Qualcomm 800 floodgates open as Moto X loses its edge

One of the most engaging bits of technology unveiled this year with the Motorola-made Moto X was Touchless Control, allowing users to say, “OK Google Now” to begin a query with the device. This service is always listening for the voice of the person with which it’s tied, and can be activated even when the […]

DROID Ultra Review

Motorola Mobility scored big when they teamed up with Google. If it wasn’t evident enough in the Moto X, then certainly Motorola’s newly optimized experience is ready to shine in the DROID Ultra, the first of three devices coming from Verizon in their newest exclusive brand lineup. If the DROID RAZR HD took the original […]

DROID Ultra vs Moto X: anything you can do, I can do better

This week the DROID Ultra hits the review bench at SlashGear, bringing with it a full understanding of how closely it’ll be resembling the Moto X in features that – surprise – Google and Motorola implemented on the whole family. What we’ve seen thus far is a device that’s only ever-so-slightly pulled in to the […]

Verizon Droid Ultra And Droid Maxx Release Apparently Delayed

Verizon Droid Ultra And Droid Maxx Release Apparently Delayed

A few weeks ago Verizon’s all new Droid lineup was announced, the smartphones are manufactured by Motorola and are now exclusive to the Big Red. Verizon said that it would release both devices on August 20th. It appears that there is a delay in the release of both Droid Ultra and Droid Maxx smartphones. The carrier’s website indicates that the smartphones will be shipped “by August 27th.” Verizon hasn’t officially confirmed the reason behind this apparent one week delay.

The new Droid lineup actually has three models, the Droid Ultra Mini being the entry level offering. Verizon said that it would be released on August 29th and right now there appears to be no delay. As previously mentioned, it is not immediately clear what’s causing the delay for Droid Ultra and Droid Maxx. Verizon is expected to launch a couple of other premium Android smartphones in the last few days of August. The Verizon Moto X is expected to be released on or shortly after August 23rd, the same goes for HTC One as well. No official release date has been provided as yet for these two smartphones, so it can’t be said right now if a similar delay will be experienced by HTC One and Moto X on Verizon. If and when Verizon makes an official statement regarding this, we’ll update you right away.

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  • Verizon Droid Ultra And Droid Maxx Release Apparently Delayed original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    Motorola Droid ULTRA, Droid MINI And Droid MAXX Revealed

    So you have been on the lookout for a new bunch of smartphones from Motorola, and your journey has thus led you to these three which were just announced earlier today – the Motorola Droid ULTRA, Droid MINI and Droid […]

    Like It , +1 , Tweet It , Pin It Original content from Ubergizmo.

        

    Moto X Android software features confirmed by DROID lineup

    If you’re anxiously anticipating the release of Motorola’s common hero smartphone Moto X and like the idea of confirming specifications before the device itself is revealed in full, today is your lucky day. What we’ve seen today in the reveal of three new Motorola smartphones with DROID branding for Verizon is the re-appearance of a few features that’d previously been tipped for the Moto X. They’ll carry ever-so-slightly different user interfaces, but will they keep the same Android-deep features?

    imaga

    Gesture to Launch Camera

    As we saw in a leaked video earlier this month and as indicated by Motorola’s own Dennis Woodside back in May, Moto X will be able to detect when you take it out of your pocket, then will be able to activate its built-in camera with a flick of your wrist.

    “The [Moto X] knows when it is in my pocket, it knows when I take it out of my pocket. I might want to do something, I might want to take a picture, so it fires up the camera.” Dennis Woodside for Motorola

    flicker

    Today Verizon’s new DROID line hints at a similar bit of functionality. They suggest that you’ll be able to “quickly launch the 10-megapixel camera with a simple gesture”, just the same. This indicates that there are two possibilities, the first being Google adding this flick feature to Android itself, therefor moving it to their Nexus line not too far into the future. The second possibility is that this feature will be Motorola’s own, and will only appear on Motorola smartphone (until hacking can commence.)

    Camera Interface

    This morning we saw a leak of what was called a Moto X camera interface. There we saw what very well could appear on a Nexus device and not look out of place in the least. Many of these same images appeared on-screen at this week’s Verizon event introducing the phones, shown as Motorola’s new UI for cameras on all devices.

    Screen-Shot-2013-07-23-at-11.38.40-AM-568x500

    camera

    It’s shown again on Verizon’s purchase page for the DROID MINI in short. They’ve also reminded us there that the device “helps you take better photos in low-light environments” – that kind of power comes from the device’s processor, but it’s very possible the same claims will be made of the Moto X.

    Always On Voice Commands

    Back in June of 2013, Qualcomm (with LG) revealed that they’d be bringing on “Always On Voice Commands” in their next-generation processing architecture. We’ve heard from Qualcomm earlier in the year that the Qualcomm Snapdragon 800 brought this ability natively, then we heard about Android’s Open Mic.

    goodmorning

    It was leaked as part of the hands-on video shown earlier this month of the Moto X, and here once again we’re seeing the exact same user interface appearing on the new DROID lineup.

    “When Droid Mini is on, it’s ready. Command this smartphone without touching it, even when it’s asleep. Use voice commands to get directions or open a Mobile Hotspot.” – Verizon

    So don’t expect that bit of functionality to be limited to Moto X, not by any measure. Instead we may very well see not one whole heck of a lot of Motorola-centric software appearing on the Moto X when it’s formally revealed on August 1st at all. Not unless Google has something up their sleeves for reveal tomorrow morning!

    fb

    And don’t forget that fancy super-minimal notifications screen while the device is sleeping, either.

    “The low-power notification system displays alerts so you can avoid constantly waking your phone.” – Verizon

    We’re to understand that Motorola has formulated a way to only light up a portion of the display to show these notes, saving energy as they do so. Stay tuned!

    notes


    Moto X Android software features confirmed by DROID lineup is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
    © 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.

    DROID Ultra official aside battery boosted MAXX

    This week the folks at Verizon have revealed the full new wave of DROID devices starting with the DROID Ultra. This device will be delivered alongside a MAXX version, complete with the same set of specifications save a much larger battery. These two devices will be joined by a smaller handset called DROID Mini, each of these devices coming forth to replace last year’s DROID RAZR family.

    droidultra

    The DROID Ultra will be appearing with a rather thin at just 7.18mm while the larger comes in at 8.5mm, the both of them working with full Kevlar backs. These machines work with Google’s Ingress game built-in, a sure sign that the company’s ownership is coming in full tune.

    Screen Shot 2013-07-23 at 12.52.31 PM

    UPDATE: Oddly enough, these devices are not working with 1080p displays. Instead they’ll both be 5-inch, 720p displays, mimicking the resolution of last year’s displays on slightly larger panels.

    Both machines will be working with a brand new Motorola X8 SoC. This is a rather unique move by the company, bringing on their own processing architecture for the full set of machines – certainly set to put the full DROID line on a different road from the Moto X.

    fdds

    Motorola suggest that both machines work with a 24-percent increase in CPU speed as a result of this new processor, along with a 100% increase in GPU speed. That’s over last year’s DROID RAZR offerings with the Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 dual-core processors in place, of course – so with quad-core we’d certainly hope for such a jump.

    Both machines work with a 10-megapixel camera at their back complete with f2.4 lens, and both work with capacitive buttons at their base, believe it or not!


    DROID Ultra official aside battery boosted MAXX is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
    © 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.

    Verizon Reveals The $99 Motorola Droid Mini, $199 Droid Ultra, And The $299 Droid Maxx

    droid-trio

    As if we didn’t already have enough Motorola phones to wait for, Verizon showed off a trio of new Motorola DROID smartphones at a (surprisingly cozy) event in New York City.

    The flagship of the three is the DROID Ultra, which Motorola’s Rick Osterloh refers to as the thinnest 4G LTE smartphone out there with its and 7.18mm thick chassis. Motorola’s fascination with Kevlar is still in effect on the device’s rear (though the finish is glossy as opposed to matte like it usually is), and a 5-inch 720p display occupies most of the space on the device’s front.

    Motorola is continuing the Maxx line of power-conscious devices — it’s functionally the same phone as the Ultra except it’s a little fatter at 8.5mm, a features a sealed battery capable of up to 48 hours of continued usage. Last (and certainly not least) is the DROID Mini, a slightly smaller take on the Ultra formula that’s eschews that giant 5-inch screen for a more manageable 4.3-inch 720p screen.

    Putting industrial design aside though, perhaps the most interesting thing tucked away inside these new DROIDs is what Motorola calls its X8 mobile computing system — it’s a eight-core system that encompasses the dual-core CPU and uses additional cores to allocate computing power to graphics processing, language processing, and the like. The X8 system also enables touchless control for the device so users can make phone calls and ask for directions hands-free, and active display, which lights up just a portion of the screen to display notifications . Sound familiar? It should — those features were also prominently highlighted in a leaked Rogers demo video for the Moto X.

    If those monikers seem to be missing a little something, you’d be right — that RAZR label that graced the nearly all the Motorola devices released on Verizon in the past year is gone. It’s DROID all the way now, and I have to wonder if Motorola is retiring one of its most famous mobile brands because it’s looking to reinvent itself with another release later this summer. Speaking of the summer, all three devices will officially go on sale on August 20: the Mini, Ultra, and Maxx will cost $99, $199, and $299 respectively with a 2-year contract.

    We’re still waiting on confirmation from Motorola and Verizon on specs, but the representatives on have said they’re just not talking about them today. That is, for lack of a better term, pretty damned stupid. Overall Motorola is being very cagey about the hardware details, and about specifics around the X8 and its origins (though it seems to be based on a Qualcomm MSM8960 Pro), which is an odd way to launch a product.

    Hands On (the TL;DR version)

    I got plenty of hands on time with the new Droids and wrote about them at length, but here’s a truncated version in case you need some more meat.

    Meet The Mini





    First up is the Droid Mini, the smallest of the bunch. I was a bit of a sucker for the RAZR M, Motorola’s original pint-sized Droid — the package was quite handsome with its nearly edge-to-edge display and its tiny frame, but was it was no top-tier device when it came to performance. Motorola thankfully didn’t repeat its earlier mistake, as the Mini seems awfully snappy. Colors on the 4.3-inch OLED display running at 720p were bright without being lurid, and it’s a nice, dense little thing to hold on to. It’s not perfect though — the glossy Kevlar finish that Motorola ran with feels a little off-putting and picks up fingerprints like crazy, a trait it sadly shares with its flagship brother.






    The Underwhelming Ultra?

    Speaking of the flagship, Motorola apparently focused on making it very thin, and they succeeded — it’s a scant 7.11mm thick, and sports a 5-inch 720p OLED screen. Fortunately, the Ultra has some nice heft to it, which helps give the whole package a more premium feel compared to other top-tier smartphones (I’m looking at you Galaxy S4).

    To be quite honest, the Ultra is the hardest of the three to write about. Motorola seemed to make the Ultra the foundation that the other two Droids work off of — the Mini is the more pocketable Ultra, and the Maxx is the Ultra with a much better battery — and because of that the Ultra wound up being the least interesting of the three.

    And then there’s the Maxx






    The most impressive device I mucked around with today was the DROID Maxx, for perhaps obvious reasons. Back in the day, the Maxx was always the chunky, more utilitarian version of whatever slim smartphone Motorola was touting at the time. Now it’s gotten to the point where it’s just not much larger than any other hot-selling smartphone out there. It’s great that the Ultra is so slim, but the Maxx is so much less of a lump than it used to be that it’s actually a little surprising.

    Let’s put that in perspective a bit — my iPhone 5 usually lives inside a very slim case (this one, if you care), and it fits in my pocket as well as you would expect. The Maxx, with its ridiculous 3,300mAh battery, is just about as thick as that iPhone.

    Yes, it may seem like a minor thing to get worked up over, but think about it. Companies like HTC and Samsung and Sony like to push the envelope in terms of raw computing power and graphical performance, and one could argue that they’re just trying to give some consumers what they want. But where’s the value in that for the companies who make the devices? It’s mostly in marketing. You get to crow about having the world’s [insert superlative here] phone for a few months until someone else one-ups you. But batteries are different — if smartphone companies started duking it out on battery life instead of screaming clock speeds all the time, we’d finally start getting phones that can keep up with all the seriously crazy things we ask of them.

    Verizon NYC Droid event liveblog

    Verizon NYC Droid event liveblog

    It may not be the much-hyped Moto X unveiling, but today’s Verizon press event will likely bring some big announcements of its own. It’s been nearly a year since Motorola unveiled its trio of Razr handsets for the carrier, and it’s all but certain that the company has at least a phone or two in store for us today. Will we finally get acquainted with the Droid Ultra, not to mention a Droid Maxx variant? Heck, rumors say there’s also a Droid Mini on the way. Stay tuned as we bring you the latest from Verizon’s event in Lincoln Center!

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    Verizon’s NYC Droid event is today at noon ET, get your liveblog here!

    It’s been nearly a year since Motorola unveiled a trio of Droid Razr handsets, but all signs point to a new lineup at Verizon’s NYC event today. Will we get a look at the much-rumored Droid Ultra, not to mention an updated version of the long-lasting Droid Razr Maxx? Whatever today’s press conference has in store, one thing seems pretty clear: Motorola’s gearing up for a change in its handset nomenclature, and you’ll want to tune in to see what’s in store. We’ll be liveblogging the carrier’s announcements starting at noon ET — hit up this link to follow along!

    July 23, 2013 12:00:00 PM EDT

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