The Moto X is packed to the brim with sensors that help it predict what you’ll need from it next. For instance, the phone will automatically display the time when you slide it out of your pocket or pick it up, without you having to press the power button. It’s convenient and helps save some battery life since it doesn’t light up the entire screen, only a small portion of it. I’m a big fan of the feature and wish someone had thought of it sooner.
The Moto SmartActions app that was on previous Motorola phones has been replaced by a new Moto Assist app. Whereas SmartActions let you create a wide variety of actions to help automate your phone and get the most out of it, Moto Assist is extremely basic and only offers actions for when you’re driving, sleeping, or in a meeting.
The headlining feature of the Moto X, however, is Touchless Control: With Touchless Control enabled, you can speak commands to your phone without having to interact with it in any physical way. The feature is built atop Google Now, and you trigger it by saying “Okay Google Now,” followed by your command. You won’t get jokes and stories like you do with Siri, but I’ve often found Google Now to be better and faster at processing my speech than Apple’s virtual assistant.
The Moto X ships running Android 4.2.2 Jelly Bean, though Motorola promised the phone would be updated to 4.3 in a timely manner. The Moto X is not a Nexus device, so it won’t be updated at the same pace as the Nexus 4 or the Nexus tablets. Motorola has generally been good about updating its phones, but it’s something worth noting if you were hoping to have your hands on the latest version of Android right out of the gate.
Designed by you
Dual-core and lag-free
Unlike Samsung, HTC, LG, and pretty much every other Android phone manufacturer out there, Motorola isn’t competing when it comes to specs. While hardcore Android fans will take one look at the Moto X’s spec sheet and scoff at the phone’s 4.7-inch, 1280-by-720p AMOLED display and 1.7GHz dual-core Snapdragon S4 processor, there’s a lot more to a handset than the type of chips it uses or the resolution of its display. Motorola and Google worked closely together to optimize Android for this hardware, and the results of that collaboration are telling. To put it bluntly: The Moto X feels faster than many of the quad-core phones I’ve used in the past year.Motorola rates the nonremovable battery in the Moto X at 24 hours of mixed use. In my four days with the phone I’ve only had to charge it twice: Once when I got it on Thursday, and a second time when I came into the office on Monday. Granted I only used the phone casually—checking email, browsing the web, taking photos, and messing around with Google Now—but the phone seems like it’ll make it through an entire day on a single charge. If you’re someone who’s constantly on their phone playing games, however, I can see the battery running dry in about 4-5 hours of constant use.
I was given the Verizon version of the Moto X to test and was overall satisfied with the phone’s download speeds and call quality. Although it’s not as fast as when it first launched, I had very few problems streaming music and downloading apps over Verizon’s LTE network, and the cross-country call I made had zero static on either end of the line. One of the people I called remarked that I sounded like I was standing right next to them—even though I was 2903.5 miles away. Impressive.
Camera is hit or miss
Bottom line
I have my reservations about the Moto X shipping with an older version of Android and I question how well the X8 system architecture will perform a year from now, but I think Motorola and Google have a winner with their latest handset. It’s not quite a Nexus, but it’s the closest you’re going to get to one while still being on contract somewhere other than T-Mobile.
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