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Motorola to produce a "first-of-its-kind 5G wearable"
What do you get when you cross a Lenovo AR headset with a Motorola-designed, touchpad-bearing neckband -- all of it spearheaded by Verizon as a marquee use case for its 5G ultrawideband network? Meet "Project Ironman." pic.twitter.com/ZAe5LEekRp
— Ev (@evleaks) December 1, 2021
Castano added that Motorola's next Edge flagship phone will be introduced in a few days which might spread some more sunlight on this entire project including "Project Ironman."
If true, this would not be the first time that Motorola and Verizon teamed up on a game-changing device. In November 2009, both Verizon and Motorola were eager to build an iPhone killer. At the time, Apple's smartphone was exclusive to AT&T, and previous attempts by Verizon to at least match the iPhone failed miserably. In late 2008, Verizon thought that it had what it was looking for with the BlackBerry Storm.
When we say that the first touchscreen 'Berry was an unmitigated disaster, we are being too kind. This writer pre-ordered the device and it was even more of a hot mess than you've heard. The technology that was supposed to make pressing on the virtual QWERTY feel like you were typing on a physical keyboard was not complete. This mistake along with others (no Wi-Fi, for example) was corrected on the Storm 2, but by then it was too late.
Can Verizon and Motorola find the magic one more time?
The BlackBerry Storm 2 might have given Verizon a decent phone and it probably would have been its top touchscreen offering for 2009 had it not been for the Motorola DROID. Verizon, Google, and Motorola teamed up to develop the first Android 2.0 phone and it featured a 3.7-inch LCD display, slightly larger than the iPhone's 3.5-inch screen. It also had a physical keyboard that would slide out.
To say that the Motorola DROID was a game-changer would be true. Android went from strength to strength and became the most widely used smartphone operating system in the world. While some of the players' names have changed, we once again have Motorola and Verizon teaming up on a possible game-changing new mobile device (albeit a wearable one this time) and we can't wait to see what happens.
Verizon's "Project Ironman" reportedly features 5G Motorola AR glasses - PhoneArena
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