Review: Motorola Moto X
Motorola reinvented them-self with MOTO X. MOTO X is the first distinctive product to be designed and built by Motorola as a Google company. It is just not revolutionary but a fantastic phone with many amazing features. As its name implies the phone is built in the spirit of Google's X program, which seeks to improve things by monumental leaps.
Why To BUY
- Motorola Moto X speedy camera
- Moto X whiz-bang voice controls
- Well-crafted design
- Great battery life
- Endless variety of customized designs
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The Moto X, which will be available later this month on AT&T (T) and four other U.S. carriers for $200 with a two-year contract with some very nifty surprises of its own.
Motorola spent a lot of time studying human hands to make the Moto X just the right size. Moto X comes with pretty stunning 4.7-inch of Amoled Display, offering a bright and rich picture. The Moto X delivered a commendable balance of detail and color by using its RGB sub-pixel structure, which means each pixel has its own red, green and blue sub-pixels.
Even the Moto X's back-mounted speaker pumps out lots of volume-enough to fill a medium-size room with music. But just like other smartphones, even this one can't touch the HTC One when it comes to balanced sound output.
But what makes the MOTO X the really fun part. The Moto X, comes in 252 different color combinations to piece together for AT&T’s version. The AT&T customers will be able to log on to the Moto Maker website to customize the Moto X to their heart's content. They can customize the color of back and front panel, the volume/lock buttons on the top and side, the camera bezel, mobile accessories like Sol Republic earphones and chargers, phone covers and even can print their name on the back of the Moto X.
The Moto X's back has a reasonably pronounced curve across it, filling your palm neatly, and is finished with a crosshatched texture that makes gripping it easy. It’s a surprisingly compact device (65.3 x 129.3 x 5.6-10.4 mm and 130 grams) even though it shares the same 4.7-inch screen size as the HTC One. Though it’s not exactly the most premium-feeling phone, but the composite backside of the Moto X has a nice trendy grippy texture.
Another Fun part of Moto X is contextual computing, which the company refers to as "Touch less Control". You can wake up your Moto X simply by saying "OK, Google Now" and ask the phone to do a various task like initiate calls, texts, navigate to a specific address, set reminders and check the weather ETC. Thanks to its dedicated natural language processor, due to which the command is specific to your voice only, even in a moderately loud room.
Also you can activate your camera just by twist the phone back and forth, and can take pictures by touching anywhere on the screen. Its 10.1-megapixel of camera is paired with an f/2.4 aperture lens which gathers up to 75% more light than a typical RGB sensor, making it great for low-light performance and overall faster exposure times. But phone doesn't offer special features such as an Eraser Mode or Sequence Shot which both HTC and Samsung offer.
Overall we can say that Moto X is a mid-range smartphone that actually makes you feel smarter with its compact size and awesome customization.
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