Motorola T720

Motorola T720/T720i/T721/T725/T730
DeveloperMotorola
TypeMobile phone
First releasedSeptember 2002 (2002-09)
SuccessorMotorola V500
Form factorClamshell
Dimensions90 mm (3.5 in) H (folded)
47 mm (1.9 in) W
21 mm (0.83 in) D
Weight100 g (3.5 oz)
DisplayCSTN 4:3 ratio
External displayYes
Data inputsKeypad

The Motorola T720 is a clamshell mobile phone developed by Motorola, announced on February 14, 2002 in Milan. It is a "T"-prefix product, although was not marketed under the Timeport or Talkabout brands and there would be no more handsets under this designation after the T720 line. The Motorola T720 was the company's first regular cell phone that had a color display, when excluding Motorola's Accompli 009 communicator. It was released in GSM and CDMA variants.

The Motorola T720 was developed on the back of the success of the Motorola V60 and the growing trend and adoption for color. The controls are generally similar to the V60 and V66. Its most notable feature is the color display: it is a CSTN display producing 4096 colors and passive matrix. This was however not technically as good as the competing Samsung T100 that featured an active matrix display. The Motorola T720 also had a much improved (over the V60) external display, with a resolution of 120x160 pixels, up from 96x16 pixels.

Described as a cross between the Motorola V60 and Motorola StarTAC, the Motorola T720's silver body is slightly larger than V60 and it also has bigger buttons with backlighting, and larger display, including a larger external display. As part of the color display, Motorola also designed a new user interface menu that would be used on many of their future feature phones for several years. Key features include GPRS, a WAP browser, EMS (5.0), and polyphonic ringtones, and an email client supporting POP3 and IMAP protocols. It does not have MMS, however. The T720 sold by Verizon Wireless ran BREW and could download ringtones and games using Verizon's Get It Now service.