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Motorola MC45

Moto adds yet another multi-function handheld for enterprise and field mobility applications
(by Conrad H. Blickenstorfer)

On January 29, 2013, Motorola Solutions introduced the MC45 mobile computer, which the company describes as a cost- and size-optimized device targeted at applications such as customer relationship management (CRM), sales order entry, inventory management, proof of delivery, direct store delivery (DSD) and route accounting, while also expanding the range of solutions available for small- and medium-sized businesses and emerging markets. The MC45 combines a cell phone, mobile broadband, a laser scanner, an autofocus camera, and a mobile computer all into one small and handy device.

By now, Motorola Solutions' lineup of handheld computers includes over 20 different products of varying ruggedness, size and design (and that's before all the Psion handhelds that are now under Moto's jurisdiction). The majority use either the longish "flashlight" or the thumbtype PDA formfactor. So where does the MC45 fit into this crowded lineup? In general, the two-digit model numbers indicate what Motorola calls an EDA or Enterprise Digital Assistant. Below you can see part of Moto's current EDA lineup. From left to right, it's the the small MC35, the newly introduced MC45, the MC55, and the top-of-the-line MC75:

Above: Motorola's Enterprise Digital Assistants MC35, MC45, MC55, and MC75

The MC45 measures 5.6 x 2.6 inches, is an inch thick, and weighs 8.7 ounces. That makes it roughly as big as three Samsung Galaxy S III smartphones stacked on top of each other, and it weighs a bit more than twice as much as an iPhone 5. If that all sounds like a lot, it's not. For a handheld as tough and rugged as the MC45, that's very small and light.

Small, though, is also the display. It measures just 3.2 inches diagonal, barely larger than the LCD of a compact digital camera, and the resolution is only QVGA (240 x 320 pixel). That's good enough for the Windows Embedded Handheld 6.5.3 OS the MC45 is based on, but it's a very far cry from the retina-class mega resolution found on most modern consumer smartphones. And no capacitive multi-touch here either. It's a resistive digitizer, which is what Microsoft's mini-OS was designed for (a very long time ago) anyway.

On the processor side, the MC45 breaks a bit with the traditional Pocket PC mold that for many years standardized around XScale PXA processors (first from Intel, then from Marvell which no longer seems interested in that market): the new device runs on a 600MHz Qualcomm MSN7627 chip. There's 256MB of RAM and a gig of Flash, with onboard storage expandable through the unit's microSD card slot. The MC45 comes standard with a 3.7V/3,080mAH Li-Ion battery that's good for full-shift operation.

Motorola describes the MC45 as its "first WAN-based solution in a new category of mobile computers offers," referring to the unit's 3.5G HSDPA voice/data wide area network radio capability. That means quad-band GSM and 850/1900 or 2100 MHz UMTS/HSDPA. The units also include dual-band 801.11a/b/g WiFi and Class 2 Bluetooth 2.0.

These days, virtually any smartphone can read barcodes via its camera, but professional scanning applications requires real 1D laser scanner, and the MC45 has one. Using Moto's patented Adaptive Scan technology, the MC45 can reliably read even damaged or poorly printed barcodes from as far as 15 feet away. And the unit's 3.2megapixel autofocus camera can read 1D/2D codes if need be. For magnetic card reading, there's an optional Mobile Payment Module that connects to the MC45 via Bluetooth. And the MC45 also has integrated autonomous and assisted GPS.

In terms of ruggedness, the MC45 is, of course, much tougher than any consumer smartphone. It can handle 5-foot drops, is sealed to IP64 specifications where the "6" means it's completely protected against dust, and the "4" that it is protected against water spray from all directions. The operating temperature range is a wide 14 to 122 degrees Fahrenheit. Motorola also quotes a "tumble spec" where the devices survive 250 1.6 foot tumbles.

With the vastly more modern Windows Embedded 8 Handheld on the horizon and Android on every Motorola Mobility phone, why does Motorola Solutions release the MC45 with the comparatively ancient Windows Embedded Handheld 6.5? We're guessing here, but a), because Embedded 8 Handheld isn't here yet and will have much higher hardware requirements, b) because Android really also needs a bigger screen and a procap touchscreen, and c) because for whatever it's worth, Microsoft's old Windows Mobile remains the defacto OS in vertical and industrial handhelds even in 2013. And there's another reason: to tide customers over until the mobile OS landscape settles, Motorola offers RhoMobile (see here), which supports OS-agnostic browser-based apps. We haven't seen how well that works, but in theory it's not a bad solution.

So overall, while Moto's mobile handheld lineup is already very packed, the new (albeit rather conventional) MC45 combines PDA, phone, data communication, GPS, and scanning into a single and very compact Windows Mobile handheld. The starting price of US$1,345 may seem high, but units such as this one practically last forever and they don't break. Whether Motorola really needs THAT many very slightly different handhelds is another question.

Specifications Motorola MC45
Added/changed Added 02/2013
Form-factor Mobile computer
CPU Speed ARM 11 Qualcomm MSN7627/600 MHz
OS Windows Embedded Handheld 6.5.3 Professional
RAM/ROM 256MB/1GB
Card slots 1 microSDHC (up to 32GB)
Display type Outdoor-viewable color TFT LCD
Display size/res 3.2-inch/240 x 320 pixel QVGA
Digitizer/pens Resistive touch/1
Keyboard/keys 26-key numeric
Navigation nav controls, stylus
Housing Impact-resistant plastic
Operating Temp 14° to 122°F (-10° to 50° C)
Sealing IP64
Shock 4 feet to concrete (two drops all six sides)
Size (WxHxD) 5.6 x 2.6 x 1.0 inches (142 x 66 x 25 mm)
Weight 8.7 oz. (248 grams)
Power Rechargeable 3.7V, 3,080mAH Li-Ion
Camera 3.2-megapixel AF camera w/ illuminator (supports 1D/2D bar code)
Sensors Ambient light, proximity
Interface USB 2.0 host and client, mic, speaker, 1D laser scanner; optional magnetic stripe reader module
Wireless Bluetooth Class II version 2.0 + EDR, 802.11a/b/g WiFi, 3.5G HSDPA, quad-band GPRS/EDGE, integrated Assisted-GPS
List price Starting at US$1,345
Product page www.motorola.com/mc45
Windows Mobile Info
  • Windows Embedded Compact 2013
  • Windows Embedded 8 Handheld
  • Windows Embedded Compact 7
  • Windows Embedded Handheld
  • Windows Phone 7
  • Windows Embedded CE 6.0 R3
  • Windows Mobile 6.5
  • Windows Mobile 6
  • Windows CE 6.0
  • Windows Mobile 5
  • Windows CE 5.0
  • Windows Mobile Smartphone
  • Windows Mobile 2003
  • Windows CE .Net
  • Windows for Pocket PC 2002
  • Pocket PC intro 2000
  • Windows CE H/PC Pro 1998
  • Windows CE 2.0 1997
  • MC45 front and back
    inserted by FC2 system