Motorola Razr M HD in the offing?

Motorola Razr M

Specifications of a certain Motorola Razr M HD have surfaced on the web, without any substantial evidence to back the rumor. But as the manufacturer has introduced the HD versions of a couple of other smartphones in the past, there is a strong possibility that the Google-owned OEM has planned to introduce the device in question as well.

The Razr M HD specs list was sent to the guys over at Phone Arena by an anonymous source. According to the undisclosed informer, the Motorola handset will treat prospective users to the Android Jelly Bean 4.1 OS and is even said to be upgradeable to version 4.2. The candy bar device may come encased in a chassis with dimensions of 5.15 x 2.52 x .035 inches, which tips the scales at 5.22oz.

The sleek phone’s front panel claims to accommodate a 4.5-inch TFT capacitive multi-touch display which is capable of rendering visuals in 1280 x 720p resolution with a pixel density of 326ppi. A scratch-resistant glass, probably Corning Gorilla Glass, has been reinforced on the touchscreen and it has also been deployed with a light sensor and a proximity sensor.

Rear

Apparently, the handset takes inspiration from the Maxx HD and employs a 3300mAh lithium-polymer battery that can cough up the juice for offering talk time of about 21.25 hours and standby time of close to 15.65 days, on a single charge. The Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 Plus MSM8960 processor sits snugly under the hood with the 1.5GHz dual core Krait CPU and the Adreno 225 GPU.

And if that’s not enough, the smartphone will be shipping with 1GB of dual channel 500MHz DDR2 RAM and 8192MB of ROM. Its 16GB of integrated storage can be expanded by up to 32GB with a little assistance from a microSD or a microSDHC card. Nothing has been mentioned about the camera, but it should be armed with an 8MP camera as well as a front-mounted webcam. It is even likely to feature Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and 4G LTE compatibility amongst a lot of other attributes.

The Motorola Razr M HD hasn’t gone official and as mentioned above, there are no concrete evidences to prove that the device is indeed on the cards.