MOBILE

G-Force Stunner – New Smartphone of Motorola (Part 1)

4/21/2014 2:34:15 PM

The Moto G is made by Motorola but the biggest influence here is Google, Moto’s owner and the main driver of the G’s Android OS. It takes the company’s Nexus concept of serving up top-quality hardware at low prices and really runs with it.

The sharpest 4.5" HD display in its class, all-day battery, quad-core speed,
AndroidTM 4.4, KitKat®, and colorful backs to customize your phone.

The result is a device that asks just how far you can push the boundaries of what is classed as a “budget” phone. The answer is likely to haunt Sony, Samsung, HTC and other Android rivals for some time to come.

To keep the price of a smartphone under $250, compromises have to be made, but the Moto G chooses exactly the right places to do so. First up, a curved back sidesteps the issue of bulk; it’s 11.6mm at its thickest point, but just 6mm at its thinnest. Combined with the matt back cover this makes it easy to hold, despite its 143g weight, and a reminder of just how convenient it is to have a phone you can hold and use with just one hand, something that’s increasingly been forgotten as smartphone screens get bigger and bigger.

Despite being mostly plastic, the build quality is great. The G feels well put together and able to take the odd tumble, giving the HTC One Mini a run for its money and easily trumping the Galaxy S4 Mini. Furthermore, a water-repellent coating provides protection against the British weather and spilled beverages.

In the US, Motorola offered almost limitless colour customization of its America-only Moto X, and there’s a taste of that here too, with a choice of interchangeable back covers, in colours ranging from subtle to trendy. All are reassuringly hard to get off once attached.

Google’s Android 4.3 is presented all but unskinned – a welcome sight, in our view, as Google’s collection of services is now so wide- ranging that it can feel crowded when another UI is added over the top.

Another handy advantage of unadorned Android is speed, and the Moto G flies along with nary a hint of lag. Motorola includes just two bespoke apps: Migrate, which helps you swap your content from one phone to another, and Assist, a contextual app that changes notifications and alerts depending on time of day, appointments in your calendar and more.

Its edge-to-edge display stretches to all four corners of the phone.
Watch, read and browse on a big, brilliant display. You’ll get a sharp picture and then some.

All of this is shown through the Moto G’s 4.5-inch, 720p, and 329ppi display. Immediately it’s clear that if any compromises were made, they weren’t in the screen department. Not only is it the best display in its class, it’s also arguably one of the best displays of its size, offering bright, vibrant colours and very black blacks.

Motorola has also shoved two fingers up at its low-rent rivals when it comes to power. An impressive Qualcomm 1.2GHz Quadcore processor means lag-free operation – and it should get even better when the G gets its promised upgrade to multi-tasking-friendlier Android KitKat in early 2014 – and no panic when HD video rears its head.

You don’t have to hang up to send an email or turn off YouTube when you want to text. Moto G multitasks as easily as you do with the powerful Qualcomm® SnapdragonTM 400 processor.

That leaves the camera and storage to pick the short straws in the low-budget spec lottery. But while the rear-facing five-meg snapper is not going to go toe-to-toe with the iPhone 5S or Galaxy S4, it’s actually not that bad. Images in good light are surprisingly colorful and what the camera app lacks in stunning detail, it makes up for in ease of use and idiot-proofing. For straight-to-Facebook use, it’s great.

 

Other  
 
Top 10
Extending LINQ to Objects : Writing a Single Element Operator (part 2) - Building the RandomElement Operator
Extending LINQ to Objects : Writing a Single Element Operator (part 1) - Building Our Own Last Operator
3 Tips for Maintaining Your Cell Phone Battery (part 2) - Discharge Smart, Use Smart
3 Tips for Maintaining Your Cell Phone Battery (part 1) - Charge Smart
OPEL MERIVA : Making a grand entrance
FORD MONDEO 2.0 ECOBOOST : Modern Mondeo
BMW 650i COUPE : Sexy retooling of BMW's 6-series
BMW 120d; M135i - Finely tuned
PHP Tutorials : Storing Images in MySQL with PHP (part 2) - Creating the HTML, Inserting the Image into MySQL
PHP Tutorials : Storing Images in MySQL with PHP (part 1) - Why store binary files in MySQL using PHP?
REVIEW
- First look: Apple Watch

- 3 Tips for Maintaining Your Cell Phone Battery (part 1)

- 3 Tips for Maintaining Your Cell Phone Battery (part 2)
VIDEO TUTORIAL
- How to create your first Swimlane Diagram or Cross-Functional Flowchart Diagram by using Microsoft Visio 2010 (Part 1)

- How to create your first Swimlane Diagram or Cross-Functional Flowchart Diagram by using Microsoft Visio 2010 (Part 2)

- How to create your first Swimlane Diagram or Cross-Functional Flowchart Diagram by using Microsoft Visio 2010 (Part 3)
Popular Tags
Microsoft Access Microsoft Excel Microsoft OneNote Microsoft PowerPoint Microsoft Project Microsoft Visio Microsoft Word Active Directory Biztalk Exchange Server Microsoft LynC Server Microsoft Dynamic Sharepoint Sql Server Windows Server 2008 Windows Server 2012 Windows 7 Windows 8 Adobe Indesign Adobe Flash Professional Dreamweaver Adobe Illustrator Adobe After Effects Adobe Photoshop Adobe Fireworks Adobe Flash Catalyst Corel Painter X CorelDRAW X5 CorelDraw 10 QuarkXPress 8 windows Phone 7 windows Phone 8 BlackBerry Android Ipad Iphone iOS