Verizon Moto-X Mini Review
Posted: Wed Sep 18, 2013 6:42 am
Pulled the trigger Monday. Loving the phone.
First off, Verizon data is SO much better around here than Sprint. We live in the boonies here and Sprint has no 4G. AT&T and Verizon are both spotty I've been told, but I have pretty consistently been getting 4G on the Moto-X and bandwidth speeds has been very fast.
Verizon store clerk was EXTREMELY competent. I was in and out with 3 new phones (2 Moto-x, 1 iPhone 4s from my brother) in 30 minutes. Got a black one for me, and got the white one for the wife.
Love the feel of the phone. Performance is amazing - makes my old phone, and even my Nexus 7 tablet feel slow and clunky by comparison. I use the Dolphin browser, which is very fast on this phone. Chrome worked fine as well but I like Dolpin. Everything responds instantly. Very little Verizon crapware installed on it.
Loving the simplicity of the nearly stock Android OS. All my old apps work just fine. No regrets about not having an SDCard slot. I have the 16Gb phone (Verizon doesn't have the 32Gb yet) and really, it's plenty of room for me. I'm all loaded up, including a 2Gb map for off-line GPS, and still have 6Gb free, and I could trim that map down to just the geographic areas I need if necessary. I don't put videos on my phone.
Haven't played with the advanced Google Now feature yet.
Screen is extremely bright and really color saturated - maybe too saturated but I like it. Everything stands out nicely and blacks are very black.
Purposely ran the battery down yesterday by using the phone practically non-stop all day. I also used it as a wifi hotspot in the car to allow my iPod to download podcasts.
The speaker is very load and much clearer than my old Evo 4G which tended to crackle - even when new.
Camera is nothing great by today's standards, but it's way better than my old Evo HTC's miserable camera. I'm not a person who relies on a phone camera anyway - I have a pocket digital camera in my brief case all the time and the wife has a DSLR. The phone camera is just a backup.
I also bought the Motorola Roadster 2 BT phone speaker since my old one is not fully compatible:
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2407039,00.asp
You need to install the MotoSpeak app which gives you full hands-free functionality, including ability to send & receive texts audibly. I use SMS for Voicemail in lieu of a pager, so that's handy.
First off, Verizon data is SO much better around here than Sprint. We live in the boonies here and Sprint has no 4G. AT&T and Verizon are both spotty I've been told, but I have pretty consistently been getting 4G on the Moto-X and bandwidth speeds has been very fast.
Verizon store clerk was EXTREMELY competent. I was in and out with 3 new phones (2 Moto-x, 1 iPhone 4s from my brother) in 30 minutes. Got a black one for me, and got the white one for the wife.
Love the feel of the phone. Performance is amazing - makes my old phone, and even my Nexus 7 tablet feel slow and clunky by comparison. I use the Dolphin browser, which is very fast on this phone. Chrome worked fine as well but I like Dolpin. Everything responds instantly. Very little Verizon crapware installed on it.
Loving the simplicity of the nearly stock Android OS. All my old apps work just fine. No regrets about not having an SDCard slot. I have the 16Gb phone (Verizon doesn't have the 32Gb yet) and really, it's plenty of room for me. I'm all loaded up, including a 2Gb map for off-line GPS, and still have 6Gb free, and I could trim that map down to just the geographic areas I need if necessary. I don't put videos on my phone.
Haven't played with the advanced Google Now feature yet.
Screen is extremely bright and really color saturated - maybe too saturated but I like it. Everything stands out nicely and blacks are very black.
Purposely ran the battery down yesterday by using the phone practically non-stop all day. I also used it as a wifi hotspot in the car to allow my iPod to download podcasts.
The speaker is very load and much clearer than my old Evo 4G which tended to crackle - even when new.
Camera is nothing great by today's standards, but it's way better than my old Evo HTC's miserable camera. I'm not a person who relies on a phone camera anyway - I have a pocket digital camera in my brief case all the time and the wife has a DSLR. The phone camera is just a backup.
I also bought the Motorola Roadster 2 BT phone speaker since my old one is not fully compatible:
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2407039,00.asp
You need to install the MotoSpeak app which gives you full hands-free functionality, including ability to send & receive texts audibly. I use SMS for Voicemail in lieu of a pager, so that's handy.