LG Xenon - Blue (AT&T)
Manufacturer: LG Electronics U.S.A. Part number: 3680271
- More product information:
- Editors' review
- User reviews
- Specifications
- Product series
- Accessories
- Manufacturer info
- Bottom Line:
- Despite a few problems, the LG Xenon is one of the better messaging phones we've seen, plus it has a cool touch-screen interface and plenty of features.
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CNET editors' review
LG Xenon - Blue (AT&T) price range: $99.99
- Reviewed by: Nicole Lee
- Reviewed on: 04/08/2009
- Released on: 04/08/2009
The good: The LG Xenon has an attractive touch-screen display, a great QWERTY keyboard, customizable standby screens, plenty of shortcuts, and lots of features like 3G speeds, quad-band support, a 2-megapixel camera, GPS, and more.
The bad: The LG Xenon suffers from the lack of POP or IMAP e-mail support, the touch screen suffers from a slight learning curve, the Web browser feels a little clunky, and you're limited to only six widgets to customize the home screen.
The bottom line: Despite a few problems, the LG Xenon is one of the better messaging phones we've seen, plus it has a cool touch-screen interface and plenty of features.
Most of LG's messaging phones in the U.S. have been geared toward CDMA carriers, like the LG Rumor 2 for Sprint and the LG enV2 for Verizon Wireless. Not so with LG's latest messaging phone, the LG Xenon, available from AT&T Wireless.
Not only does the Xenon have a slide-out QWERTY keyboard for messaging, it also has a large touch-screen interface similar to the one on the LG Vu. Unlike the Vu however, the Xenon has a home screen customizable with widgets, dedicated pages for favorite contacts and applications, and something called the "Annunciator," which is essentially a drop-down menu of certain shortcuts. Aside from that, the Xenon has almost the same features as the Vu: a 2-megapixel camera, a music player, a full HTML browser, stereo Bluetooth, and more.
Though we weren't thrilled with the Web browsing experience, we were overall pleased with the Xenon and think it makes an excellent messaging phone for AT&T customers. The LG Xenon is available for $99.99 with a two-year service agreement.
Design
At first glance, the LG Xenon appears to be just another touch-screen phone. Measuring 4.16 inches long by 2.11 inches wide by 0.62 inch thick, the Xenon has smooth, sleek lines all around, with a touch of chrome around the border. It's a little smaller than the LG Vu and a little thicker as well. The Xenon is fairly lightweight at 3.81 ounces, and it's slim enough to fit in a front pocket.

Dominating its entire front surface is a large 2.8-inch touch-screen display. It's smaller than the 3-inch displays on the LG Dare and the LG Vu, but it still looks good. It supports 262,000 colors and 240x400 pixels, which result in great-looking graphics and colorful images. You can view the date, time, battery life, signal strength, and photo caller ID. Even when the screen is locked, you can see the date and time in a screen overlay. You can set the brightness, the backlight timer, and the font size. For dialing fonts, you can set the color as well.
Along the top of the screen are three icons, each of which corresponds to one of three customizable standby screens. You get one just for your favorite contacts, one for the home screen, and one for your favorite application shortcuts. All standby screens have four shortcut icons along the bottom, which correspond to the phone dialer, the contacts list, the messaging menu, and the main menu. The main menu interface is similar to the one on the Vu, with four tabs along the right to differentiate applications. You get one tab for Phone-related apps, one for Multimedia, one for My Stuff (which includes the media gallery plus productivity tools), and another for Settings.
For the favorite contacts screen, just follow the instructions to add a contact from your phone book. The contacts will then appear as small icons with the person's name, phone number, and photo. You can have up to three pages of favorite contacts, and you can arrange them on the screen however you wish by dragging and dropping the icons, or you can align them with the grid. You can also fix the icons so they don't change position with the screen orientation. As for the shortcuts screen, you can add up to nine shortcuts. To add and remove shortcuts, simply press and hold down on a shortcut icon.
The home screen is also customizable with a variety of widgets, similar to the TouchWiz interface on some Samsung phones. On the bottom left of the Xenon's home screen is a little right arrow that opens up to reveal a tray of widgets. There are only six to choose from, though; there's an analog clock, a world clock, the calendar, sticky notes, the image gallery, and the music player. To add a widget to the home screen, just drag and drop it on the page. You can then close the tray by pressing the little left arrow.
The LG Xenon also has a drop-down shortcuts menu it calls the "Annunciator." Simply tap the top part of any screen, and a list of shortcuts will appear. You can go directly to the music player, toggle the Bluetooth connection on and off, set your ring and vibration profile, send a new text message, send a new mobile e-mail, check your voice mail, start the instant messenger for either Yahoo, AOL, or Windows Live, set your alarm clock, or view the calendar.
As with all touch-screen handsets, you use only your fingers (or a stylus if you have one) to navigate the interface. It felt quite intuitive, and we liked that there was haptic feedback to let us know when our touch has registered. There's also Touch Calibration to ensure proper accuracy and responsiveness. Do note there's a slight learning curve involved. When we first started using it, we occasionally had issues when scrolling through lists--sometimes we would accidentally select something by mistake. We did learn to deal with this eventually, though. Dialing numbers went pretty smoothly, because of the large numbers on the virtual keypad. There's also a built-in internal accelerometer, but it only works with certain applications, like the Web browser--it would turn the screen orientation from portrait to landscape mode when tilted 90 degrees, for example.

To make texting easier, the LG Xenon has a slide-out QWERTY keyboard on the side. Just slide the phone to the right, and a full four-line QWERTY keyboard will appear on your left. When you slide the keyboard out, the screen orientation will change from portrait mode to landscape mode. We really like the keys on this keyboard--they're well-spaced and feel very tactile, making it easy to type with speed. We especially like that there are specialized keys on the keyboard, like a dedicated text message key, a dedicated mobile e-mail key, a Web browser key, a phone book key, an @ symbol key, and a .com key. The latter two are especially useful when entering e-mail addresses, and of course the .com key is good for entering Web URLs. If you prefer not to use the keyboard, you can choose to enter in text via a virtual T9 keypad, but we see no reason to do so.
Underneath the display are the Call and End/Power keys, plus a task manager key that lets you switch between open applications. On the left spine is the volume rocker, the charger jack is on the top, and the right spine is home to the microSD card slot, the hold/screen lock key, and a dedicated camera button. On the back of the Xenon is the camera lens and LED flash. There's no self-portrait mirror, however.
Features
The LG Xenon has a rather skimpy 500-entry phone book, with room in each entry for two phone numbers, an e-mail address, and a memo. You can assign contacts to caller groups, have a photo for caller ID, and one of 10 polyphonic ringtones or one of 10 message alert tones. Basic features include a vibrate mode, a speakerphone, text and multimedia messaging, a calendar, an alarm clock, a calculator, a voice recorder, voice command, a notepad, a world clock, a tasks list, a stopwatch, a tip calculator, and a unit converter.
More advanced users will like the stereo Bluetooth, instant messaging (with AIM, Yahoo, and Windows Live accounts), mobile e-mail, and A-GPS. The mobile e-mail is housed within a Web-based interface and will only support e-mail from certain accounts like Yahoo, AOL, AIM, Windows Live Hotmail, AT&T Yahoo, BellSouth, Comcast, Earthlink, Juno, Mindspring, and NetZero. We weren't able to use Gmail, especially since the Xenon doesn't support POP or IMAP. As for A-GPS, the Xenon comes with AT&T Navigator, AT&T's turn-by-turn location-based service.
As with most touch-screen phones, we expect there to be a full HTML browser to make use of the larger screen real estate, and on that point, we're not disappointed. We also like that you can open up multiple browser windows, which act like tabbed browsing. Like on a regular browser, you can change the font size, toggle pop-up windows, turn off images, and more. However, the Media Net browser on the Xenon proved to be clunkier than we would like. Even though it renders most pages just fine, it sometimes won't load CSS designs properly and the page would look a little strange. You have to zoom in and out of pages using the little magnifying glass icon, which can be a bit tedious after a while, as there was often a lag. Also, because the screen is so small, you'll have to scroll a lot more through pages. Thankfully, the arrows on the QWERTY keyboard make this easier.
Since the Xenon comes with 3G/HSDPA, it is compatible with AT&T's array of broadband services, which include AT&T's Cellular Video, which lets you watch streaming video clips from content providers like CNN and CBS, AT&T Video Share, which lets you make one-way video calls to another Video Share-compatible phone, and of course AT&T Mobile Music, a music portal with an online music store, courtesy of Napster. Also in the AT&T Mobile Music offering is XM Radio Mobile, a streaming service for satellite radio subscribers, Music ID, a song ID service, music videos courtesy of MobiVJ, a music fan community, and a ringtone maker.
AT&T Mobile Music also houses the music player. It has a pretty generic interface, found on most AT&T music phones. It does have the typical music player controls like repeat and shuffle mode, and the ability to create and edit playlists. You can transfer songs via a USB cable, or purchase them over-the-air via the aforementioned Napster. It supports MP3, AAC, AAC+, and WMA formats. It has a built-in 80MB of memory, but there's a microSD card slot in case you want additional storage.

You can also store photos on the microSD card, which is useful, since the Xenon has a 2-megapixel camera. You can take pictures in four different resolutions (1,600x1,200, 1,280x960, 640x480, 320x240), three quality settings, five color effects, and five white balance presets. Other settings include a night mode, a timer, brightness, a flash toggle, and the choice of three shutter tones plus a silent option. The photo quality is pretty good. Colors did look a little muted, but the image looks tack sharp. There's also a camcorder that can record in two resolutions (320x240 and 176x144) with similar options to the still camera. You can record in three modes; General mode, which just takes up however much memory you have, MMS, which is a shorter video clip, and Video Share, which is the one-way video calling service we mentioned earlier.
You can personalize the LG Xenon with a variety of wallpaper, color schemes, clock and calendar formats, alert tones, and more. The LG Xenon comes with a few applications like MobiTV, which lets you watch live streaming TV, Mobile Banking, and My-Cast Weather. There are also games like Bubble Bash, Diner Dash 2, I-play Bowling, and Monopoly Here & Now. You can always download more personalization options, applications, and games from the Media Net store.
Performance
We tested the quad-band (GSM 850/900/1800/1900) LG Xenon in San Francisco using AT&T's service. Call quality was very impressive. Callers could hardly hear any static or background noise, though they could still tell we were on a cell phone due to the slightly robotic quality to our voice. On our end, we did hear a bit of static and echo, which were amplified when we turned on the speakerphone. It wasn't too bad, but still noticeable.
Speaking of speakerphones, callers thought we sounded just fine over speakerphone. They did report a bit of an echo effect, but that's normal. On our end, the sound from the speakers was a bit hollow, but we could still hear them just fine. The speakers definitely don't do the music justice, though, as the audio sounded tinny and hollow. We definitely recommend using a stereo headset instead.
We were mostly impressed with the 3G speeds, though we think it could be a little faster. Loading a complex Web page like CNET.com took around a minute and a half, though simpler Web pages loaded much faster. Buffering video from AT&T's Cellular Video took about 30 seconds as well, though there was no rebuffering after the video started playing. Video quality did appear pixelated, but that's more on AT&T's end than the fault of the phone.
The LG Xenon has a rated battery life of four hours talk time and 11 days in standby time. It has a tested talk time of 5 hours and 21 minutes. According to the FCC, the LG Xenon has a digital SAR rating of 0.686 watt per kilogram.
User reviews
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Great phone, great keyboard
by stanman0125 on April 11, 2009
Pros: Call quality, battery life, feel/quality
Cons: The address book has some serious short comings, camera is sluggish
Summary: Overall, I love the Xenon. I am switching to it from a Samsung Blackjack smartphone. My first try was the Samsung Eternity. I am not a huge fan of Samsung, ...
Summary: Overall, I love the Xenon. I am switching to it from a Samsung Blackjack smartphone. My first try was the Samsung Eternity. I am not a huge fan of Samsung, but at the time, it was the best option I saw.
After discovering some short comings, I decided to exchange the Eternity for the Xenon and I couldn't be happier I did.
First, the Xenon has voice dialing/commands and speed-dial, which the Eternity shockingly lacks. The Xenon handles voice commands very well, although you have to be careful how you set up your contacts if you plan on using voice dialing. The Xenon requires you to define each number for every contact as mobile, home, work, etc... which will be fine for most people entering contacts from scratch. However, I found out that importing contacts from my old phone via Bluetooth was mostly seamless, but the categorization of the numbers got jumbled. So, some home numbers were marked as mobile or work, which throws off the voice dialing. Changing the category is easy enough however, but somewhat tedious if you have a lot of contacts.
Speaking of contacts, the Xenon does not store information like birthdays, anniversaries, or ADDRESSES. I can understand the first two, but given the fact that ATT navigator is an option on this phone, it's curious that it can't store an address. An address could be entered in the 'notes' section for your contacts, but I find it odd.
The camera is solid, but sluggish. No fast moving objects, please.
That said overall, I love the phone. I have found the widgets to be useless on both the Eternity and the Xenon. Only the music play seems to be helpful to have on your home screen. The Xenon has a "favorites" button on the home screen (the star button) where you can place any application you frequently use. I put the voice command, bluetooth, and calendar there, which is great. No need for widgets for these thing. Also, the connection and profile menu, accessed by touching the very top of the screen is pretty handy, although, it does take a few tries to learn where to touch to get it to come up.
Speaking of the touch screen, it's pretty great. I found the Eternity's operation a little smoother, but overall the Xenon's is good. The widget bar is a little sluggish to appear, which I gather is more of a processor issue than a screen issue, but the responsiveness is a little slow in some other apps as well. CNET is definitely right when they say there is a learning curve, but I say it's well worth learning.
The size is good too. It's shorter and less wide than the Eternity, but a little thicker, due to the slide out keyboard, which by the way, is great. My only complaint is that I sometimes hit the mail app key when I mean to type an "A" (it's right next to it). I know that's not the keyboards fault, but I think they could have put a key that didn't launch an app right next to one of the most used letters in the English language.
The phone fits easily into the front pocket of jeans or dress pants without being overly noticeable.
Overall, I am thrilled by my choice to exchange the Eternity for the Xenon. The Xenon is a marvelous phone and texting device.9 out of 9 users found this user opinion helpful.
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great feature phone w/o being "smartphone"
by maureenjpkcmo on April 18, 2009
Pros: voice quality, combination of touch screen and slide out keyboard, numerous features, one-touch speed dialing, contact personalization.
Cons: touchscreen smudges easily, takes a bit of time to get used to the settings and setting up preferences
Summary: I had been going back and forth regarding a phone upgrade and I found nothing that really had all of the features I was looking for. One-touch speed dial and ...
Summary: I had been going back and forth regarding a phone upgrade and I found nothing that really had all of the features I was looking for. One-touch speed dial and setting up personal ring tones for contacts amazingly lacking on so many of the newer phones which I just fine weird. Logged on to ATT for another look and there was the Xenon--I immediately checked with CNET which overall gave it a pretty good review--I know CNET prefers the similar style Samsung, but truly it did not feel as sturdy in my hand and for the $100 difference in price I am very pleased. This is the best phone I have had for voice quality and as a phone that is very important to me- Previously have had samsung, nokia, and motorola phones.
5 out of 5 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Amazing Features
by ynot3312 on April 23, 2009
Pros: The LG Xenon has so many features you might want to hold onto that book so you don't miss out on every thing this phone has to offer.
Cons: I had the phone for 2 days and the screen broke from to much pressure so be gentle get insurance or a screen protector
3 out of 3 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Great Phone, great features!
by raven0811 on July 11, 2009
Pros: Full, comfortable keyboard, the touch screen is very responsive, the home screen allows room for various shortcuts, texting is very easy, it can be done either way The organization of the entire phone is very helpful and fun to use.
Cons: The screen smudges easily...there will be a lot of wiping on your part. Since the keys are so close I sometimes click either the moblie e-mail or the Internet button, very sad, it sometimes locks up when I don't want it to.
Summary: Although the phone takes some getting used to, it's a very cool phone and in my opinion is very organized. If you are an uptight stuffy nosed business person ...
Summary: Although the phone takes some getting used to, it's a very cool phone and in my opinion is very organized. If you are an uptight stuffy nosed business person I would NOT recommmend this phone, but for anyone else I would totally recommend it. It is also very affordable for what it does. Hope this review was helpful! :)
2 out of 2 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Great for texting!
Pros: Slide Out Keyboard
Touch Screen
ease of use-very readable!Cons: Too many ways to access call and message notifications-a bit confusing
small contacts list-easy to fill 500 spaces
No photo editing (at least, haven't found it yet)Summary: Cool phone, after killing my blackberry pearl, I needed to replace it.My husband was trying to talk me into an I Phone, but I don't see well, and ...
Summary: Cool phone, after killing my blackberry pearl, I needed to replace it.My husband was trying to talk me into an I Phone, but I don't see well, and it seemed like it would be a huge waste for me, I prefer to web surf on a larger screen, and the touch screen keyboard seemed like it would be super frustrating to me. After looking around a bit, I figured I would try the Xenon. so far, I'm pretty pleased. iI's so easy to text!
The fonts are very readable, I thought I would miss my blackberry, but this phone is a lot easier for me to use, and doesn't have a ton of features I never bothered with. I do however, miss the ability to synch my contact list and calender to a web app or outlook, cell phones sometimes die, and as I learned the hard lesson, unless uyou synch your phone, that info, for the most part, is gone if the phone dies. I definitely need to read the manul, maybe I could back up to sd card and back up card to PC weekly.
All in all, very pleased!2 out of 2 users found this user opinion helpful.
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This phone took text messaging to the next level
by coqolicious on June 18, 2009
Pros: Before this phone I only had T9 texting. Although I had gotten proficient, this phone really makes a difference. I'm on the web all the time now because i can type and navigate faster, and I'm also IM'ing more.
Cons: Main problem is NO SYNC with PC. :( The one thing they REALLY needed. Scrolling is sometimes hard because the scroll bar is too tiny. Sometimes the orientation doesnt switch on flip or sliding keyboard out.
Summary: This is definitely a great touch screen phone, with plenty of features.
Summary: This is definitely a great touch screen phone, with plenty of features.
2 out of 2 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Major Issues!
by DCFighter2088 on May 27, 2009
Pros: Battery Life, Touch screen, keypad, calendar! Volume.
Cons: Interface, favorites, location of buttons on touch and keyboard. Slow at responding user requests. Texting slows down after a lot o storage. Cannot move my text messagse to my external memory.
Summary: LG Xenon Model:LG GR500 (BLUE) First Issue (Major): My phone is a defective device because when its in use, sometimes it will shut off without no reason. It also ...
Summary: LG Xenon Model:LG GR500 (BLUE) First Issue (Major): My phone is a defective device because when its in use, sometimes it will shut off without no reason. It also shuts down when i charge it and use the key pad or when i slide up or slide down the phone to close it. Second Issue: Personally the USB slot for charging is located on a bad location. If i want to text using the key pad i have to work around the usb to text. Other Issues: The phone interface should have been different when texting. When i text using the touch pad i always click send when i try to do space because the send button is under it. It is just too small for the touch screen. I wish the phone could have landscape touch regardless of the keypad being landscape, that way if i didn't want to use the keypad i could always use the touch pad that way. Camera: The button to access it is next to the lock button. It drains the battery when i access the camera and i am not suppose to. I dont like it that its next to the lock button. Volume: The buttons on the left side for volume could have had other functions beside just volume. Even though the phone is touch screen, they could have made those buttons to be used for up and down when used for address book, texting, internet, games, and etc. My Favorites (little face on the main screen): This option is available but ive used it once and it was just for adding my favorites. Its good to use but i never use it. You can add 5 or more per little circle (on bottom of screen). The favorites gives you, plenty of options to talk to those favorites but i can just access those things via texting or address book. Its no use to me. Home Screen: Date, Time and AT&T logo. No use! Star (quick launch): Can add up to 9. always wants asks me to press hold to add or delete. I've added what i wanted so im tired of being asked over and over. I do not like that i cannot delete "my account". Texting: This features has many issues. When i receive text messages, most of the time it lets me know but when i receive them back to back it will put them as read. I might get a message and i wont know i got it unless i check to see when it rings for texting messages. i dont like that at all. The keypad for texting is better than the touch keys. I just dont like that you can access the online messaging on the left side when typing a fast text because it will access it. Again, it could have been on another location. It freezes or its slow to open a conversation most of the time. There is a long wait to open a window up when a conversation reaches its max. The good thing is that you have your options to change on texting. Voicemail can be access through here. Display: this option lets you customize. There isn't much to customize since its limited to what you can do. Not good at all. Music Player: This is a good feature. It organizes the music according the file name that was added. Camera: Its only 2mp. When i take pictures it comes out blurry and not great. I dont know what other people were thinking when they thought the camera was great. I wish i oould use it more but it just looks horrible. I've cleaned the lenses to make it work but it still comes out bad. Calendar: It works real good. I add things to it really quickly! Big plus! Widget: Not much use for it. Ive tried using it but i find it better to just go directly to camera, date, music directly. Tips: To save a lot of battery time keep your display light 30 seconds or lower. I prefer 30 seconds. I had it for always but my battery would drain in a day in heavy use. Review: I like that the phone has both touch and a keypad. Messaging is fast. I didn't like the size for the touch screen. Talk time is good for the use. Another regular phone. I don't like the phone as much as i thought i would. im giving it 3 stars because the phone works except that issue of mine which will be handled by att&t, getting a replacement. The interface is just not user friendly. If you really want this phone do more research before you buy it.
2 out of 2 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Best phone i've ever had!!
by megsp47 on August 30, 2009
Pros: It has a great keyboard. and the touch screen is amazing!! and it gets awesome service! much better than the last phone i had which was a pantech duo!
Cons: Haven't found anything that i dont like about the phone,
Summary: Its a VERY good phone.
Summary: Its a VERY good phone.
1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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It does what it should
by jonmac on July 30, 2009
Pros: QWERTY keyboard was my main reason for buying it. I started SMS'ing recently (late bloomer) and it just doesn't work very well on an "old style" number pad phone. I already carry a BlackBerry for work, so I didn't need anything too high tech.
Cons: It just feels like, well, plastic slapped together in an Asian sweathouse. I get the feeling that it will not surviv a drop from more than 2 inches. The responsiveness is nothing to write home about, but the price is less than a Samsung Impression.
Summary: For the price, I recommend this.
Summary: For the price, I recommend this.
1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
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Buyer beware
by MuzZviman on July 6, 2009
Pros: Great GUI and nice gadgets
Cons: CANNOT USE THE USB PORT FOR DATA OR SYNC. The lack of drivers prevents the usage of the phone as a modem and the ability to sync to PIM (like outlook). No PC Sync software. In short, a nice toy but not a serious phone.
Summary: If you plan to use this phone for anything besides casual calling and SMS, beware.
Summary: If you plan to use this phone for anything besides casual calling and SMS, beware.
1 out of 1 users found this user opinion helpful.
Specifications
- Manufacturer: LG Electronics U.S.A.
- Part number: 3680271
- Description: The LG Xenon by AT&T is the model of mobile innovation - a sleek, tactile phone with easy access to the latest wireless features. Its large touch screen with vibration feedback and enhanced flash user interface make menus, shortcuts, and contacts available right at your fingertips. With Xenon's compact, slideout QWERTY keyboard you can quickly send text messages and e-mails too. On the other hand, you don't have to lift a finger to make a call thanks to Bluetooth wireless technology and speaker-independent voice commands. In addition to all of this rich functionality, the LG Xenon is also richly entertaining! Multitask while listening to your favorite tunes on your music player, use Image Editor and Filter to creatively enhance photos taken with the 2-megapixel camera, or shoot videos to share with friends during a call. Revolutionize your world with the advanced LG Xenon.
General
- Product Type Cellular phone With digital camera / digital player
- Service Provider AT&T
- Width 2.1 in
- Depth 0.6 in
- Height 4.6 in
- Weight 3.8 oz
- Body Color Blue
Cellular
- Technology WCDMA (UMTS) / GSM
- Band WCDMA (UMTS) / GSM 850/900/1800/1900
- Phone Design Slider
- Antenna Internal
- Vibrating Alert Yes
- Polyphonic Ringer Yes
- Voice Dialing Yes
- Call Timer Yes
- Conference Call Capability Yes
- Voice Recorder Yes
- Speakerphone Yes
- Wireless Interface Bluetooth 2.0
- Additional Features TTY compatible
Communicator Features
- User Memory 100 MB
Phone Memory
- Phone Book Capacity 500 names & numbers
Messaging & Data Services
- Messaging Services Yahoo! Messenger, AOL Instant Messenger Service (AIM), Windows Live Messenger (MSN Messenger)
- Mobile Email Yes
- GPRS (General Packet Radio Service) Yes
- EDGE (Enhanced Data Rates For Global Evolution) Yes
- Internet Browser Yes
Digital Camera
- Camera highlights With a resolution of 2 megapixels, this camera phone will give you better pictures than other phones.
- Sensor Resolution 2 megapixels
- Digital Zoom 2
- Features Video recording
Organizer
- Alarm Clock Yes
- Calendar Yes
- Reminder Yes
- Calculator Basic
Display
- Type LCD display
- Technology TFT
- Display Resolution 240 x 400 pixels
- Diagonal Size 2.8 in
- Color Support Color
- Color Depth 16-bit (65000 colors)
- Features LCD touch screen
Digital Player (Recorder)
- Supported Digital Audio Standards AAC, MP3, WMA
Memory
- Internal Shared Memory Yes
- Flash Memory 100 MB
Connections
- Slot Provided 1
Power
- Type Power adapter
Battery
- Technology - Lithium ion
- Capacity 950 mAh
- Talk Time Up to 240 min
- Standby Time Up to 264 h
Product series
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Manufacturer: LG Electronics U.S.A.
Specs:
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Manufacturer: LG Electronics U.S.A.
Specs: WCDMA (UMTS) / GSM 850/900/1800/1900, Up to 240 min, With digital camera / digital player, 3.8 oz
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Manufacturer: LG Electronics U.S.A.
Specs: WCDMA (UMTS) / GSM 850/900/1800/1900, Up to 240 min, With digital camera / digital player, 3.8 oz
Accessories
Manufacturer info
- LG Electronics U.S.A.
- Manufacturer profile
- Browse LG Electronics U.S.A. products on Shopper.com
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- Website: http://us.lge.com/
- Address:
1000 Sylvan Avenue, Englewood Cliffs, NJ 07632







