLED) advanced PenTile[2] display, covered in a Gorilla glass screen and a Kevlar back plate.

[9][10] In Australia, Motorola launched it with the network operator Optus in Sydney, on 27 October 2011,[11] though not the 4G LTE variant.

[12] Motorola Droid Razr comes in the form factor of a slate with a diamond-cut aluminum chassis.

The display is a 4.3 inch qHD (540 × 960) Super AMOLED Advanced PenTile[2] capacitive touchscreen that is covered by scratch-resistant Corning Gorilla Glass with an oleophobic fingerprint-resistant coating.

The Droid Razr features four touch-capacitive buttons with the respective functions of menu, home, back and search.

[13] The Droid Razr has official support from the LineageOS project, the latest available version being 14.1, which is based on Android 7.1.2.

In Webtop mode, offering a similar user interface of a typical Ubuntu desktop, the phone can run several applications on an external display such as the Firefox web browser, SNS clients and 'mobile view' applications enabling total access of Atrix and its screen.

[18] The developer edition features the capability of unlocking its bootloader by a tool found in the Motorola Mobility website.

An unlocked bootloader gives developers the ability to load a custom operating system onto the phone without the need to use alternative bypasses such as Safestrap, it also provides easy root access[19] without the need to use specific root exploits such as the Verizon variant (XT912) and the international variant (XT910).

Motorola Droid Razr Maxx