The V3i includes a 1.23-megapixel camera, which works about as well as you'd expect. It captures serviceable snapshots and video, but prints are unlikely to be suitable for framing. You can frame shots and view them on the clear, colorful 2.25-inch display.
The big deal with the V3i, of course, is its iTunes offering. Though the V3i won't replace your iPod, the iteration of iTunes that it contains has improved is superior to the ones on past models. You connect the phone to your desktop via the included USB cable and then launch iTunes, which will recognize the phone. If you like, you can autofill the phone with a random selection of songs from your music library, or you can select particular songs to add. Like the ones on the Slvr and the Rokr, the V3i's version of iTunes accommodates only 100 songs--regardless of how much storage space you have available on your microSD card (the phone comes with a 512MB card).
Transferring songs to the phone is a slow process. The included documentation advises you to allow about 10 minutes for transferring 25 songs; and in my experience, that figure was fairly accurate. Once you've loaded songs on the phone, however, you can easily access them via the familiar, clean iTunes interface. You must use your PC to create playlists and to buy songs from the iTunes music store, though, afterward transferring them to the phone. Audio quality on the included headphones is fine, but listening through the speakers is less than pleasing.
Another drawback is the steep price: the V3i costs $300 with a two-year contract from Cingular--more than the price of a well-equipped iPod. Of course, you can't make calls on the iPod.
Motorola Razr V3i
Motorola's latest Razr delivers improved battery life and a built-in version of iTunes, but it won't replace your iPod.
$300 (with a two-year contract from Cingular)
Current prices (if available)