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72%
3.24 

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Motorola

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Verified Member MouthShut Verified Member
pune India
Was the best budget phone!!
Jan 31, 2016 02:30 AM 2676 Views

Sound Reception:

Style & Design:

Other Features:

Look & Feel:

Value for Money:

The last G's greatest asset was its small, small price tag. Last gen Moto G was one of the best cheap smartphones you could own, period.


I don't mean to sound cynical here, but if you've seen one modern Motorola smartphone, you've just seen them all. Seriously. Motorola is still enamored with those curved backs, clean faces and dimpled logos. Other details of the design are carryovers too, including the headphone jack centered along the phone's top edge, and the faintest hints of color circling the 8-megapixel rear camera. All of that taken together means this year's Moto G looks an awful lot like last year's batch of Motorola handsets with just a few notable differences.


For one, a more expansive, 5-inch 720p display fills the front - it's barely bounded by bezels on the left and right, while a shiny pair of front-facing speaker grilles above and below the screen helps the G pull off a convincing Moto E impersonation. You won't notice the tiny, white notification light next to the pinprick of a front-facing camera until someone shoots you an email or writes on your Facebook wall, though your eye will occasionally dart to the proximity sensor sitting below the topmost speaker(especially if your phone is white, like mine was). That's about it in terms of visual flair - the G in its default state is as subtle as ever, but you can trick it out with any number of Motorola's colorful backplates and cases.


As it turns out, that bigger screen winds up being a blessing and a curse. Your apps and emails have more room to stretch out and breathe, but this Moto G is also a little less comfortable to hold because of it. That's a shame since Motorola did an outstanding job making the new Moto X feel slimmer than it is by tapering the sides. Here, those edges are flat and substantial, and while they don't make the phone feel small, they do give your hands more surface area to grip - not a bad deal for any butterfingers reading this. You might also notice a hint of slack between the removable back plate and the rest of the phone, but that's just me being nitpicky.


If you thought the Moto G's looks were more of the same, just wait until you see what's lurking inside. This model has the same quad-core 1.2GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 400 as its predecessor, along with the same 1GB of RAM. That both generations of the G basically share a brain isn't necessarily a bad thing - we quite enjoyed the horsepower we squeezed out of it last year - but I couldn't help but hope Motorola would use a more powerful configuration this year.


The similarities don't end there either: Both versions of the G run with the same non-removable 2, 070mAh battery, which, at first blush, seems a silly choice. Why would anyone stick the same ol' battery in a new device with a bigger screen to light up? It's another one of those price-performance balancing acts Motorola had to cope with, and since this thing has the same brain and the same lack of LTE support(HSPA all the way) as the original G, I guess popping in a more powerful cell wasn't deemed crucial. If it makes you feel any better, though, there's now a microSD card slot behind the back cover to supplement the meager 8GB of storage, and an alternate version of the phone sports two SIM card slots instead of one.


Display and sound


Of all the surprises that first Moto G brought to the table, its 4.5-inch, 720p screen was one of the most pleasant. Impressive clarity? Accurate colors? Solid viewing angles? The original G had them all, and the sequel's 5-inch display fares almost as well. Yes, almost. There are a few bummers at play here, but the most notable is the dip in sharpness since the screen uses the same number of pixels to fill even more space. If you've got a spare moment, you can peer very intently and pick out those individual pixels; you're ultimately left with a screen that looks softer and less crisp than the one that came before it. The bigger question, though, is how much that actually matters. My answer? Hardly at all. It's not going to be a deal breaker for anyone but the most persnickety screen hounds.


More importantly, the Gorilla Glass 3-clad display is spacious, bright and plenty vivid, though colors didn't seem quite as poppy and saturated as they did on the original Moto G. Personally, I prefer it when colors border on lurid(gotta love those AMOLED screens), so the screen feels just a little lifeless to me. Of course, though, your mileage will vary on that one. Alas, things take a turn when you start looking at dark pages or videos.


There's also some noticeable backlight bleeding.


On the plus side, the silver-trimmed speakers bounding that screen are a damned sight better than the single, wimpy driver that sat low on the original G's rear end. The difference is dramatic - they get louder than you'd expect without getting too muddy or distorted. Software


The Moto G's build of Android 4.4.4 is just about untouched, a feat that(for better or worse) wasn't replicated by its big brother.


With the exception of Motorola's Migrate, Assist and Alert apps, there's just about nothing non-Googly in origin here. Thankfully, those apps occasionally come in pretty handy. As the name implies, Motorola Migrate lets you transfer messages, contacts and calendar events(whatever doesn't come through when you set up the phone with your Google account, really) from another Android phone or straight from Apple's iCloud. Assist pitches in when it can tell you're in a meeting or when it's your bedtime by automatically silencing itself.


Alert, on the other hand, is a sort of a location-based, catchall app where you can broadcast your location to friends(Glimpse), as well as set up notifications for preset contacts and emergency services if you ever feel you're in danger. Setting up that list of important contacts doesn't take more than a few moments, and triggering the emergency mode is just as simple - a single tap of a button initiates a 5-second countdown before your phone starts reaching out to everyone on the list. All told, it's a largely dummy-proof lifeline should your situation go south in a heartbeat. Here's hoping you won't ever need to use it as one.


Camera


Believe me: The 8-megapixel sensor Motorola's got in there is a big, big improvement over the 5-megapixel camera in last model.


As usual, photons are your friends and you're going to want as many of them around as possible if you want to coax your Moto G into performing its best. Under those conditions, expect to see lively colors and a bountiful amount of detail(the fact that HDR is set to "Auto" by default usually helps with that). It actually does pretty well once the light starts to fade, too - graininess becomes a problem after a while, but the sensor is more than capable of coping when the sun dips behind clouds or starts to inch closer to the horizon.


Up front, the tiny 2-megapixel, front-facing camera performs about as well as we expect.   video resolution tops out  720p and footage is all too often soft and unsatisfying.


The one-touch process of snapping a photo is impossible to screw up, and the settings offer enough depth to enable some handsome shots without overwhelming you with options. That said, it does take some getting used to. Tapping anywhere on the screen to snap a photo seems awfully smart until you realize; lots of other camera apps have you tap on the screen to focus or control exposure; if that sounds like what your current phone does. Performance and battery life


The Moto G's spec list doesn't do it many favors. Here's the thing to remember, though: While it uses a year-old chipset, the 2014 Moto G runs lean. The lack of an obnoxious, overwrought user interface means it can dedicate that available horsepower to more important things, and it shows. I spent my days testing the G as I usually do: sending off messages, jumping into Hangouts, scrolling through long web pages, firing up apps, flipping among those apps as they run and generally being a fidgety brat trying to stymie those long-in-the-tooth internals. TOnce again, the Moto G handled just about everything I threw at it with grace and gusto. Jumping out of Asphalt 8(which ran more than admirably even at the highest settings) into The Battle Cats for a spot of feline world domination made the phone seize up for a few moments while it tried to cope, but it was almost always snappy and responsive, even while I did my best to break it.


Meanwhile, the tale of the tape tells a familiar story. The results above are in line with what we squeezed out of the first Moto G, but for some reason, I had a hell of time trying to complete the GFXBench test; it kept returning an "Out Of Memory" error when attempting to render 1080p footage offscreen. Ill omen? Perhaps, but the G didn't disappoint when it came to running graphically intensive apps(and it isn't the first Moto handset that balked at that particular test, so I wouldn't worry about it too much).


battery life.


Thankfully, the situation isn't nearly as dire as it could've been: In  video-looping test(with screen brightness set to 50 percent) the G stuck it out for seven hours and 38 minutes. For those of you keeping track, that's only a hair less than the 7:48 the original Moto G was able to manage. Not too shabby, especially when you factor in how it handles when you're not looping a video for hours on end. it always managed to keep me texting, tweeting, calling and playing the odd game for full work days(and then some) at a time. For me, that worked out to just shy of 12 hours of active usage, though it goes without saying that your experience will probably differ somewhat from mine. Pros


Camera is much better than the original's


Near-stock Android 4.4.4 is a treat


Feels snappy despite aging internals


Inexpensive


Cons


No LTE


Screen isn't  crisp


Conclusion -


Was a good phone at the time of launch but now times has changed bigger, better, faster phones are available less than moto G's price.


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