On 21 August, former NASA engineer and now Halloween costume designer Mark Rober flew into London from Los Angeles.
"I could see the London Eye and I think, 'what in the world am I doing'. This wasn't part of the script," he tells Wired.co.uk.
Until June of this year, Rober was a mechanical engineer at the world's most famous space agency. He had worked at NASA for nine years, seven of which were spent working on the Curiosity Rover.
Now he creates wearable tech Halloween costumes and recently sold his company, Digital Dudz, to the British company that makes Morphsuits, where he now works (nope, we didn't know they were a British invention either).
It all began on Halloween in 2011, where Rober unveiled a costume like no one had seen before. Using two iPads, one on the front and one on his back, he was able to create the illusion of seeing through his body by linking the two using FaceTime.
"I handed my phone to my wife and said, 'people love this at the party, just film this,'" he says. He put the video on YouTube and it instantly went viral, getting 1.5 million views in a day. "Everything has stemmed from that one decision."
By the following Halloween, he was ready to share his invention with the rest of the world. With a couple of friends he created a free app, a bunch of t-shirt designs, and a website selling wearable tech Halloween costumes. After cutting a hole in the shirt and duct-taping your device on the inside, their app would play a video that made part of the t-shirt's illustration look alive.
On 3 October 2012 they went live.
"We spent zero dollars on advertising. We just had a YouTube video and that was it," he says. "We did a quarter million dollars in revenue, just in three weeks."
Since then, the app has been downloaded a quarter of a million times and Rober has left behind a career with NASA and gone full-time with his costumes. He's constantly bubbling with energy during our phone call, half-excited about the adventure he's on but, I'm guessing, also half-astounded at the ridculousness of the whole situation.
"Last year you had to cut a hole in [your t-shirt] and duct tape your phone to your shirt," he says, stressing his words as if to say, 'and people still loved it'.
"It's so ghetto," he jokes. This year they've upgraded and included a pocket to hold the phone. "You don't need to have as many MacGyver skills this year," he says.
New designs for this Halloween include integrating the app with the Morphsuits—Rober holds a patent for the integration of apps with clothing and costumes—and a design that uses your phone's accelerometer to make it look like your intestines are being ripped out when someone slaps you on the back.
Over the next two years Rober says they'll be using more features in your smartphone to create new costume experiences.
"You know you have disruptive technologies in the tech [arena], we want to be disruptive in the fancy dress industry," he says, laughing. "You've got so many things on there, the accelerometer, near-field communication, Bluetooth, and other sensors […] There are cool interactive concepts [to be explored]."
But surely leaving NASA to design costumes is a strange career move, to say the least.
"It's a little bit scary," he admits. "But at the same time it's such a cool opportunity. It's just one of those things in life, you've just got to see what happens.
"One of the things that always appealed to me about NASA was we were always doing cool stuff that no one's done before," he says, earlier in our conversation. "Granted nothing's as cool as building spaceships, but there is also something cool about getting an e-mail from a guy that says: 'I've never give so many high-fives as I did last night.'"
A few months ago, we got a glimpse of Blaupunkt’s line of personal audio devices. Now we finally have an opportunity to dig in one of those devices we featured and see how the Blaupunkt Style on-ear headphone performs.
The product design looks well-polished from the get go with the packaging. You’ve got a very sturdy box and the items are kept in place with rubberized foam cutouts. When I opened the box, I can’t help but notice the smell of new slippers which was a little odd. Inside the box we get a slew of accessories for the headphone apart from the headphone unit itself.
Items include:
2 sets of alternate ear pad
1 1 meter gold tipped 3.5mm audio cable
1 1 meter gold tipped 3.5mm audio cable with integrated headset unit
1 draw-string soft case pouch
1 transport bag
1 airplane adapter
1 3.5mm to 6.35mm step-up adapter
1 cleaning cloth
Design
The colors for the alternate ear pads are reminiscent of a donut shop…hmm. The neon colors really stand out, but looks like the colors will match up better with the white version of the Blaupunkt Style. The L and R labels are found inside the ear pad so that can be tricky. With the different colored pads, you might want to assign one color for the left and another color for the right.
The pads are lined with very soft leatherette. Replacing the ear pad is a bit tricky. At first I felt some hesitation because I was afraid that I might tear the soft leatherette as I was turning the ear pads to remove it, but it held up well. I also noticed that the left and right unlatch the ear pads through different directions so that’s something to look out for.
The entire headphone is also coated with a rubberized finish which feels really nice to the touch. I just hope that it will resist scratches and retain the finish over a long period of time.
The headband is a bit original in design as I haven’t seen one like it. It’s made of thick plastic rubber (I think) and it makes the headband really flexible and sturdy. Blaupunkt also added a rubber stopper at the bottom of the headband to add more grip to the top of our head and also to provide a little cushion.
The headband adjusts by pulling the earpieces downward. Doing this will reveal metal parts that hold the headphone together. It looked like it is made of aluminum alloy. The headband also folds inward so that we can easily store it inside the pouches that come with the Blaupunkt Style.
Despite the flexibility of the headband and the softness of the ear pad, I found it painful to wear the Blaupunkt Style over long periods of time, because the headphones were pushing too hard against my ear. Maybe I have a big head? Haha. This “strong” clamping force might be great for folks that move a lot while listening to music.
The cable with the integrated controller works as it should on the iPhone but what I noticed is that the controller looks to be made of cheap plastic. The jacks will also fit an iPhone with a casing, although the allowance it provides might not be enough if you have a really thick casing. The other audio jack is just a straight up 3.5mm stereo cable so it’s nice to have if the cable with the controller doesn’t work on you device.
The audio jacks connect to the bottom of the ear pieces. It doesn’t matter which audio jack port we connect them on the headphones. Curiously, one port has a blue ring and another has a black ring. Not sure what the color coding is for but we can certainly use this as another way to differentiate the left and right side.
A nice design feature allows us to daisy-chain another headphone or earphone on to the Blaupunkt Style. You can easily use this if you’re watching or listening something together with a friend…or a special friend? We could probably daisy-chain more headphones as long as possible but I wasn’t able to try that out.
Sound Quality
So enough with the looks, let’s move on to the really important part – the sound quality. The first time I used this, I was listening to Dave Matthews Band and I was blown away. The song I was listening to had a lot of percussions and a guitar and the Blaupunkt Style was able to deliver crisp sounds to all those little details from all the instruments. Vocals were also emphasized by the headphones giving it a live vibe to the music. Overall the trebles and midrange were so crisp that the bass didn’t come out as punchy.
Consequently, music genres that are bass heavy don’t seem to match the Blaupunkt Style really well. Not that the Blaupunkt Style can’t handle the bass, but for me it just sounds different in a bad way for certain music genres. On the flip side, I really enjoy watching dialogue heavy shows with this because the boost in vocals makes it easier to hear the actors’ voices.
It is also amazing how much louder these headphones are compared to other headphones that I used. If we were to compare it to the Superlux HD 681 EVO, I’d say that the Blaupunkt Style is 30% louder when I tested it at the same volume level on my audio device.
Speaking of comparisons, the Blaupunkt Style feels a little bit sturdier than the Superlux HD 681 EVO. This is probably brought about by the rubberized finish on the Blaupunkt pair. The smaller size of the Blaupunkt Style and the better pouch and extra ear pads are all huge pluses compared to the HD 681 EVO.
I would like to say that the Blaupunkt’s can also reproduce accurate sounds but only for certain music genres so the Superlux wins in this department. The trebles and vocals are crisper on the Blaupunkt Style compared to the HD 681 EVO, but not too much that it would crack my ear drums. Bass seems a little more pronounced on the HD 681 EVO than the Blaupunkt Style as a consequence of its preference to enhanced vocals and crisp trebles.
So, for Php14,500, these can be yours at Mobile 1 and Egghead where you can also audition a pair before purchasing. A little out of my budget…but if you’re looking for that live sound vibe or if you want a headphone that will stay on your head on the go, the Blaupunkt Style should work for you.
IBM announced today that it has opened a new global delivery facility in Nuvali, a fast-growing eco-city development in Santa Rosa, Laguna. This affirms the company’s continued expansion into the country’s next wave cities following its announcement in May this year regarding launching a similar facility in Naga City in the Bicol region.
Both Sta. Rosa and Naga City are recognized as the country’s ‘next wave cities,’ or growth centers outside Metro Manila that are poised to serve as Information and Communications Technology (ICT) hubs due to their rich talent, steady telecom infrastructure and support facilities, and generally favorable investment climate.
“IBM’s expansion in Sta. Rosa or the ‘Lion City of the South,’ reinforces our strategy and deliberate effort to grow and nurture local talent and develop further opportunities in the country’s next wave cities,” says IBM Philippines President and Country General Manager Mariels Almeda Winhoffer. “This demonstrates our continued commitment to the country as we work towards enabling a Smarter Philippines.”
The new facility in Nuvali, Sta. Rosa provides another strategic location for IBM Global Process Services (GPS), which will drive its continued expansion in delivering innovative business solutions to its broad range of global clients in Customer Relationship Management, Human Resources, Application Services, Finance & Accounting and Supply Chain Management.
Organizations are increasingly partnering with IBM to elevate capabilities and drive innovation across functions in order to improve business outcomes.
This complements the company’s existing operations in Metro Manila, where it maintains a number of established global delivery centers in three key cities – Quezon City, Makati City and Pasig City. The expansion further strengthens IBM’s presence and existing service delivery capability in the Philippines, which currently serve over a million client employees across 84 countries.
“The Philippines remains one of the strategic locations in IBM’s global delivery network that integrates capabilities, assets, and skills without borders,” said GPS Delivery Country Leader Cassandra Soto. “With our second global delivery facility in Sta. Rosa City (after Naga City) this year, IBM is in a better position to provide premier career opportunities to more local talent, while helping enhance the country’s global competitiveness in the business process solutions industry.”
IBM’s presence in the Philippines spans over 75 years. In the past few years, IBM has made substantial investments in the country, expanding its business portfolio, growing talent, extending geographic reach and boosting skills development as it anticipates exponential growth around the country. This is in line with IBM’s geographical expansion strategy to expand and grow beyond Metro Manila to prime areas such as Sta. Rosa and Naga City.
BlackBerry was supposed to launch their latest BB10 device, which is the Q5, yesterday but had to postpone due to the severe weather condition.
The BlackBerry Q5 is considered to be the more affordable version of the Q10, which is a QWERTY smartphone in the BlackBerry 10 platform (version 10.1). Instead of a serious design found on the Q10, the BlackBerry Q5 has a more youth-oriented look although only available in Black despite having a White and Red version.
It has BlackBerry’s classic QWERTY keyboard to match the 3.1-inch touchscreen. It will also have the same but lower-clocked dual-core chip as the more expensive Q10 to go with 2GB RAM and 8GB internal storage. Although the chip is capable of LTE, it seems that unlocked units will only be getting 3G.
There’s a 5-megapixel rear camera and a 2-megapixel front facing one and a non-removable battery rated at 2180mAh which is slightly higher than the Q10 (2100mAh).
Kristian Salvo, Country Manager for the Philippines at BlackBerry said, “We are excited to bring the new BlackBerry Q5 smartphone to the Philippines. The BlackBerry Q5 smartphone offers a great experience to customers who want to have the power of BlackBerry 10 with a QWERTY keyboard in a stylish youthful design, making it easy for them to have fun and stay socially connected with those that matter most to them.”
The BlackBerry Q5 is slated to hit the market this weekend, August 24, for Php18,690.
Private Company seeks applicants for the Mars One project! Says earthlings above 18yrs can apply with their videos on mars one official website.
It used to be a space lover’s dream to cross the vast frontiers of space and to have a place to call home other than the planet ‘earth’. Now it’s becoming a reality. With sanctions imposed on NASA and budget cuts for further space expeditions, private companies like Mars One supported by wealthy ambitious businessmen eager to become space travelers have set up a private shop supporting space settlement in a distant planet. Mars being the most suitable planet for earth settlers owing to environmental conditions has therefore become a talk of the day.
Mars One, a Dutch private space exploration company plans to send four astronauts in the first quarter of 2023. All the contributions are made by private space exploration enthusiasts’ aka wealthy businessmen and private corporations with no interference from politics. The company says that these will not be space travelers, rather permanent dwellers on Mars. For this purpose, Mars One started taking applications from around the world and the company CEO says that selection will be made regardless of caste, color, or creed and applicants will be selected from all the world continents.
So far so good, Mars One CEO Bans Lansdorp says that they have received over 100,000 applications for the opening on April 23 present year. The application process is scheduled to be completed in 2015. By that time 24 applicants will be shortlisted for training. The applicants will possess high physical and intellectual skills and the shortlisting will be based on rigorous tests where an applicant’s abilities will be pushed to the limits, says Bans. After the successful launch of first four astronauts travelling a journey of 7 months to Mars, another team of four will be sent with an interval of two years. During the training phase, the lucky 24 will also be put into simulation tests where they’ll be required to live in controlled Martian like environments and simulated communication / signal lag with earth will also be displayed that can stretch over 10-20 minutes.
When anyone thinks about the most efficient supply chain and booming performance, what comes into their mind? Large companies such as Coca-Cola, Wal-Mart and Pizza Hut instantly pop into majority of people’s heads. While, if anyone thinks about a meal delivery system and a cultural structure, then Mumbai, India would be the home to the most successful supply chain around the world in few people’s mind.
DABBAWALA (Dabba means Lunch box or tiffin while dabbawala means the person with lunchbox) is the name given to that person whose work is to collect the lunch boxes with freshly cooked food from the houses of office workers, deliver it to their individual workplaces and to return the empty lunch boxes to their residence back by using different transport modes such as public trains, bicycles, and walking, etc.
Dabbawala is considered as the world’s top performance supply chain, based on barefoot men who use public trains for delivering reusable containers in whole city having a population of 12.5 million people approximately.
Not a single piece of paper is used during this whole process. All dabbas have different numbers, colors or other symbols so the dabbawalas can remember where to deliver a specific dabba.
Dabbawalasis an old industry for 125 years, which is recognized by Forbes at the six sigma level in 2002. There are about 4500 to 5000 dabbawalas who deliver more than 175000 lunch boxes per day across Mumbai. They deliver dabbas at the distance of 75 km. Their customers consist of 11% students, 15% businessmen, 36 % Government, 38 % employees of private sectors. The most inspiring thing is that there is only one mistake in deliveries of every 6 million. That’s an efficient supply-chain management.
The reason of the successful supply chain is that they don’t use modern technology but barefoot men and trains. They just use SMS and web technology for orders and don’t have any social network or computer chips. They focus on the entire system as well as flow of information and products, not the individual parts. They have accurate timing and high teamwork for completing their task.
Unless you’re living in a cave, the term BitTorrent shouldn’t seem unfamiliar to you. It’s a P2P (short for Peer-to-Peer) file sharing protocol that lets multiple users distribute the same file over the internet in bits and pieces. On the basic level, a torrent file or a magnet link contains metadata about files and folders that need to be distributed, for instance music, photos, videos, documents etc. In order to download torrents, a torrent client must be installed on your device. Applications such as Utorrent, BitTorrent and tTorrent are quite popular on PC and mobile devices. However, these apps haven’t yet been offered in Modern UI flavor. Torrex is a new (and purportedly, the only) Windows 8 and RT based BitTorrent client that lets you download all kinds of torrent files from the internet.
Torrex is a solid app that can prove to be very useful to Windows RT users as they as cannot employee desktop apps on RT to download torrents. The app includes most of the features that are found on desktop and mobile BitTorrent clients. Torrents can be added to the app using two different ways. If the torrent file is already available on your local drive, you can click or tap ‘Add torrent’ from the app bar and select the source. The other way is to click or tap ‘Add torrent from URL’ and type or paste the torrent link, followed by hitting the ‘Add’ button again.
The app then lets you specify the destination folder and name of the downloaded file. If its a multi-file torrent, you can easily select the items to download by checkmarking them. The size and date of the torrent is also shown under the Add torrent screen. When you have everything set to your liking, click or tap ‘Start’ to begin the download.
All the torrents, whether under progress or completed, are shown on the main screen. While a torrent is being downloaded, Torrex displays its size, transfer rate and ETA. Further actions can also be performed on the selected torrent from the app bar. For instance, you can easily pause/resume or stop the download, delete the torrent. or move it up or down in your queue.
Torrex also allows you to personalize its view according to your desire. The Personalization bar, which can be accessed from the Settings charm, lets you change the application’s language as well as the theme and background of the UI. In addition, you can toggle automatic adding of torrents, and the warning shown on exiting the app.
The Preferences bar, on the other hand, packs loads of advanced features. You can limit the download and upload speeds, toggle DHT (dynamic host tracking), set the max number of connected peers, connections, active torrents, slot per torrents and cache size, and so on.
The free version of Torrex features ads and has some limitations like no background downloads. You can easily remove the ads and enable background downloads by getting the Pro version via an in-app purchase.
Many of us work with information on our computers that we don’t want anyone else to see, be it confidential financial data, some personal communication, or a website that would freak other people out. There can be hundreds of such scenarios where you don’t want anyone to peek at what you’re doing on our computer and in such situations, it can prove useful if you’re able to quickly hide the active window, making it vanish from the taskbar as well. HiddeX is a tiny (about 270KB in size), portable freeware app for Windows that can easily hide any running program or window such as a web browser, game, document, video player etc. using mouse or keyboard shortcuts.
The application does a great job of hiding the specified window from the desktop without closing it, and also makes it disappear from the taskbar. With one single mouse click (or keyboard hotkey, should you choose to specify one), it can hide and restore a window. It comprises of a simple, barebones UI and runs straight from its portable EXE file.
Getting started with HiddeX is easy as pie. Launch the program and you will see a list of applications that are currently running on your computer in then upper pane. Below that is another pane for the windows that you want to hide. All you need to do is double click your desired item from the upper pane to add it to the Hide pane.
HiddeX also lets you specify the type of programs or services you want to hide. The Type section highlighted in the screenshot below basically allows you to switch among Windows Text, Windows Classes and Process via clicking the pertaining radio button. This is a solid feature that makes the program hide background process as well.
The second interesting aspect of the tool is that you can hide windows swiftly via keyboard shortcuts as well as the mouse. All you have to do is press the hotkey combination after clicking the H/S field, and hit apply. When it comes to the mouse, you can pick middle mouse key, scroll wheel, or the gesture of taking the mouse curser to the corner for the purpose.
You can also specify HiddeX’s behavior for when it launches i.e.hide window, and activate hotkeys for mouse and keyboard. In addition, there are a few advanced parameters such as autorun, mute, quickly hide, hide tray icon and get focus that you can use to set everything the way you want.
HiddeX is available for free and can be grabbed from the developer’s website. It works on Windows XP, Windows Vista, Window 7 and Windows 8.
I'll admit that I didn't get the excitement about the Moto X when it launched. A so-called "Google phone" was something that people have speculated about since Google's purchase of Motorola closed last year. And yet, much of the breathless pre-release coverage (and several early reviews of the phone) seemed to treat the phone as special because Google was saying it was special, not because it was earth-shattering hardware in and of itself.
We're now about two weeks out from our first hands-on session with the phone. After living with it for a while, I get it—at least a little. There are still things about the phone that I don't understand, but I can see why people would walk into a store and walk out with the Moto X instead of a Galaxy S 4 or anHTC One or even an iPhone 5. It's the rare flagship Android handset that's greater than the sum of its specifications, even if in the end it's still just another Android phone with a couple useful extra features stacked on top.
But the Moto X doesn't need to melt anyone's face or sweep Samsung under the rug. The Moto X doesn't need to redefine the way we think about smartphones or show us Google's grand vision for Android's future. The Moto X just needs to reverse Motorola's decline, stop the bleeding, and show that Motorola and its parent company can put their heads together and put out a desirable Smartphone.
$199 with two-year Verizon, AT&T, Sprint, or T-Mobile contract
Body and build quality
The short version: Finally, a flagship phone that feels great to hold. Where the Nexus 4, Galaxy S 4, HTC One, and others are all a little uncomfortable for one reason or another, the Moto X gives you a phone you can use one-handed, without ripping out all of the desirable features.
The long version: There are a few phones I've used—the HTC 8X, the BlackBerry Z10—that have earned my esteem specifically because they are really nice to hold. Both Windows Phone and BlackBerry 10 are still missing too many things for me to use either of those devices as a primary real-life handset for longer than a week or two (the amount of time I like to spend with review hardware, at a minimum), but in both cases I wished I could get phones exactly like them with stock Android installed instead. The Moto X comesvery close to being that phone.
The Moto X's 4.7-inch screen belies its size—the phone is actually very similar in width to the Z10 and the HTC 8X, even though those phones have smaller 4.2 and 4.3-inch displays. Compared to other Android phones with similar screens like the 4.65-inch display of the Galaxy Nexus, the 4.7-inch screens of last year's Droid Razr HD phones, or the 4.8-inch screen on the Galaxy S III, the Moto X is both narrower and shorter. It's still larger than an iPhone 5 by a fair margin, and it's thicker than some of its high-end Android competitors (0.41 inches at its thickest point, compared to 0.36 inches for the S 4 and 0.37 for the HTC One). Still, the phone's width and height combined with the curve of its non-removable back makes it one of the most comfortable-to-hold Android flagships you can buy right now.
Of the competing flagship phones, the One and its 4.7-inch 1080p display come the closest to matching the width of the Moto X (at 2.69 inches, compared to 2.57 inches), but the One's height and its top-mounted power button are less-than-friendly to one-handed users. Some Android phone screens are creeping up above six inches, and frankly it's nice to get something fast that doesn't include a warning about team lifting.
The build quality of the phone's all-plastic body is decent but not exceptional. It feels sturdy in the hand and doesn't creak or flex like Samsung's phones can, but small imperfections keep it from playing in the same league as the HTC One or iPhone 5. The power and volume buttons feel just a bit too loose, the SIM card tray sticks out from the side of the phone just a bit too much, and the phone (at least in white, the color of our review unit) looks cheaper than it feels.
The difference between the Moto X and something like the HTC One is akin to the difference between the old white polycarbonate MacBook and the aluminum unibody MacBook Pros. Both feel like solid, well-made devices, but one is definitely made from superior materials.
The screen: Not all AMOLEDs are created equal
The short version: You'll notice the Moto X's AMOLED display before you'll notice its 720p resolution. At least it isn't PenTile.
The long version: That 4.7-inch screen has a resolution of 1280×720, a spec that was much more common in flagship phones a year ago. The screen has a still-respectable 313 PPI, which pales in comparison to the 469 PPI of the One or the 441 PPI of the Galaxy S 4 but is nevertheless crisp and readable. The difference between a 720p smartphone screen and a 1080p smartphone screen is not the legibility of tiny text, but the crispness of that tiny text. By the time letters are too small to discern on the 720p display, you're going to want to zoom in for a closer look anyway. We'll use some pictures from our look at HTC's Droid DNA, the first 1080p smartphone screen we encountered, to demonstrate.
The display's quality is ultimately more germane to this discussion than its resolution. The Moto X uses an AMOLED display, which suffers and benefits from most of the same things that most other AMOLED displays suffer and benefit from. On the one hand, the screen offers deep blacks and vibrant colors; on the other, those colors are inaccurate and sometimes too harsh. Whites and grays often take on a greenish or purplish cast. Outdoor visibility also suffers, and the Moto X's display looks washed out, even in indirect sunlight.
Where the Moto X differs from phones like the Galaxy Nexus and Galaxy S III is that its AMOLED screen doesn't use the problematic PenTile subpixel arrangement. The negative effects of PenTile are more visible at lower resolutions (and are basically gone once you move to a 1080p display like the Galaxy S 4's), but even at 720p you may notice slightly jagged text and uneven-looking images (see below).
The non-PenTile screen on the Moto X enables crisper text and more even colors. Note particularly the flat, uninterrupted white of the Google Play icon that looks almost rough on the Galaxy S III's PenTile display. At 306 PPI, the S III's screen is pretty close to the Moto X's in density, but the subpixel arrangement makes for a screen that's a little harder on the eyes after an extended period.
As with the build quality, the Moto X's screen is a little deficient compared to phones from other companies at the same price point. Still, Motorola and Google have chosen a screen that is good enough that Joe Smartphone probably won't be bothered by it. I would like to see more AMOLED displays come with color profiles like those included on the TouchWiz versions of the Galaxy S 4—research has shown that using that phone's display in Samsung's Movie or Photo modes will take the edge off of AMOLED's harsh colors, eliminating one of my biggest gripes about the display tech. Neither stock Android nor the near-stock version of Android on the Moto X includes such profiles, a situation we'd like Google to rectify.
Camera
The short version: Motorola has replaced the stock Android camera interface with its own simple, gesture-oriented version. Unfortunately, the camera itself isn't very good.
The long version: Before we evaluate the camera's quality relative to other shooters in this price range, let's talk about the interface, since it's one of the Moto X's few deviations from stock Android. Where the Android 4.2 camera keeps its menu settings arranged in a circle that you can invoke by long-pressing the screen and Android 4.3 moves those settings to an arc, the Moto X camera works mostly with gestures and swipes.
The interface is simple: tap anywhere to take a picture. Swipe to the right to pull out a menu of settings, including HDR, exposure controls, and a couple different shooting modes (panoramic shooting is here, but Photo Sphere doesn't appear to have made the jump). Swipe to the left to jump into the Gallery app and look at all the pictures you've just taken. A "quick capture" mode also allows you to engage the camera by rotating the phone twice in rapid succession—it works even when the phone is in standby, and it may be quicker for you than opening up the camera app the usual way. I found this interface both easier to use and easier to get used to than either of the stock Android camera interfaces. Let's hope it migrates to stock Android in the next release.
The shots that the camera produces are acceptable but not exceptional, bearing in mind that many smartphone snaps are destined for Twitter or Instagram or some other place where DSLR quality would be buried by image resizing and compression algorithms anyway. Many of the shots we took were tinged with a vaguely purplish color, and you'll want to make sure you keep the lens clean and free of fingerprints and smudges. Much more so than in other phones we've used, dirty glass can drastically reduce the quality of your shots (I can honestly say that this is something I've never had to worry about with any other camera phone). The results are the same whether you're shooting indoors or outdoors, with or without HDR enabled.
Software: Stock Android with a twist
The short version: Aside from the new camera interface, the Moto X runs Nexus-style stock Android with three major additions: active notifications that you see even when the phone is in standby, a "touchless control" feature that allows you to give voice commands to the phone without actually touching it, and whatever preinstalled applications and services your carrier decides it wants to install.
The long version: The Moto X almost pointedly runs Android 4.2.2, as if to drive home the assertion that Motorola won't get special treatment just because it happens to be owned by the company that makes Android. Android 4.3 is such a minor update (at least when it comes to big user-facing features) that the phone doesn't really feel like it's missing anything (and Bluetooth 4.0 support has been included anyway), but it's noteworthy that a company owned by Google isn't shipping a phone with the latest version of Android installed. Verizon's involvement may be a factor, since even Nexus phones on the Verizon network require validation that the other versions aren't subject to.
The good thing about Google's involvement is that the Moto X runs the closest thing to stock Android that you'll find on a major phone from a major OEM on all the major carriers. Google's standard UI is clean, refined, fast, and visually consistent, claims that few of Google's Android partners can make about their own custom skins. We did notice occasional signs of stutter just after turning the phone on or while performing tasks in the background, but even compared to Android 4.1 running on last year's Droid Razr Maxx HD, the difference is night-and-day.
Even Google and Motorola's additions to the operating system are visually consistent with the rest of Android's default icons and typefaces. Extra Settings menu items fit right in with the standard ones, and the quick setup wizards for Moto X-specific features like the active notifications and touchless controls resemble similar wizards elsewhere in Android. Unfortunately, one difference between stock Nexus-style Android and Android on the Moto X is the presence of carrier-preinstalled applications and services. As is typical, many of these can be disabled, but none of them can be totally uninstalled. The other added software features are much more useful.
Active notifications
Active notifications are designed to reduce the amount of time you need to spend unlocking and poking at your phone. Using the default settings, a very basic white-on-black interface will pop up to show you the current time and notifications that you've enabled. This screen, which is styled to match the phone's Android operating system but actually runs on the separate low-power "contextual computing" coprocessor, will show up every time you move the phone—pulling it out of your pocket, for example, or picking it up off of a table. If you see a notification you want to interact with, press down on the unlock icon and swipe up. If you just want to get to the standard Android lock screen, either swipe down or hit the phone's power button as you would on any other handset.
Active notifications work best for the kind of people who habitually pull their phones out just to see what time it is or if they've received any pressing e-mails or text messages (most apps that support notifications, like Twitter and Facebook, can use the active notifications feature with no extra modification from their developers as long as they've been enabled in the feature's settings menu). If that doesn't describe you, you might not get much out of the feature—all it really saves you is a single button press. I also found that the feature was a bit too eager to turn on. Bumping the table that the phone was on was usually enough to activate it.
Aside from the option to enable and disable active notifications for all of your installed applications, the feature comes with a few other settings you can use to tailor its functionality. For example, the default settings include an (adjustable) window between 11:00pm and 6:00am during which the phone won't show you active notifications. If you want more privacy, you can also hide notification details (things like the subject lines of the e-mails you're receiving) if you've protected your phone with a PIN or password lock, or you can disable the active notifications feature entirely.
Touchless control
The second of the Moto X's two coprocessors is for voice processing, and that's where the "touchless control" feature comes in. It takes the same Google Now-powered voice commands available on any Jelly Bean phone and lets you access it by saying "OK Google Now," Google Glass-style. Even when the phone is in standby, the low-power coprocessor is always listening for your voice. The phone will reliably spring to life as long as you speak clearly and it's only a few feet away from your face.
If you have your screen locked with any kind of password (I say "if," but under no circumstances should you be using a phone that isn't protected with a PIN or other password), the phone will turn on when you say "OK Google Now" and it will register the subsequent command that you give it. However, it will force you to input your password before processing the command. You can also disable the "launch when display is off" feature or just disable touchless control entirely. If you prefer convenience to security, you can turn on a "call when locked" feature that will allow you to make phone calls without unlocking the phone even if you're using a password, but this feature is off by default and we recommend that you keep it that way.
Google Now continues to be a capable personal assistant. It's pretty good at understanding and interpreting most of the things you say—the only things I consistently had trouble with were names that weren't stored somewhere in my contacts list. I was able to perform Google searches, find pizza places, and look up pictures of cats without issue, and SafeSearch will protect you from automatically seeing potentially objectionable images (as I found when I said "OK Google Now, show me pictures of butts"). The touchless controls are a logical extension of what Google Now already does, and we wouldn't be surprised to see the "OK Google Now" voice activation phrase introduced on other Android handsets in the near future, even if other hardware lacks the low-power coprocessor that makes the feature usable in standby mode.
Internals and performance: Good GPU, OK CPU
The short version: You need to know two things about the Moto X's "X8 computing system": it's a Snapdragon 600 with two CPU cores instead of four, and it comes with low-power coprocessors that drive the active notification and touchless control features. 802.11ac is a nice addition to the standard LTE and Bluetooth 4.0 connectivity options.
The long version: Google and Motorola will tell you that the Moto X (and the new Droid handsets) are powered by the "Motorola X8 computing system," which as we've discussed is a fancy and sort-of-misleading name for a combination of chips. Two of the X8's eight "cores" are the coprocessors that enable the software features we discussed in the previous section, and the rest of them are part of a Snapdragon system-on-chip (SoC) like the one you'd find in most high-end and midrange US smartphones.
The interesting thing about those coprocessors is that because they aren't actually part of the main SoC, Google says they can be paired with other chips in other devices. If the company wanted to enable active notifications and the rest on a cut-rate low-end phone or a beefy 10-inch tablet, there's apparently nothing in particular tying them to the Snapdragon that powers the Moto X. Expect more fun branding games if this implementation starts to catch on.
Moving on to that Snapdragon SoC, we don't have much to report that we didn't already cover in our Moto X performance preview. The chip is branded as an S4 Pro, a label that is becoming more ambiguous as it's applied to more SoCs (see also: the 2013 Nexus 7). The easiest way to explain the chip in the Moto X is to say that it's a Snapdragon 600 with two Krait 300-based CPU cores instead of four.
While there's less CPU power on tap here, the Adreno 320 GPU goes toe-to-toe with the version in the Snapdragon 600. This approach to processing power—a fast GPU combined with a "good enough" dual-core CPU—is the same one that Apple has taken with its A5 and A6 SoCs, and it keeps battery life relatively high while maintaining good graphics performance.
You'll miss those two CPU cores for processor-intensive tasks, but browsing and general performance are still very fast, and the Moto X proves itself to be a capable gamer. The CPU performance is actually very comparable to the A6 in the iPhone 5, and the GPU performance is quite a bit faster (though the Apple A6 is a year old at this point, and a new iPhone is expected soon). If you need the fastest phone, a Snapdragon 600 (or, soon, Snapdragon 800) phone will be the one you want, but Motorola is offering a more-than-acceptable amount of power here.
As for the rest of the internals, the Moto X is as good as any flagship smartphone: 2GB of RAM and 16 or 32GB of (non-expandable) storage are standard, as is Bluetooth 4.0 and LTE connectivity. 802.11ac Wi-Fi support is an unexpected but welcome surprise; the Galaxy S 4 and HTC One both offer it, but otherwise we're still seeing 5GHz 802.11n as the best available option in many phones, tablets, and laptops. The Moto X offers one bi-directional wireless stream, giving it a maximum theoretical throughput of 433Mbps.
One small issue that may or may not trip up early adopters: I consistently received error messages when trying to enable Bluetooth Internet tethering using the Verizon SIM provided with the review unit. Whether this is Motorola's or Verizon's fault is unclear, but others seem to be having the same problem.
Battery life
The Moto X uses a 2200 mAh battery that Motorola and Google say should be good for "up to 24 hours" in "mixed usage." Just what represents mixed usage is left to the imagination, but based on my usage, the phone will have to spend quite a bit of time turned off and in your pocket to achieve this number. Even in active usage, I didn't have trouble making it from morning to evening without needing to plug in, but the phone was usually down to 10 or 15 percent by the time I went to bed. I never needed that midday change that I sometimes take with my Nexus 4, but that "mixed use" figure isn't indicative of what you'll get if you're using the phone regularly throughout the day.
In continuous usage with the phone set to 50 percent brightness and the auto-brightness sensor turned off, the phone played this relaxing video of a waterfall for about nine hours and 30 minutes, which compares favorably to the seven hours we got from the Google Play edition of the HTC One and the seven hours and 32 minutes we got from the Nexus 4 running Android 4.3.
Not the king of the hill, but worth a long, hard look
After two weeks of use, I've come to like the Moto X. I don't understand any assessment of the phone that calls it some kind of game-changer, but it's a very amiable, approachable handset. It feels good to hold and use, and the active notifications in particular are something I'll miss when I go back to my iPhone 4S. It doesn't offer all the specs of its contemporaries, but the Moto X is worthy of consideration because it's a decently sized, mostly well-built phone with a few useful tweaks. It's also only a point release away from being Nexus-style stock Android. We suspect this will appeal to Verizon customers in particular, who can use neither the Nexus 4 nor either of the Google Play edition phones on their network of choice (the Moto X can't beat any of those phones in the spec race, but it will run circles around that old Verizon Galaxy Nexus you're carrying).
One of my initial criticisms of the phone still stands, even if the rest of the phone manages to hit that elusive "good enough" target: the price. Motorola will sell you a Moto X for the same price as a Galaxy S 4 or HTC One, big-name phones with a sizable leg-up in specifications. We mention the specifications not because every consumer on the planet needs a 1080p display and a top-of-the-line quad-core CPU, but because Motorola and Google aren't really passing any savings on to the consumer. I've seen it argued that the phone's much-ballyhooed made-in-the-USA label is contributing somewhat to that inflated cost, but there's no concrete data that can confirm or dispute that stance.
In any event, Motorola has built a smartphone that seems well-attuned to the things that normal people want and need, but they haven't given it a price to match. It's true that Apple sells the similarly specced iPhone 5 at the same price, but the fact of the matter is that even under Google's aegis, Motorola doesn't have the brand strength or consumer goodwill that Apple does (I can't think of another company that could move 31.2 million phones this late in their flagship's life cycle). In an ideal world, Google and Motorola would upend the US smartphone market with Nexus-esque off-contract pricing somewhere between $300 and $400 unlocked. More realistically, it wouldn't be unreasonable to sell this phone for $99 on-contract instead of $199.
If you're in the market for a new Android phone right now, we would still ask you to consider a Galaxy S 4, HTC One, or even a cheaper phone like the Galaxy S III before we'd recommend the Moto X. However, as a beginning, as the first step in somelonger journey, Google and Motorola's first "true" joint effort is intriguing. It's a confident step forward. It makes me interested to see where Motorola will be a year from now, and that's something I haven't said in a while.
The good
A flagship Android handset that isn't allergic to one-handed use
Mostly solid build quality with a plethora of color options
Good-enough 720p AMOLED screen, improved somewhat by its lack of PenTile
Great graphics performance, respectable CPU performance
Near-stock Android, if that's what you're into
Active notifications and touchless controls are both genuinely useful additions
Good battery life
802.11ac
The bad
Average camera that's very susceptible to smudges
AMOLED still has issues with color accuracy and white balance
This isn't a Nexus—you'll have to deal with carrier-preinstalled apps, and updates will probably have to jump through most of the same hoops that they would on a non-Google phone
The ugly
Google and Motorola are using a lesser SoC and a lower-resolution screen, but they're not passing those savings on to you