Sony slashes Xperia X price down to INR 24,990 in India
Motorola One — Screen The Motorola One has a 5.9-inch screen. As it’s a very long panel, maxing out that diagonal stat, this display is not huge. This phone is made for accessibility rather than to cater primarily to hardcore gamers and video streamers. In the hand it’s closer in size to the Moto G6 than the Moto G6 Plus.
If that’s a positive point or not depends on whether you’d rather a phone that fits easily into pocket and hand, or one that will make music and games shine all the more. The Motorola One is, perhaps surprisingly, not a Full HD-grade screen. Its resolution of 1520 x 720 is the elongated version of 720p. Even at 5.9 inches, the difference between this and Full HD isn’t glaring.
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However, both the Nokia 7.1 and Honor 8X have sharper displays. Up close you can see slight pixellation, and the effect is more noticeable when you read an article on the phone. The curves or fonts really show off the lower pixel density.
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Colour performance is closer to the Moto G series than that of a top-end phone too. You have a choice of “vivid” and natural modes, and as the panel doesn’t have ultra-deep colour capabilities, the difference between the two is not great. As a fan of more natural colour profiles, I think both look great. There’s more evidence this isn’t a top tier panel.
At an extreme angle, there’s some colour distortion. This isn’t the best screen at the price. However, unless you go looking for the deficiencies, they are not that obvious.
Motorola One — Software As implied in the name, the Motorola One is an Android One phone. This means it uses Google’s standard Android interface, not a custom one. It’s not exactly the same as the interface used in Pixel phones. They use Pixel UI, which has a few distinct visuals elements of its own, but ultimately feels similar. Motorola says it promises to give the One two major Android updates: Android 9.0 and whatever comes after.
At launch it runs Android 8.1.0, the latest version. In theory the use of Android One should mean the phone also gets updates, and regular security patches, more quickly than other phones. Related: Best Android phones Little of the Moto series character is lost too. Sure, the Motorola One doesn’t have the lurid green wallpaper a Moto G6 uses by default, but it does have the staple Moto extras. Moto Display is the most important.
This screen fades notifications in and out when the phone is in standby, and also turns on briefly when the One is picked up. It’s handy if you want to see the time, or your battery level, without actually unlocking the phone fully. A couple of Moto gestures are packed-in too. Double “karate chop” the Moto One to toggle the LED flashlight, and flick it twice to activate the camera. These are useful, particularly the flashlight, as long as you train yourself to remember they exist. The Motorola One’s real-world performance is good, roughly on-par with the Moto G6 and Moto G6 Plus. That means no annoying lag, no strange delays as you wait for the keyboard to appear or text input to catch up with your fingers.
True high-end phones load apps more quickly, but the difference is only noticeable with apps that aren’t cached because they have not been used recently. This phone has 4GB RAM and a Snapdragon 625 CPU, an octa-core processor with eight Cortex-A53 that run at up to 2GHz. The CPU is a little old, announced in February 2016, and both the Nokia 7.1 and Honor 8X have much er processors. However, it does do its job well. Gaming performance benefits form the Moto One’s lower resolution too. Sure, graphics in some games won’t look as sharp as the Nokia and Honor rivals, but fewer pixels to render means less strain on the GPU. Fairly well-optimised games like Asphalt 8 run great.
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