Motorola Moto X4: 4th Gen. Android smartphone

Bangalore: The Motorola Moto X4 Android One is made for Project Fi, a wireless service from Google. All your calls, texts, and data on one simple—and smart—plan. Your Fi phone automatically finds you the best signal, and when you travel abroad, you’ll enjoy high-speed data at the same rate you pay at home.

https://twitter.com/LouieChanHK/status/924979349610041344

Motorola Moto X4 smartphone was launched in September 2017. The phone comes with a 5.20-inch touchscreen display with a resolution of 1080 pixels by 1920 pixels at a PPI of 424 pixels per inch.

The Motorola Moto X4 is powered by 2.2GHz octa-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 630 processor and it comes with 3GB of RAM. The phone packs 32GB of internal storage that can be expanded up to 200GB via a microSD card. As far as the cameras are concerned, the Motorola Moto X4 packs a 12-megapixel primary camera on the rear and a 16-megapixel front shooter for selfies.

The Motorola Moto X4 runs Android 7.1.1 and is powered by a 3000mAh non removable battery. It measures 148.35 x 73.40 x 7.99 (height x width x thickness) and weigh 163.00 grams.

Key Specifications:

The Motorola Moto X4 is a single SIM (GSM) smartphone that accepts a Nano-SIM. Connectivity options include Wi-Fi, GPS, Bluetooth, NFC, Headphones, FM, 3G and 4G. Sensors on the phone include Proximity sensor, Accelerometer and Ambient light sensor. Available in Indian Market in two colours.

Moto’s days of bamboo and dazzling colors are long gone. Metal and glass are de rigeur on high-end phones, so of course the newest Moto X is covered in both, front-to-back, and comes in any color you want so long as it’s black or silver. Like a Samsung Galaxy phone, the glass on the back tapers in at the edges, making it easier on your palms.

The glass also makes it incredibly slippery, fingerprint-prone, and breakable, but no more than any other iPhone-like device out there. My review unit has already picked up minor scratches so I recommend investing in a case, like this one from Spigen.

The brushed metal edges smoothly curve around the phone’s corners with care. Aside from the USB-C port, its curves are only broken up by the pop-out tray (it holds the MicroSD card and SIM) up top, a headphone jack on the bottom, and the three buttons on the right side for volume and power. Onscreen navigation buttons are present, but savvy users can save reclaim screen space by enabling sliding gestures on the iPhone-like fingerprint sensor under the display.