It aimed at functional similarity to Palm's Synergy, including such features as Remote Wipe.
Motoblur included a variety of widgets which combined various social networking portals such as Facebook, MySpace, and Twitter as well as other services (news or weather reports) all in one place.
It also combined multiple email accounts and contact communication sources into singular notification views, being the first handset software to do so.
User account information was stored on Motorola's redundant servers for access from web browsers and future phones.
[3] In late 2010 Motorola announced that Motoblur would not be their development focus in the future, as Android made custom skins largely redundant.