One more thought, Puff.
I recently bought a Samsung t401g phone to use for emergencies. It comes pretty close to meeting your price point and specifications. It can only be used as a prepaid phone on the Net10 network, but Net10 is the least expensive cell phone plan in America. If you don't already have a T-Mobile (or other) SIM card and plan, it can save you a lot of money. Net10 phone calls are 10¢ a minute, and text messages are just 3¢ each. There are NEVER any roaming fees, regardless of where you are using the phone in America. Net10 phones are GSM phones which piggyback off BOTH T-Mobile's and AT&T's networks (the phone picks whichever carrier's signal is stronger at the moment, so you actually get BETTER service than you would with either a T-Mobile or an AT&T service contract). If you don't talk a great deal, you can keep the total cost of everything down to just $15
per month.
The Samsung t401g matches your price point almost exactly ($79 brand new, with NO contract obligation). The price of the phone includes your first two months/300 minutes worth of service.
The camera isn't wonderful, but it's 1.3 MP (which means 1280x1024 photos), and that is way better than the Razr's VGA camera. There is even a crude image-editing application built into the phone, for doing some simple editing of your photos. Video recording is quite low res at just 176x144 pixels, but that still beats the Razr (and most other cell phones in this price range), which can't record video at all!. The t401g accepts microSD cards up to 16 GB (& possibly 32 GB when these become available). So you can load up an unbelievable number of pictures, photographs, videos, and mp3s onto it.
You don't need any special software to access the phone's memory card from your computer. It is recognized by Windows, Mac, or Linux as a flash drive when you connect via usb cable or bluetooth. You just drag and drop to upload/download from it. And you can use the phone as a flash drive, of course, to transfer files between home and work computers, etc.
The built-in media player can play back some video formats as well as mp3 audio and display still jpegs. It is compatible with stereo A2DP bluetooth. If you have stereo bluetooth headphones, you can stream the audio wirelessly from the phone to your headphones. Should a phone call come in while you are using the media player, the phone will interrupt media playback and send the telephone call audio to the headphones. If you want to use regular wired headphones, however, you'll need an adapter - it uses a ridiculous proprietary jack for usb and headphone connections. The phone has a small speaker built into the back, if you don't want to use either bluetooth or wired headphones. There is also a built-in voice recorder for taking voice memos, recording lectures, etc.
The phone is a slider type with a QWERTY keyboard. The big keyboard works very well for texting, but it does make the overall size of the phone a bit big and clunky (112x51x18mm). I have not personally found this to be a problem. The keyboard is also useful with the phone's note-taking application, which lets you write out short memos, notes, lists, etc. that you can recall later, upload to your computer, send as text messages, etc. The keyboard is also useful with the built-in internet browser ("NetFrontBrowser v3.4") which offers very limited access to selected Net10 news, sports, weather, and shopping sites.
There is also a nice "converter" application for doing Celcius/Fahrenheit, foreign currency, and metric/English length/width/volume/weight conversions. Other applications include an alarm clock, calendar, stopwatch, countdown timer, and world time clock.
The phone comes with two games, Sudoku and "Jump Boy" (I have no idea what the latter is - I've never tried it). You can buy other games on-line.
I think the build quality is quite good. The phone seems sturdy (even a little heavy) and looks professional. There is NO "Net10" logo on it anywhere, so no one will know you are using a no-contract phone (if you care about that). I've never had to use Net10's customer support, but everyone says it is just unbelievably BAD.
Anyway, I've been well satisfied with my t401g and Net10 service so far.