The good:The Motorola Moto X
squeezes a speedy camera and futuristic voice command capabilities into
a well-crafted design that hits the sweet spot between screen size and
comfort. The phone has great battery life and is available in an
endless variety of customized designs.
The bad:With
no expandable storage, space could get tight, especially on the 16GB
base model. The screen isn't as big and sharp as those on some
competing handsets.
The bottom line:While
in screen quality and storage capacity it lags behind rival
superphones, the Moto X's superbly compact and comfortable design,
whiz-bang voice controls, and long battery life make it a worthy
Android contender.
To put it bluntly, Motorola has never created a true flagship ubersmartphone on the level of the Samsung Galaxy S4 and HTC One.
But the company aims to change that with the Moto X. The $199
smartphone is Motorola's first handset fully developed under the
auspices of its corporate parent (and Android godfather), Google. And
it'll be available on most major U.S. carriers when it hits stores
later in August.
Make no mistake; the Moto X isn't a
fire-breathing mobile monster that will blow away the competitors in a
spec sheet battle -- the screen isn't cutting-edge, and there's no
expandable storage. Storage is the phone's biggest weakness: with just
16GB in the $199 model (the 32GB Moto costs $50 more) and no SD card
slot for adding more, it's got an uphill battle on the value scale
versus the HTC One (32GB by default) and Galaxy S4 (expansion slot
onboard).
Storage qualms notwithstanding, though, the X is a
nimble, compact handset with advanced capabilities that targets
ordinary phone users. The Moto X boasts many of the same features that
Motorola's new trio of Verizon Droids flaunt -- especially always-on
Google Now voice control -- plus a few slick extras. Better yet,
they're all crammed into a highly customizable design built for maximum
comfort. This is a scrappy smartphone with enough going for it to bring
the fight to the big boys.
presented by
The good:The Motorola Moto X
squeezes a speedy camera and futuristic voice command capabilities into
a well-crafted design that hits the sweet spot between screen size and
comfort. The phone has great battery life and is available in an
endless variety of customized designs.
The bad:With
no expandable storage, space could get tight, especially on the 16GB
base model. The screen isn't as big and sharp as those on some
competing handsets.
The bottom line:While
in screen quality and storage capacity it lags behind rival
superphones, the Moto X's superbly compact and comfortable design,
whiz-bang voice controls, and long battery life make it a worthy
Android contender.
To put it bluntly, Motorola has never created a true flagship ubersmartphone on the level of the Samsung Galaxy S4 and HTC One.
But the company aims to change that with the Moto X. The $199
smartphone is Motorola's first handset fully developed under the
auspices of its corporate parent (and Android godfather), Google. And
it'll be available on most major U.S. carriers when it hits stores
later in August.
Make no mistake; the Moto X isn't a
fire-breathing mobile monster that will blow away the competitors in a
spec sheet battle -- the screen isn't cutting-edge, and there's no
expandable storage. Storage is the phone's biggest weakness: with just
16GB in the $199 model (the 32GB Moto costs $50 more) and no SD card
slot for adding more, it's got an uphill battle on the value scale
versus the HTC One (32GB by default) and Galaxy S4 (expansion slot
onboard).
Storage qualms notwithstanding, though, the X is a
nimble, compact handset with advanced capabilities that targets
ordinary phone users. The Moto X boasts many of the same features that
Motorola's new trio of Verizon Droids flaunt -- especially always-on
Google Now voice control -- plus a few slick extras. Better yet,
they're all crammed into a highly customizable design built for maximum
comfort. This is a scrappy smartphone with enough going for it to bring
the fight to the big boys. Editors' note:We're
continuing to evaluate the Moto X's battery life, camera, and
performance, so the final rating may fluctuate. We'll update this
review accordingly as needed.
A more thoughtful design
Under the thumb of Verizon's macho Droid brand for years, Motorola's
smartphone industrial design has been well, industrial. Ever since the
original Droid device hit the scene, Motorola has cranked out flagship
machines sporting sharp angles, Kevlar coatings, and hard metallic
trims.
To
be fair, that's not a bad thing; those devices have been very popular.
Plus the company's upcoming Droid mobile machines are less stark than
their predecessors, featuring smoother curves and no metallic
highlights. All three devices, though, the Droid Mini, the Droid Ultra,
and the Droid Maxx, keep the traditionally aggressive red or sober
black color scheme that's in keeping with Verizon's intimidating
robotic franchise.
The Moto X's compact, contoured shape makes it easy to hold.
(Credit:
Sarah Tew/CNET)
The Moto X, however, pushes this history aside and attempts
to turn an all-new page and gain broader appeal. Instead of harshly
chiseled lines, the Moto X is sculpted with softly rounded curves. The
phone's back is gently rounded for a more comfortable grip. It's an
approach many hardware makers are taking these days, including HTC with
its One and One Mini.
The Galaxy S4 handset is also similarly contoured, but unlike Samsung's
slippery, smudge-prone runaway hit, the Moto X has a textured
soft-touch finish.
Motorola takes this contoured design a step
further, shaping the back of the Moto X with left and right edges that
slope at a sharper angle than the middle of the device. Motorola claims
that this careful molding fits your hand better than a simpler uniform
arc. The handset even uses a specially formed battery (2,200mAh,
embedded) to match the Moto X's unique curvature.
The bottom is sloped more steeply at the edges.
(Credit:
Sarah Tew/CNET)
I have to admit that when I picked up Motorola's latest
creation, it felt pretty damn good, its rounded frame fitting my
fingers and palm like a glove. While I experience a similar reaction
when I grip the HTC One, the Moto X's contours and solid chassis exude
just as much quality and luxury to me. I also like how the phone's
soft-touch backing wicks away moisture and fingerprints and has an
almost metallic rigidity.
Choose multiple colors and patterns for your Moto X.
(Credit:
Sarah Tew/CNET)
These colors don't run
A huge part of the Moto X's design story is its made-in-America (or at
least designed-and-assembled-in) moniker. As Motorola has explained
earlier, it will design, engineer, and construct all Moto X units in
the United States; Fort Worth, Texas, to be precise.
Consumers will have a choice of two basic colors to choose
from when purchasing a new Moto X handset, white and black. Motorola,
however, will offer buyers the option to personalize their phones with
custom hues, patterns, and engravings crafted to order at Motorola's
new Texas factory.
The back of the Moto X uses a premium soft-touch finish.
(Credit:
Sarah Tew/CNET)
These tweaking options, done through the Moto Maker online
studio, include 2 front colors, 18 on the back, and seven accents.
Motorola claims that this variety allows for thousands of permutations.
There will even be custom wallpaper designs and cases to gussy up your
device with. And thanks to the plant's Fort Worth location, shoppers
who order the gadget can expect it to hit their doorstep within four
days. Be advised that Moto Maker will be available for AT&T
versions of the Moto X exclusively, at least at first. Screen
In many respects the Moto X's display is a step down compared with what
you get from the latest crop of premium smartphones. Competing devices
such as the Sony Xperia Z,
HTC One, and Samsung Galaxy S4 all have screens of 4.7 inches or
larger. These gadgets also flaunt displays with full-HD resolutions
(1,920x1,080 pixels), translating into massive views that still manage
to offer high pixel densities.
By contrast the Moto X's 4.7-inch
720p (1,280 by 720 pixels) OLED screen, while no doubt large, doesn't
serve up quite the same level of sharpness as HTC's and Samsung's
mobile hot rods. I must stress, though, that unless you've had bionic eye implants
or carry a jeweler's loupe, you probably won't pick up on any lack of
detail. Additionally, the Moto X's OLED screen technology produces
vivid colors, deep blacks, and wide viewing angles.
Of course a
display's impact isn't based on just resolution, brightness, and color
quality. Case in point: the Moto X's screen has an extremely thin bezel
that lovingly hugs the front edges of the handset. Similar to those
found on last year's Droid Razr M and the company's newly announced Droids, this helps the Moto X's display appear larger than life and command your attention. Core components
Motorola calls the engine that propels the new Moto X its X8 Mobile
Computing System, the same electronics under the hood of its new
Droids. Claimed to include eight distinct processing cores, the system
sure sounds impressive. When you break it all down, though, the X8
essentially is really just a souped-up 1.7GHz dual-core Qualcomm S4 Pro
processor paired with quad-core Adreno 320 graphics.
To
bring the core count up to eight, Motorola also throws in two
additional low-power processing centers, one for contextual computing
and another for analyzing spoken language. OK, so this may help the
Moto X's total "core" tally reach the magic number, but I'm sure I'm
not alone in crying foul.
When I think of numerous CPU cores, I
envision multiple electronic brains of equal power and speed working in
unison to tackle every smartphone task. Since not all of the X8's cores
are created equal and they are relegated to specific tasks (all but two
outside of general number-crunching), the Moto X is no true octa-core
phone in my book.
That said, its power is nothing to sneeze at,
either. The question remains how it'll compare with handsets with
faster quad-core Snapdragon 600 chips. Hopefully the Moto X's 2GB
allotment of RAM will keep the performance gap from being too great.
The Moto X runs Android 4.2.2, not version 4.3.
(Credit:
Brian Bennett/CNET)
Software and interface
Given that the Moto X was born of the union between Motorola and
Google, I was surprised to learn that it doesn't come with the freshest
flavor of Android Jelly Bean (version 4.3). Rather, the phone runs
Android 4.2.2 Jelly Bean. That said, Motorola has teamed up with Google
to add plenty of neat tricks, the most notable of which is contextual
computing, which the company refers to as "Touchless Control."
That's
really a fancy way of saying that the phone runs a low-power microphone
in the background with an ear continually trained on your voice. Just
as with the new Motorola Droid Mini, Ultra, and Maxx, speaking a magic phrase at your Moto X tells the device to fire up the Google Now information app.
Speak and the Moto X does your bidding.
(Credit:
Sarah Tew/CNET)
In the Moto X's case, to begin you say, "OK, Google Now."
From there you can ask a number of questions to find your current
location, the weather, sports scores, and the answers to other queries.
You can also tell the Moto X to set up reminders in your calendar, and
initiate calls, texts, and e-mails a la Siri -- except you don't have
to press a button.
The Moto X always has an ear out for your commands.
(Credit:
Brian Bennett/CNET)
Aside from these slick voice capabilities, the Moto X's
interface essentially remains the same as stock Jelly Bean. The five
home screens, application tray, and widgets are pretty much identical
to what you'd see on Google-approved machines such as the LG Nexus 4 and the Google Play Editions of the HTC One and Samsung Galaxy S4.
There
are some slight yet important differences, though. The Moto X will
softly pulse important notifications and alerts on the screen, even
when asleep, as they occur. Motorola says this will help users conserve
battery life since the phone won't have to power up the display each
time the notification light flashes. Holding your finger on the center
of the screen (and notification) causes the Moto X to display
additional details for the alert. Dragging your finger upward takes you
directly to the corresponding message if you decide more action is
required.
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