Motorola is on a roll. Since relaunching under Google’s 
tutelage last year, the company has produced four superb handsets: the 
original Moto G and Moto X and following them in 2014 with budget champion the Moto E and the superb new Moto G. Now Motorola is refreshing the Moto X and after critical, but not commercial, acclaim it really means business.
How good is the new Moto X? In short it is the best smartphone I’ve used this year. Yes that means better than the LG G3, Nokia Lumia 930, HTC One M8, Samsung Galaxy S5, Sony Xperia Z3 and iPhone 6 (though your choice of ecosystem will determine this). Yes the much anticipated Nexus 6 is still to be released this year, but that’s a phablet.
So let’s break down why I think so highly of it.
Design – Tough, Practical And Surprisingly Compact
There is no denying large screens are in,
 but they aren’t to everyone’s taste so when Motorola announced the 
4.7-inch screen on the original Moto X would be bumped to a massive 
5.2-inches many sighed – myself included.
So here comes the good news: Motorola has pulled it off. 
The 2014 Moto X measures 140.8 x 72.4 x 10 mm (5.54 x 2.85 x 
0.39-inches) and weighs 144 g (5.08 oz). To put this in context, that’s 
shorter and narrower than the 5.1-inch Galaxy S5 and dramatically 
shorter and lighter than the 5-inch HTC One M8 (146.4mm and 160g).
 
 
Moto X curvature (image credit: Gordon Kelly)
Even the 4.7-inch iPhone 6 isn’t significantly smaller and 
while the iPhone 6 Plus has a screen that is only 0.3-inches larger than
 the new Moto X, side-by-side the difference in size is dramatic. Make 
no mistake, this is still a smartphone not a phablet.
The trick lies in the bezels. The 2014 Moto X has 
dramatically thinner bezels than its predecessor and only LG’s G3 can 
come close – but that’s another 5.5-inch phablet. The fact the Moto X 
has roughly the same footprint as the LG made 5-inch Nexus 5
 (you can just about see its metal edging sneaking out when they are 
placed one atop of the other) is a testament to Motorola’s design team.
 
 
5-inch Nexus 5 resting on top of the 5.2-inch Moto X (image credit: Gordon Kelly)
Furthermore the Moto X is rock solid. The aluminium chassis adds incredible rigidity and it came ‘top’ in the controversial bendgate tests.
 The rubber rear may not look the most glamourous, but this gives it 
more grip than its rivals and the sunken circular Motorola logo acts as a
 pleasant resting point for your index finger. Furthermore the curvature
 means it feels great in hand and it is something I’ve personally missed
 in the iPhone range since the 3GS.
 
 
(image credit: Gordon Kelly)
There are also a couple of neat touches. The camera lens is
 protected by the ringed dual flash (more later) and the power and 
volume buttons are distinguished by the textured finish to the former. I
 would prefer the power and volume buttons on different sides of the 
phone, but it feels like a small niggle.
Read more: Motorola Moto G (2014) Review: The Best All-Round Budget Smartphone
Features – Out To Compete With The Best
Motorola has earned a lot of praise for the way its recent 
handsets outperform rivals, despite not featuring the most cutting edge 
specifications. Yes Motorola has been the Apple of the iPhone world. But
 this changes with the new Moto X.
On paper the company’s flagship means business. The 
aforementioned 5.2-inch screen packs a Full HD 1080p AMOLED display 
which makes colours strikingly rich and vivid and combines them with 
great viewing angles. In fact I’d put it ahead of any other 1080p 
smartphone display I’ve seen.
 
 
(image credit: Gordon Kelly)
Inside you’ll find a Qualcomm Snagpdragon 801 chip which 
puts it inline with the Galaxy S5, One M8 and LG G3 and is a dramatic 
step up from the ageing MSM8960Pro Snapdragon used in the original Moto 
X. There’s also 2GB of RAM and a quad-core 2.5 GHz Krait 400 GPU.
The next upgrade is the camera. Motorola has increased the 
resolution from 10 to 13 megapixels, added a dual LED flash and offered 
4k video recording. The front camera remains 2 megapixels, but still 
supports 1080p video recording.
 
 
(image credit: Gordon Kelly)
Another welcome (and surprising) move is the shift to a 
front facing external speaker which produces loud, clear and 
surprisingly rich (for a phone speaker) audio that is great for 
listening to the talk radio or podcasts. Only the HTC One range with its
 dual front facing speakers can beat it and the fact Motorola has 
slightly raised it and the earpiece at the top mean they protect the 
screen during falls.
 
 
Raised, front facing speaker sounds great and protects the screen (image credit: Gordon Kelly)
Caveats? There are a couple. The most significant is the 
absence of a microSD expansion slot, something that has come back into 
fashion with its rivals. Its a surprising absence given the cheaper Moto
 G has one and with just 16 and 32GB configurations the Moto X lacks the
 capacity of some. The battery is also fixed.
Aside from this the lack of OIS (optical image 
stabilisation) in the camera is a shame and a crucial factor for 
shooting smooth video and the longer exposure times required when taking
 photos in low light. Finally there is no waterproofing like the Galaxy 
S5 and Xperia range. As such there may be a few deal breakers in here 
for some.
 
 
Android on the Moto X (image credit: Gordon Kelly)
Software – The Motorola Touch
Where the Moto X immediately gets back in my good books 
though is its implementation of Android. For all intents and purposes 
Motorola uses stock Android on its handsets and the Moto X is no 
different.
This has two major benefits: firstly the Moto X is 
incredibly responsive as it operates without a third party skin. 
Secondly it allows Motorola to push out updates to the latest version of
 Android very quickly.
Current Motos have received updates within 30 days of a new
 Android release (making a mockery of some rival’s lead times of 3-6 
months) and Motorola promises the same again with the upcoming release 
of Android L (expected to be Android   v5.0). This could well beat some 
Google Play Edition handsets, if not quite the Nexus range.
In addition to this Motorola does add a few apps of its own
 but, unlike the much criticised bloatware from Samsung, these are 
subtle, well thought out and genuinely useful.
 
 
Motorola Android Tweaks (image credit: Gordon Kelly)
For example, ‘Moto Voice’ lets you use voice commands even 
when the phone is locked (and pick any trigger phrase you like) and 
‘Moto Display’ uses front mounted sensors to display the time when you 
wave a hand over it, while a ‘peak’ view lets you preview notifications 
in the lock screen without having to open them.
There is also ‘Moto Migrate’ which transfers all files, 
call records and your SMS history over from your old phone (iPhone or 
Android) and ‘Moto Assist’ which automatically mutes notifications at 
night, reads received messages aloud when driving and silences the phone
 when it detects you are in meetings (taken from your calendar).
Its great stuff you wish Google would implement, rather 
than garbage that replicates existing Android features. Samsung take 
note.
 
 
Left to right: Moto X and Nexus 5 (image credit: Gordon Kelly)
Performance – Fastest Android Experience To Date
The cat may already be out the bag here, but the 
combination of the Moto X’s top end hardware and stock Android makes for
 a fearsome combination. Navigating around the UI is faster and more 
fluid than any handset I’ve used so far (including the Nexus 5) and 
there is quite simply nothing game-wise within the Google Play store 
that can trouble it.
When heavily tested the back of the phone can get warm, but
 it doesn’t reach the red hot temperatures I’ve experienced from the 
Nexus 5 and HTC One M8.
Of course the Snapdragon 805 is on the horizon, which will 
have a few spec warriors concerned about investing in the Moto X. I 
wouldn’t worry. The 805 offers incremental performance and battery 
improvements over the 801, but when your phone is already lightning fast
 and long lasting it should already do everything you need.
 
 
Moto X battery usage (image credit: Gordon Kelly)
Battery Life – All Day Stamina Even With Heavy Use
Which leads us nicely onto battery life. There has been 
some concern at the 2300mAh battery inside the Moto X when capacities of
 between 2600 and 3000mAh are becoming standard on big screen phones.
In reality the bad news is this means you don’t quite get 
the superb battery life of Galaxy S5, One M8 or LG G3 (though this is 
technically a phablet), but the good news is it is still excellent.
With heavy use the Moto X consistently lasted me over 20 
hours with around 10% left on the battery. Given a ‘normal day’ should 
be around 15 hours including an evening out (8am to 11pm) I can’t see 
even serious gamers running into too many problems.
Yes the S5, M8 and G3 tend to last 1.5 days, but the 
reality is surviving a long day of heavy use is the benchmark phones 
should meet and the Moto X (unlike the Nexus 5 and iPhone 6) achieves 
it. Only if you have an aversion to plugging your phone in at night 
should you be concerned.
 
 
(image credit: Gordon Kelly)
Camera – Very Capable But Not The Best
Which leads us to perhaps the one area where I have slight 
reservations. Let me be clear: the camera in the Moto X is excellent. In
 fact it would possibly be class leading even a generation ago, but it 
can’t quite keep up with its main rivals in late 2014.
 
 
(image credit: Gordon Kelly)
What I primarily put this down to is the lack of OIS 
(optical image stabilisation). In good conditions photos look fantastic 
and there’s great use of bokeh which can produce some really dramatic 
shots.
The problem is without OIS there are more blurred photos 
and in low light the longer exposures also pick up small shakes which 
can impact shots. Likewise the Moto X’s 4K video recording is crystal 
clear, but if you don’t have a steady hand the wobbles it picks up 
diminish results, notably for video taken on the move.
 
 
For me OIS (and digital image stabilisation – DIS – as seen in the iPhone 6) is now a key feature for every modern smartphones.
Where the phone comes fighting back are its best shot and 
and ‘Highlight Reel’. The former takes shots both before and after you 
do which is great for moments you just missed and the latter 
automatically creates Google+ style albums and slideshows. Neither 
feature is new, but they work well and the Highlight Reel offers greater
 sharing flexibility than HTC’s equivalent ‘Zoe’.

Price And Availability – A Bargain
Furthermore the Moto X really causes a stir when it comes 
to pricing. The Moto X will launch this month and on a two year contract
 it will cost just $99, undercutting most rivals by $100 while without a
 contract it costs a bargain $450. This is substantially less than 
anything but the Nexus range and the OnePlus One phablet.
Couple this with Motorola’s commitment to fast Android 
updates which gives the handset longevity (Android L claims to bring 
better performance and battery life) and the new Moto X is an 
indisputable bargain.
 
 
5.2-inch Moto X vs 5.5-inch iPhone 6 Plus (image credit: Gordon Kelly)
Verdict
The new Moto X is my smartphone pick of 2014. The reason is
 because it is such a complete package. It packs the biggest and best 
1080p display I’ve seen inside the sector’s most compact and toughest 
form factor and marries it with barnstorming performance, what amounts 
to stock Android with some very smart tweaks, strong battery life, a 
very able camera and a great price.
There are caveats: the lack of OIS, expandable storage, a 
removable battery and water resistance will be deal breakers for some. 
But as a whole for me the Moto X breaks new ground, it is what a 
flagship Android handset should be: the thoughtful combination of 
hardware and software. iPhone owners have long been able to crow about 
this, but now Android has its own pin-up.
For Motorola the big question will be whether this Moto X 
will sell better than the last? I don’t know. As HTC discovered with the
 One M7 and M8, being the best phone at launch is far from a guarantee 
of commercial success. But one thing is certain: the new Moto X deserves
 to be a massive hit.
 
 
 
 
 

 

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