The Motorola Droid X is an Android-based smartphone by Motorola, distributed exclusively by Verizon Wireless in the US.
Wi-Fi capability (can access wireless internet the same way a laptop can)
HDMI output (can display video in high definition)
8-megapixel camera with 720p video recording (can capture high quality photographs and video)
1.0 GHz TI OMAP3630-1000 processor (i'm not a programmer but I would assume this means it computes fairly fast)
a 4.3" FWVGA LCD display (a quality display screen)
and 3G wireless hot-spot capability (3G is the type of network most smartphones run on)
The Droid X has a dedicated camera button instead of a shutter button on the touch screen. (meaning the button is on the side instead of on the touch screen like the iPhone which can be difficult and leads to less acuracy)
The Droid X comes with 8 GB of internal flash memory (about 1,750, 10,000 photos or 10 hours of video)
and a 16GB on a MicroSD card included (up to 3,500 songs or 20,000 photos or 20 hours of video(upgradeable to 32GB) total memory expandable up to 40 GB.
Unlike the Motorola Droid, the Droid X does not have a physical keyboard, but instead features Swype and a multi-touch QWERTY keyboard.
Like most Android phones it has GPS (global positioning system)
, text to speech and live traffic. It does not have a trackball, but an equivalent workaround can be tried via keyboard
The smartphone was released on July 15, 2010 at a price of US$199, after $100 rebate with a 2 year contract.
Customers with a Verizon contract ending in 2010 can upgrade. Otherwise, the retail price of the device is $569.