Moto G 2014 review – now with Android 5.0 and 4G LTE - technology blog

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Saturday, 18 April 2015

Moto G 2014 review – now with Android 5.0 and 4G LTE

NETWORKTechnologyGSM / HSPA
LAUNCHAnnounced2014, September
StatusAvailable. Released 2014, September
BODYDimensions141.5 x 70.7 x 11 mm (5.57 x 2.78 x 0.43 in)
Weight149 g (5.26 oz)
SIMMicro-SIM
DISPLAYTypeIPS LCD capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
Size5.0 inches (~68.9% screen-to-body ratio)
Resolution720 x 1280 pixels (~294 ppi pixel density)
MultitouchYes
ProtectionCorning Gorilla Glass 3
PLATFORMOSAndroid OS, v4.4.4 (KitKat), upgradable to v5.0 (Lollipop)
ChipsetQualcomm MSM8226 Snapdragon 400
CPUQuad-core 1.2 GHz Cortex-A7
GPUAdreno 305
MEMORYCard slotmicroSD, up to 32 GB
Internal8 GB, 1 GB RAM
CAMERAPrimary8 MP, 3264 x 2448 pixels, autofocus, LED flash, check quality
FeaturesGeo-tagging, touch focus, face detection, HDR, panorama
Video720p@30fps, stereo sound rec., HDR, check quality
Secondary2 MP
SOUNDAlert typesVibration; MP3, WAV ringtones
LoudspeakerYes, with stereo speakers
3.5mm jackYes
COMMSWLANWi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, hotspot
Bluetoothv4.0, A2DP, LE
GPSYes, with A-GPS, GLONASS
RadioFM radio
USBmicroUSB v2.0, USB Host
FEATURESSensorsAccelerometer, gyro, proximity, compass
MessagingSMS(threaded view), MMS, Email, Push Email, IM
BrowserHTML5
JavaNo
 - Digital TV (DS DTV 16GB model only)
- Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic
- MP3/AAC+/WAV/Flac player
- MP4/H.264 player
- Photo viewer/editor
- Document viewer
- Voice memo/dial
BATTERY Non-removable Li-Ion 2070 mAh battery
Stand-by
Talk time
MISCColorsWhite, Black
Price group
TESTSPerformanceBasemark OS II: 526 / Basemark OS II 2.0: 497
Basemark X: 3142
CameraPhoto / Video
LoudspeakerVoice 66dB / Noise 66dB / Ring 75dB
Audio qualityNoise -91.6dB / Crosstalk -91.7dB
Battery life
Endurance rating 50hIt's no secret that budget smartphones are often small, chunky devices with sub-par screens and under-powered specs. This all changed when the original Moto G launched at the end of 2013, as it revolutionised what we came to expect from budget smartphone performance. However, it was still, by current standards, a compact phone with a small 4.5in display. Now, the latest version of Motorola's best-ever-selling smartphone, also called the Moto G, has a large 5in display, giving you great value performance on a big screen. 
It's rare to see a budget phone with a screen this size, so the fact that Motorola has kept the price down to £150 SIM-free is outstanding. There's also a 4G version now which costs £9 more, so you no longer have to settle for the old Moto G, or indeed the cheaper new Moto E, if you want the fastest download speeds. The new Moto G is also available in both dual and single SIM varieties (in the dual SIM version you can use two SIM cards at the same time) and now has an Android 5.0 Lollipop update available so you can start using Google's latest operating system once you've performed a simple system update.
Motorola New Moto G face on
The new Moto G still ships with Android 4.4.4, but you'll be able to update to Android 5.0 Lollipop as soon as you take it out of the box 

MOTO G DISPLAY

Motorola's outstanding build quality returns for the new Moto G. Its curved back, which measures 6mm at its thinnest point and 11mm at its thickest, is extremely comfortable to hold, and its feather-light weight of 149g is just 6g heavier than the old Moto G - an impressive feat for a considerably larger handset. The screen is also surrounded by the Moto G's new front-ported dual speakers, which deliver impressive-sounding audio for your films and music.
The 5in screen is beautiful. The resolution is still 1,280x720, so the new Moto G actually has a lower pixel density of 293 PPI (pixels-per-inch) compared to the old Moto G's PPI of 326, but the screen still looked perfectly crisp and sharp.
New Moto G side on
The screen isn't quite as bright this time round, but our peak measurement of 350.7cd/m2 means the screen is still perfectly legible both in- and outdoors. Colour accuracy is also a little lower than the old Moto G as well; we measured the new handset as covering 87.2 per cent of the sRGB colour gamut, compared to the old model's 98.4 per cent. The trade-off is noticeably deeper black levels, which we measured at an impressive 0.36cd/m2.
Measured contrast was also excellent, at 960:1. This high contrast level helped the screen produce plenty of detail in our high-contrast test images, and the screen's viewing angles were equally superb. When we placed the new Moto G to our side, we could still see the screen clearly with hardly any discolouration present onscreen.

MOTO G CAMERA

Motorola has also improved the Moto G's camera, which is great news as the camera was one of the old Moto G's weakest areas. The phone now comes with an 8-megapixel rear sensor with an f2.0 aperture, and you also have the option to change the aspect ratio from 16:9 to 4:3. The old Moto G, by comparison, was locked to 16:9. The new Moto G has all the same photo modes available, too, including HDR and Panorama modes.
New Moto G shell cases rear
^ Interchangeable shells and flip cases are also available for the new Moto G for either £10.99 or £22.49 from Motorola
Outdoors, our photos looked rich and much more natural than the old Moto G's images, and there was much more detail on show. The brickwork in our test scene was crystal-clear and the sky didn't suffer from any signs of overexposure. Objects further away were a little fuzzy compared to those in the foreground, but it's still a huge step up from most other budget cameras from similarly priced phones.
We were pleased with the Moto G's HDR mode, too. The effect was sometimes a little strong, but it helped bring a lot more definition to our shots and helped brighten what was otherwise a very gloomy afternoon. The accuracy of the colours wasn't affected by HDR either, so images still looked great regardless of whether HDR was turned on or off.
New Moto G camera test
^ Colours still looked good even in overcast, cloudy weather
New Moto G camera test HDR mode
^ HDR mode brightened our photo considerably, dispelling the non-HDR shot's gloomy shadows
^ The 8-megapixel camera provides a lot more detail than the old Moto G's sensor
^ To get an 8-megapixel camera with HDR on a sub-£150 phone is almost unheard of

MOTO G PERFORMANCE

Inside, the new Moto G is similar to the old one. Both phones use a quad-core 1.2GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 400 processor, so the phone's performance has remained largely unchanged. The new Moto G scored 1,478ms in the SunSpider JavaScript benchmark, which is in line with the old Moto G's score of 1,410ms. While it's a little disappointing that Motorola hasn't updated the processor, this still provides the phone with plenty of speed, allowing it to outstrip many of its main competitors.
Loading up The Guardian's desktop home page posed no problem for the new Moto G, and we were able to scroll up and down the page with no stutter or hesitation whatsoever. The screen's resolution of 1,280x720 was also clear enough to read headlines, but we had to zoom in to read smaller pieces of text. Again, the touchscreen was very responsive and panning round zoomed in was very smooth and judder-free.
Graphics performance was also similar to the old model, but again, this is no bad thing. In Epic Citadel, the Moto G's Adreno 305 GPU scored an admirable 34.4fps on Ultra High quality settings, and in 3DMark's Ice Storm Unlimited test, it scored 4,679, which roughly translates to 21.2fps. This should be more than enough to play most games in the Google Play Store, but the phone may struggle with more demanding apps. This is still very impressive for a sub-£150 handset, though, as it beats the £360 HTC One Mini 2and is on par with HTC's excellent budget phablet, the £280 Desire 816.
The new Moto G will be available in both 8GB and 16GB models, but both come with the ability to expand the storage up to 32GB via microSD card slot - a feature we're pleased to see make the cut from the 4G version of the old Moto G. 

MOTO G BATTERY LIFE

Battery life is excellent. In our continuous video playback test, the new Moto G's 2,070mAh battery lasted 9 hours and 39 minutes with the screen set the half brightness. This beats the original Moto G by about 30 minutes, so we were pleased to see the larger screen didn't take its toll on the phone's battery life. It doesn't quite match the 4G Moto G, which lasted another hour under the same conditions, but this is still an excellent result for a phone of this price and the new Moto G should be able to keep you going all day before you need to recharge it. 

ANDROID 5.0 LOLLIPOP

Both the 3G and 4G versions of the new Moto G still ships with Android 4.4, but you can now download a free upgrade to Google's latest operating system, Android 5.0 Lollipop. You can read about all the latest features in our full in-depth Android 5.0 review, but we'll cover the basics here to give you an idea about what to expect.
As the Moto G already uses a stock version of Android, the home screens have changed very little in Android 5.0. Google's new Material Design scheme is now present throughout, refreshing various app icons with a cleaner, flatter design, but by and large the home screens look very similar to how they did before.
^ With Android Lollipop, you'll now see notifications appear on the lock screen, which you can instantly dismiss or jump straight into with a simple double tap
The more drastic changes are located in the phone's settings and notification menu. This is now combined into a single drop down menu, but you can swipe down again to access various setting shortcuts including brightness, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Aeroplane mode, torch, location and cast screen settings.
It's slightly irritating that you can't enable auto brightness here, as this is tucked away in the main settings menu, but at least you no longer have to dive into several different menu screens to access the phone's connectivity features. Notifications will also appear on the lock screen, which you can either dismiss with a swipe or double tap to launch them instantly once you've unlocked it. 
Android 5.0 also brings several performance enhancements, as the operating system runs and compiles code differently. While we've yet to re-test the Moto G's battery life (we'll update this review when we do), its PCMark scores (which tests web browsing, video playback, document writing and photo editing) nearly all showed signs of improvement. With Android 4.4, the Moto G scored 2,850 overall, but Lollipop increased this to 3,152.
Admittedly, web browsing only improved by 100 points and its video playback score actually decreased, but its document writing test shot up nearly 1,000 points and photo editing jumped up by nearly 400, so composing documents and emails and messing about with your photos shouldn't take quite as long as before.

MOTO G APPS

The new Moto G also comes with several Motorola apps that make using the phone much more user-friendly. Motorola Migrate helps you move all your files, contacts, call history, messages from your old phone to your new handset, while Motorola Assist can affect your phone's behaviour at different times of the day. For example, it can automatically put your phone into silent at night, but still ring if one of your specified VIP contacts calls or if anyone calls twice within five minutes. It will also read text messages aloud if you're in the car or at home, let you know who's calling, or play music over Bluetooth when you start driving. It will access your calendar as well and switch to silent mode when you're in a meeting, and it will even send an auto-reply text message to any calls you miss, letting the caller know that you're busy. 
^ Moto Assist (left) and Moto Alert (right) are both great apps that help make the Moto G that much more user-friendly
There's also Moto Alert, which is particularly handy if you're a parent buying the new Moto G for a child. There are three ways the app can alert others. The first is Emergency, which can send a text alert to certain contacts during an emergency, sound an alarm automatically or auto-dial your chosen emergency contact number. It works surprisingly well, and worked happily with both landline and mobile numbers. Moto Alert can also keep track of when you leave and arrive at places you visit regularly, such as school or work, and automatically alert your chosen contacts when you do so.
The second feature is Follow Me, which sends your current location to select contacts at specified intervals so that concerned family members know where you are. It’s also handy for helping your friends track you in busy, crowded areas. Meet Me, meanwhile, can send a text to your contacts telling them where to meet you.

MOTO G CONCLUSION

The new Moto G isn't just an amazing bargain. It's a £150 phone that gives a surprising number of £200-plus mid-range handsets a real run for their money, and in most cases actually beats them hands down in terms of overall value. We didn't think it was possible to create a better phone than the original Moto G, but the latest version of Motorola's unstoppable handset rightly claims its crown as the new king of budget smartphones. It wins a Best Buy award. 
We're also pleased Motorola's finally released a 4G version of the handset as well, as this was the only feature we found lacking when it first launched at the end of last year. If £150 or £159 is still a little too much, though, the new smaller Moto E (2015) is another excellent choice at £109 SIM-free. 
Hardware
ProcessorQuad-core 1.2GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 400
RAM1GB
Screen size5in
Screen resolution1,280x720
Screen typeIPS
Front camera2-megapixel
Rear camera8-megapixel
FlashYes
GPSYes
CompassYes
Storage8GB / 16GB
Memory card slot (supplied)microSD
Wi-Fi802.11n
BluetoothBluetooth 4.0
NFCNo
Wireless data3G
Size141x70x11mm
Weight149g
Features
Operating systemAndroid 4.4.4
Battery size2,070mAh
Buying information
WarrantyOne-year RTB
Price SIM-free (inc VAT)£145
Price on contract (inc VAT)N/A
Prepay price (inc VAT)N/A
SIM-free supplierwww.amazon.co.uk
Contract/prepay supplierN/A
Detailswww.motorola.co.uk
Part codeXT1068

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