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Motorola launches its premium flagship 'Signature Series' in India as part of a push to position itself as a lifestyle tech brand, Ruben Castano, VP of Design, Brand and CX at Motorola Mobility. |
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Motorola launches its premium flagship 'Signature Series' in India as part of a push to position itself as a lifestyle tech brand, Ruben Castano, VP of Design, Brand and CX at Motorola Mobility. |
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Motorola has launched the Moto Watch powered by Polar in India. The smartwatch focuses on wellness tracking, long battery life, and a classic round design, with prices starting at Rs 5,999. |
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Motorola has launched the Motorola Signature, marking its entry into the ultra-premium smartphone market in India. This device features a Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 processor, a 6.8-inch Extreme AMOLED LTPO display with a 165Hz refresh rate, and a triple 50MP camera setup, including a periscope lens. , Technology & Science, Times Now |
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Motorola Signature sits above the Edge lineup for the company has promises better service and experience. |
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Motorola has launched the moto watch powered by Polar in India, offering advanced sleep and recovery tracking, dual-band GPS, OLED display and up to seven days of battery life. |
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Motorola Signature debuts in India with Snapdragon 8 Gen 5, triple 50MP cameras, Pantone design, and Android 16. Prices start at Rs 59,999, with sales beginning January 30 |
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Motorola Signature offers a well-thought, sleek, and elegant design that feels feather-ish to hold; has a Sony Lytia backed camera system to impress a lot of us who want the periscope, main, and front sorted; and peak performance to stand among the best in the segment |
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Motorola on Friday launched a new premium and flagship smartphone, Motorola Signature, in India. As the name suggests, the new Motorola Signature marks the beginning of a new series for the Lenovo-owned smartphone brand |
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Motorola Signature is powered by Qualcomm's latest Snapdragon 8 Gen 5, which is paired with up to 16GB of LPDDR5X RAM and storage options going up to 1TB. |
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Since October 2025, the cost of RAM has doubled due to the diversion of essential components used across computing devices to meet the growing demand for AI data centres. |