Moto X Release:Google Bets On Voice Control And Customization
With New Phone
Moto X is finally here.
Google on Thursday unveiled the
Moto X, the first smartphone fully designed and built by Motorola since it was
bought by Google last year.
But thanks to recent
leaks, the phone's biggest
features didn't come as a surprise: The device can be customized with different
colored rear
casings and accents,
it has a camera that is activated with a flick of the wrist, and like the new
Droid lineup announced last week, many of the phone's functions -- including
Google search -- can be controlled solely by your voice.
At a press event on Thursday, Rick
Osterloh, Motorola Mobility's senior vice president of product management,
lamented that smartphones today aren't actually very smart.
"Phones today require you to
manually enter a pin and touch it," Osterloh said. "It should be able
to respond to you."
Motorola is touting Touchless
Control as one of its best features. It allows Moto X owners to set alarms, get
directions, make calls, send messages and schedule appointments -- all without
touching the phone.
Touchless Control works by way of
three microphones that are always on, waiting for owners to utter the phrase,
"OK Google Now." That phrase activates the phone and makes it perk
up, eagerly awaiting your question or command: "Get me directions to
Central Park," "Make me an appointment tomorrow at noon" or
"What time is it in Singapore?"
A phone that's always listening
may seem like a privacy nightmare, but privacy experts told The Huffington Post
that Touchless Control is actually executed quite well because it's optional --
and, by default, off -- and processes the information on the phone rather than
through Google's servers.
"If it's only happening
locally on the device, then that really eliminates most of the privacy issues
most people would have," said Sarah A. Downey, a privacy analyst at Abine,
a company that makes consumer online privacy tools. "There isn't any data
stored."
But it still remains to be seen whether Touchless Control --
which is also available on the Droid Mini, Droid Ultra and Droid MAXX, all announced
last week -- will
boost sales for the new phone. One of the issues with voice-activation
technology, analysts say, is that people may still not be ready to change the
way they interact with phones.
"Nobody has really been able
to overcome the consumer resistance to people talking to their phones,"
said Tero Kuittinen, a mobile analyst and vice president at Alekstra, a firm
that works to reduce companies' phone bills. "They feel self conscious
about doing it if there are other people in a room."
"So I'm somewhat skeptical
about whether that feature alone will sell a phone," Kuittinen added.
Charles Golvin, a principal
analyst at Forrester Research, agrees.
"By and large, people's
decision making is a melange of price, look and feel, ecosystem preference and
how invested they are in Android versus iOS," he said. "It's not any
one feature."
Motorola is also pushing its new
camera, which can be activated by twisting your wrist, a gesture the company
likens to "turning a screwdriver." This, combined with the fact that
users can take photos by pressing anywhere on the screen, allows for fast
picture-taking. Moto X has a 10 megapixel rear-facing camera and a 2 megapixel
front-facing camera. Both are capable of shooting 1080p HD video.
The company says the phone's
customization makes it hugely innovative, but in actuality, the customized
features only affect how the phone looks. Customers will be able to use
"online studio" Moto Maker to choose from 18 different colored rear
casings with accents, pick a black or white front, and engrave messages on the
back of the phone. Moto Maker is currently only available to AT&T
customers, and there's no timeline of when customers who use other carriers
will be able to buy it.
The American version of the phone
is assembled in Fort Worth, Texas, which Motorola says will allow the company
to complete custom designed phones within four days of an order placement.
Motorola did not provide exact
dates as to when Moto X will be available, but said that black and white
versions of the phone will be sold with AT&T, Sprint, US Cellular and
Verizon Wireless for $199 with a two-year contract. It did not reveal the price
of the unlocked version of the phone, or how much it will cost T-Mobile
customers.

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