Honestly, it's the little things that really bothered me on the G2 that Moto X got really right. For instance, like how all the software is optimized, and lets the processors actually do what they need to do instead of being throttled. Also, another fact is that the speaker, while no "Boom" speakers on the HTC One, are the best speakers on a phone I have ever owned, even while the phone is laying on it's back. It looks like they actually did some acoustics work on the speaker, it's quite extraordinary. The phone seems to have been actually designed instead of "Let's slap everything together", and the SOC, Flash Storage, and other internals of the phone are high quality. Even their display seems to have been tweaked better than most AMOLED displays out there.
The Anandtech article is what really sold me on the Moto X, honestly. It really showed to me that Motorola going against the spec war wasn't really marketing speak per se, but every part of the phone was designed for very specific reasons.
The Anandtech article is what really sold me on the Moto X, honestly. It really showed to me that Motorola going against the spec war wasn't really marketing speak per se, but every part of the phone was designed for very specific reasons.
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