Jumat, 07 Februari 2020

Motorola Razr fails folding durability test earlier than expected - PhoneArena

How many times do we check our phones on an everyday basis? Most of us check pretty regularly, to see if we’ve received some notification or maybe someone has given us a like on our new Instagram photo… A study by global tech protection and support company Asurion, performed in 2017, shows that Americans check their phones on average around 80 times a day. 


Let’s say you are planning to buy the new Motorola Razr and you are interested to know if its quirky design can handle our everyday usage. CNET has decided to perform a durability test on the Razr’s folding mechanism to check the lifespan of its moving parts for us. The test was executed using a machine called FoldBot, designed by SquareTrade, which automatically folds the phone and opens it again. Last year, the same test was performed on the Samsung Galaxy Fold, which lasted 119,380 folds on the machine. So, how did the Moto Razr do?The FoldBot machine, initially calibrated for the Galaxy Fold, was redesigned for the Motorola Razr and CNET started a livestream yesterday with the goal of reaching 100,000 folds on it. Unfortunately, at 27,000 folds, the livestream hosts noticed that the machine was experiencing some resistance from the mechanism of the phone. Apparently, the hinge was making noises and resisting the fold. Additionally, when closed, the Razr also seemed slightly uneven. However, the screen still looked unchanged and worked well.

During the same durability test, the Galaxy Fold’s screen broke in the end, but only after lasting 119,380 folds on the machine (to be precise, 14 hours of constant folding and opening had done it for the Galaxy Fold). That being said, it’s important to also mention that the test was slightly different for the two devices, as the machine adapted for the Razr folded it only halfway through, while the Galaxy Fold was closed all the way through every time.

Okay, but what does this mean in real life? Given the fact that the machine folded the Razr halfway through and that the data from the 2017 reports that Americans are checking their phone around 80 times a day, that means the Razr could eventually show some problems after around a year. It’s important to note that, according to CNET, the testing machine might not have been configured optimally for the test. Also, the machine does the folding quite quickly, when in reality, people don’t usually walk around abusing their phones like that.

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2020-02-07 11:13:00Z
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The straight line from Google Maps to Clearview AI - The Verge

Few apps made by a Big Tech company have improved more over the years than Google Maps. When it launched in 2005, it was a moderately better alternative to AOL’s MapQuest. With the rise of smartphones, it became truly essential to the lives of millions — upending incumbents whose entire business had been selling expensive, subscription-based in-car navigation systems. And with each passing year it improves: offering advice about when to change lanes, rerouting you to avoid traffic, and even telling you which exit to take when climbing out of the New York subway. Today is its 15th birthday.

It’s a happy story in a relatively dark time for consumer tech, so it makes sense that Google would want to celebrate. The company marked the occasion with a lightly refreshed design, including a good-looking new pin-shaped logo. It also sat for a portrait in Wired, where Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai took a victory lap with Lauren Goode and Boone Ashworth:

“Overall, I think computing should work in a way where it’s much more intuitive to the way people live and not the other way around,” Pichai says. “AR and Maps is really in the sweet spot of that, because as humans we’re walking around the world, perceiving a lot, trying to understand a lot.” Pichai says he sees a future in which Maps users are walking around and an AR layer of information is popping up in Maps, showing them vegetarian menu options at nearby restaurants.

That doesn’t mean AR in Google Maps works like magic now—or will in the near future. “We talk about the double-edge sword of AR,” says Alex Komoroske, director of product management at Maps. “If you get it exactly right, it’s extremely intuitive. But if we get it wrong, it is actively confusing. It’s worse than showing nothing.”

People walking around and finding themselves subject to ubiquitous computing — whether they like it or not — is a subject that has been in the news constantly of late, as we debate the rise of for-profit facial recognition and tools like Clearview AI. It’s a story that, to my mind, starts with the rise of Google Maps.

But first, a bit of history.

“Worse than showing nothing” is what Google Maps was accused of a decade ago in Germany, where in the aftermath of the Nazi regime, privacy-conscious Germans objected to the latest feature added to the app in the name of progress: Street View, which took photos of everyone’s homes and allows anyone to browse them at their leisure. In response to criticism, then-Google CEO Eric Schmidt famously suggested that people angry about the loss of privacy should simply move. (To where?!) Angry Germans sued, but ultimately lost. The courts ruled that, because the photos had been taken from a public road, and people could opt out of having their homes shown, their privacy had not been violated.

Of course, one reason that people object to these massive data-collection schemes is that they almost always gather more data than even their creators intend. Street View cars, for example, connected to unsecured Wi-Fi networks as they made their rounds between 2008 and 2010 — and when they did, slurped up “snippets of e-mails, photographs, passwords, chat messages, [and] postings on websites and social networks,” according to a 2012 story in the New York Times.

Google said it had all been a mistake and apologized, and Germany fined just shy of the maximum for a data privacy breach on that scale: a hilarious 145,000 euros. (I am not leaving out any zeroes on accident there.) In the intervening years, like most data privacy scandals, it has been more or less forgotten.

Still, the case feels freshly relevant in light of the past month’s news about Clearview AI. Like Google in 2008, Clearview slurps up public data — in this case, photos of people posted publicly on the internet — to build a for-profit tool without the permission of anyone involved.

In fact, much of the news in the past week has been companies (including Google!) leaping up to insist that Clearview does not have permission to build its Google-for-faces tool, which the company says it sells only to law enforcement. Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, and Venmo have sent similar cease-and-desist letters.

No one seems terribly confident those letters will be effective, though. Last year, another for-profit company that LinkedIn sued for scraping its public content won its case. There are arguably some good reasons about that — the ability to scrape public sites is good for journalists and academics, for example.

Still, for all the reasons Kashmir Hill laid out in her initial profile of Clearview, the implications of a tool that immediately associates any face with a name are chilling to contemplate: stalking, blackmail, targeting protesters and dissidents, and so on. On Wednesday, BuzzFeed reported that the company is selling the technology to authoritarian regimes. (Even Schmidt, who had suggested that people move to avoid his fleet of Street View cars, said Google would never build a facial recognition database.)

The uses and potential misuses of Clearview’s technology strike me as plainly dangerous in a way that Street View never did. Google offered you a view of an address you could have visited yourself, and — critically — allowed homeowners to opt out of the program, blurring the view of their houses. Like other Google Maps features, it was conceived as a tool for helping people get around — not to empower the prison-industrial complex.

Still, for everything Google Maps did right — and I am a highly satisfied customer — it also heralded a new era in networked photography. You cannot make a previously unseen world visible without making it, at least in some ways, less secure. Look at the once-sleepy neighborhoods transformed into clogged wrecks the moment that Google Maps (through its acquisition of Waze) gained visibility into traffic patterns, and began rerouting the world in the name of efficiency. Once again, making something easier to see made a large group of people feel less safe.

On the whole, at least for me, I’d say it has been a good bargain. But as Maps turns 15, it seems worth noting that there’s a straight line from Street View to Clearview. We’re beginning to understand in America what Germans knew a decade ago — that whatever miracles technology can provide must always be weighed against the value of simply being left alone.

The Ratio

Today in news that could affect public perception of the big tech platforms.

Trending up: Google has quietly been conducting a five-year study on how to get employees to eat healthier — and so far, it appears to be working. The strategies include making plates slightly smaller, putting vegetables first in the buffet line, and funding a new curriculum at the Culinary Institute of America focused on making vegetables taste better.

Governing

Trump’s re-election campaign plans to spend more than $1 billion to ensure he gets a second term. Helping to spread his message is a vast array of partisan media, outside political groups, and enterprising freelance operatives. These pro-Trump forces are poised to wage what could be the most extensive disinformation campaign in US history. Here’s McKay Coppins at The Atlantic:

After the 2016 election, much was made of the threats posed to American democracy by foreign disinformation. Stories of Russian troll farms and Macedonian fake-news mills loomed in the national imagination. But while these shadowy outside forces preoccupied politicians and journalists, Trump and his domestic allies were beginning to adopt the same tactics of information warfare that have kept the world’s demagogues and strongmen in power.

Every presidential campaign sees its share of spin and misdirection, but this year’s contest promises to be different. In conversations with political strategists and other experts, a dystopian picture of the general election comes into view—one shaped by coordinated bot attacks, Potemkin local-news sites, micro-targeted fearmongering, and anonymous mass texting. Both parties will have these tools at their disposal. But in the hands of a president who lies constantly, who traffics in conspiracy theories, and who readily manipulates the levers of government for his own gain, their potential to wreak havoc is enormous.

Trump is the third president to be impeached, but he’s the first to go through the process in the social media era. This shift changed everything about how Americans understood the developments in the trial. (Cat Zakrzewski / The Washington Post)

Nevada’s Democratic Party is scrambling to figure out a better way to report results, after ditching plans to use an app like the cursed one that upended Iowa’s contest. The Nevada caucus is just about two weeks away. (Emily Glazer and Dustin Volz / The Wall Street Journal)

Vice’s Motherboard published the APK for The App that ruined the Iowa caucus. “Trust and transparency are core to the U.S. electoral process. That’s why Motherboard is publishing the app that malfunctioned in Iowa,” they said. (Jason Koebler / Vice)

Internet trolls deliberately disrupted the Iowa caucus hotline with numerous prank calls while officials were trying to report results. The prank callers included a number of Trump supporters. (Ben Collins, Maura Barrett and Vaughn Hillyard / NBC)

The Congressional investigation into Big Tech is putting pressure on the country’s top two antitrust enforcement agencies — the Federal Trade Commission and the Department of Justice — which have historically been slow to act. Last summer, after Congress announced its probe, both agencies made similar announcements. (Jason Del Rey / Recode)

Child welfare advocates attacked Facebook’s plans to encrypt its messaging apps, saying it would allow child predators to operate with impunity on the company’s platforms. So far, the tech giant isn’t backing down. (Katie Benner and Mike Isaac / The New York Times)

The announcement of a second proposed California privacy law, the California Privacy Rights Act, set off a fresh wave of lobbying efforts from privacy advocates and executives at Google and Facebook. Many provisions within the new law are a direct result of these efforts. (Issie Lapowsky / Protocol)

European Union antitrust investigators are ramping up the investigation into Facebook’s data practices. They’re now looking for documents related to how the company allegedly leveraged access to user data to stifle competition. (Sam Schechner, Emily Glazer and Valentina Pop / The Wall Street Journal)

Industry

Two more content moderators — these ones working for Facebook through Cognizant — filed a class-action suit against the company on Wednesday. They worked at the Tampa site I profiled for The Verge last year. (Found out today that my piece on the Tampa site is a finalist for a National Magazine Award, by the way!) Here’s Kavitha Surana in the Tampa Bay Times:

The two filed a class-action lawsuit against Facebook and Cognizant on Wednesday, alleging the companies made content moderators work under dangerous conditions that caused debilitating physical and psychological harm and did little to help them cope with the traumas they suffered as a result. Jeudy also has filed a discrimination charge against Cognizant with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

The lawsuit says the two companies ignored the very safety standards they helped create. It also alleges that Facebook’s outsourcing relationship with Cognizant is a way for the social media giant to avoid accountability for the mental health issues that result from moderating graphic content on the platform.

A leaked document shows TikTok waited to report a livestreamed suicide on its app in order to get its PR strategy in place. The company’s goal was to make sure the video didn’t go viral. That’s ... not terrible. But waiting three hours to call the police sure is. Paulo Victor Ribeiro at The Intercept reports:

In the statement for users, TikTok said that it was “extremely sad about this tragedy” and guaranteed that its top priority was to “foster a secure and positive environment on the application.” The company wrote, “We have measures in place to protect users from misusing the app, including simple mechanisms that allow you to report content that violates our terms of use.” Insofar as these mechanisms exist, however, they had clearly not worked as well as advertised. [...]

According to the ByteDance source, TikTok’s chief of operations in Brazil and Latin America advised employees of the Brazilian office not to say anything about what had occurred. “Her orders were clear: ‘Don’t let it go viral,’” the source told me.

Twitter reported $1.01 billion in revenue for last quarter, thanks to strong advertising sales. It’s the first time the company’s revenue has broken the billion-dollar mark. Daily users were up, too, likely because of how good your tweets are. (Ingrid Lunden / TechCrunch)

Shoddy coronavirus studies keep going viral on social media. Some are coming from scientists who are rapidly posting findings about the outbreak without properly vetting the claims. Boo! (Stephanie M. Lee / BuzzFeed)

Pornhub hosts hundreds of explicit videos featuring footage of women who were not aware how the content will be used. The website’s solution to stop these videos from spreading is to fingerprint the videos after someone requests that they be taken down. This investigation shows how often this system fails. (Samantha Cole and Emanuel Maiberg / Vice)

And finally...

‘Emoji jacket’ can help cyclists communicate their never-ending rage to drivers

Cycling is dangerous, but emoji are cute. So naturally:

Here comes Ford with a novel solution: an emoji jacket. As part of its “Share the Road” campaign to improve cycling safety, the automaker’s European division designed a cycling jacket with an LED display on the back that lights up with various emoji to convey the cyclist’s mood. A smiley face indicates a happy cyclist, a frowny face a less happy one, and so on. There are also directional symbols for when a cyclist intends to make a turn and a hazard symbol when they may be experiencing a flat tire.

I want one and I don’t even bike!

Talk to us

Send us tips, comments, questions, and Google Maps directions: casey@theverge.com and zoe@theverge.com.

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2020-02-07 11:00:00Z
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Motorola Razr's hinge 'broke' after 27,000 folds in durability test - Engadget

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Chris Velazco/Engadget

Since foldable phones are still far from common, a lot of potential buyers want to know how durable they are before shelling out money for one -- especially because the available models are far from cheap. CNET has put the new Motorola Razr to the test by folding it repeatedly for thousands of times using a machine called Foldbot made by SquareTrade. The result? Its hinge started acting wonky by around 27,000 folds. To note, a 2017 study found that Americans check their phones 80 times a day. That means the Razr could start showing problems within a year.

Last year, CNET conducted the same test on the Samsung Galaxy Fold, which lasted for 14 hours (119,380 folds) on the machine. The Foldbot was actually designed to test Samsung's device, but the publication had it modified for the Razr, with the goal of reaching 100,000 folds. However, the hosts of the livestream had to cut the testing short when the phone's hinge started making noises and showing resistance after almost four hours. It also looked uneven and out of alignment when the phone is closed.

That said, the Razr's screen still worked and looked just fine even after its hinge started giving out. The Galaxy Fold's screen broke by the end of its test, but then again, it lasted much longer and the machine was calibrated to fold it all the way through each time. For Razr's test, the machine only folded the device halfway.

You can check out the highlights from CNET's four-hour livestream below:

Source: CNET (YouTube)
In this article: CNET, gear, mobile, motorola, Razr
All products recommended by Engadget are selected by our editorial team, independent of our parent company. Some of our stories include affiliate links. If you buy something through one of these links, we may earn an affiliate commission.
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2020-02-07 07:34:40Z
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Kamis, 06 Februari 2020

YouTube Music may soon get one of Google Play Music’s best features - The Verge

In 2018, Google executive T. Jay Fowler confirmed on Twitter that the company planned to migrate Google Play Music subscriber catalogs, playlists, and preferences over to YouTube Music, which at the time it had just re-relaunched as its own paid streaming service with Fowler at the helm. A few months shy of two years later, 9to5Google reports that Google has developed an internal beta version of YouTube Music that may add at least some of this long-awaited functionality.

Specifically, 9to5Google says the new version adds support for user-uploaded music — one of the best features of Google Play Music. It might not sound exciting to everyone, but humor me for a moment. Music streaming services have almost everything you might imagine listening to in the cloud. But a user-uploaded music feature is great to have in those rare instances when a particular artist or album isn’t available to stream. Being able to upload files yourself without having to use a different music app is wonderful.

There’s no indication as to whether this internal version of YouTube Music also includes playlist and preference migration, as was promised in 2018. The Verge has reached out to Google for comment on this development.

Google originally told The Verge it planned to transition Play Music subscribers to YouTube Music in 2019. That obviously didn’t happen, but this may be a sign that 2020 could be the year when YouTube Music absorbs more of its Google predecessor and becomes a serious music streaming service.

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2020-02-06 22:59:26Z
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How to mute notifications and block ‘heavy’ ads in the latest version of Chrome - The Verge

Google is in the process of rolling out the official build of Chrome 80, its latest version, and while most of the upgrades are behind the scenes, there are a couple of features that can make surfing just a little better, and that can be enabled manually. One of these will let you avoid all those annoying drop-down requests from websites asking you if you want to allow notifications, and the other will make your online travels just a bit faster by eliminating too-large ads.

First, make sure you have version 80 of Chrome.

  • Click the three-dot icon at the top right and select “Help” > “About Google Chrome.”
  • If the version of Chrome listed is 79, then hit the button that will manually update. After a minute or two, you should have updated to version 80.

Quieter messaging

If, like me, you really hate those pop-up windows in new sites that urge you to permit notifications, there is now a way to make them less intrusive (without having to shut off all notifications completely).

According to 9to5Google, you can now arrange to instead get a quiet prompt on the bottom of the screen informing you that a notification has been blocked (along with a small bubble on top that lets you allow the notification if you want to). Google will apparently roll this feature out automatically for users who repeatedly refuse notifications. However, if you don’t want to wait, there’s a way to activate it manually.

  • First, send your browser to chrome://flags/#quiet-notification-prompts. You’ll see a feature called “Quieter notification permission prompts.” Enable it, and restart your browser.
  • Click on the three-dot menu in the upper right corner and then go to “Settings” > “Advanced” > “Privacy and Security” > “Site Settings” > “Notifications.”
  • Where previously there was just a toggle to turn notifications on and off, you’ll now also find a toggle labeled “Use quieter messaging (blocks notification prompts from interrupting you).” Turn the toggle on, and you’re done.

Heavy Ad Intervention

While Google is not about to wipe ads off its browser, it is making some strides to rein in the more intrusive. A new feature called Heavy Ad Intervention will block any ads that take up too many system resources (although the company is not clear on what “too many” consists of).

To enable this feature:

  • In the address field, enter chrome://flags/#enable-heavy-ad-intervention.
  • Click on the button to the right of “Heavy Ad Intervention” and switch it to “Enabled.” Restart your browser.

This is a difficult feature to test, since it’s hard to say which or how many ads will actually be blocked. But if only a few of the most performance-consuming advertisements are eliminated, it can’t be anything but an improvement.

Vox Media has affiliate partnerships. These do not influence editorial content, though Vox Media may earn commissions for products purchased via affiliate links. For more information, see our ethics policy.

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2020-02-06 21:56:42Z
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The Best Updates in Google Maps' 15th-Anniversary Redesign - Lifehacker

Screenshot: David Murphy (Google)

In celebration of Google Maps’ 15th birthday, Google is updating the service with a new logo and icon, and it’s rolling out several new features for the app. Here’s everything included in the big update.

New and redesigned tabs

Image: Google
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The biggest change in the new Google Maps is its updated UI. The app’s various features and pages have been organized into five new tabs that line the bottom of the app screen. Here’s what each one does:

  • Explore: Offers reviews and recommendations for nearby restaurants, activities, and attractions.
  • Commute: Gives directions to a location, travel time estimates, traffic alerts, and more.
  • Saved: A customizable list of saved locations for quick access. The list can be organized by category and shared with others.
  • Contribute: Submit reviews, photos, and other suggestions for places on Google Maps.
  • Updates: A feed of recent reviews and other updates for places you have visited in the past, trending locations, and recommendations from Local Guides. You can also interact with businesses listed on Google Maps directly through this tab.
Screenshot: Google

Live view assistance and transit attributes

Several helpful updates are also included in the 15th-anniversary redesign that will help you get around more effectively and safely.

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The Live View mode, which offers real-time AR assistance when you’re walking to a location, will now show you the exact distance and direction of your destination.

For those who are traveling by public transportation, Google Maps now displays important information about the vehicles and facilities along your route. Google Maps already shows how crowded your route is but users can now find (and contribute) information about several other “transit attributes” like the current temperature in the bus or train; whether there are wheelchair and disability-accessible entries, seating, and other assistance; and if there’s security personal and other safety measures onboard. Some regions will also list if there are designated sections for women and, in Japan, you’ll see how many train carriages are available on your route.

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2020-02-06 21:30:00Z
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The new Razr is here, but maybe you should wait to buy it. Here's why - CNET

Motorola Razr

Motorola has reinvented the Razr as a foldable smartphone.

Juan Garzon/CNET

The next stage of smartphones continues to unfold with the official launch of the Motorola Razr on Feb. 6. The iconic Razr brand has been reinvented as a cutting-edge smartphone with a folding screen and it's available exclusively on Verizon in the US to start -- coming to other countries later in 2020. But before you make an impulse purchase on this nostalgic phone, there are some important things you need to understand about it.

1. The Razr is an early peek at the future

I've been saying this a lot lately: Foldables are destined to play a key role in the future of mobile devices. Humans have been folding things for a long time. Folding is one of our best innovations, because it's an incredibly practical way to optimize space. We fold papers to slip them into our pockets. We fold clothes to put them in our suitcases. We fold reading material in half and call them books. As technology advances, it only makes sense that we're going to start to fold these devices that have become so central to our lives to get larger screens and more viewability out of these little slabs we carry with us wherever we go. 

The Moto Razr is a remarkable accomplishment of engineering that gives us an impressive glimpse of the future. When opened, the Razr is roughly the size of the Samsung Galaxy Note 10 Plus, but it folds into a little package that sits neatly into the palm of your hand. It's mesmerizing to fold and unfold the screen when you first get ahold of this device. You can't help but admire what Motorola has pulled off. And if you like living in the future, this device is for you. But you're going to have to be more careful with it than the phone you use today and you're going to have to be comfortable trading some high-end smartphone features for that foldability. 

Now playing: Watch this: Motorola Razr is futuristic and familiar

12:33

2. The Razr's screen durability is a huge question mark

You're probably familiar with the problems Samsung faced with Galaxy Fold screens breaking when the phone first arrived in mid-2019. Samsung made some key changes and the revised version of the Fold that appeared a few months later has fared much better now that it's in the hands of hundreds of thousands of users. But the truth is that if these foldable devices were software, they would be beta releases. They are still very early and very experimental.

After using it for a few days, I have serious concerns about how well the Moto Razr is going to hold up over time. The Razr makes a cringe-worthy crinkling sound every time you open and close it. And the sides of the hinge have a tiny air gap and I worry that dust and lint will easily get in there and cause the hardware to fail over time.

Read more: Can we fold the Razr 100,000 times?

Just as troubling is the concern over how well the foldable Razr will hold up to the daily wear and tear that today's phones go through. When it's folded, the Razr could be even more durable than most of today's slabs of glass -- like a hardcover book protecting the pages within. But when it's flipped open and it suffers the kind of falls that phones regularly endure today, how will it hold up? 

While I was testing the Razr, it accidentally slipped out of my hand while it was open and fell from about three feet (waist-level) and landed softly on its back on a carpeted floor. For a couple hours afterward, the screen acted funny, swapping involuntarily between normal resolution and a low-res mode in which all the colors were washed out. I did a factory reset and it didn't fix the problem. But after turning it off overnight, it eventually stopped doing it and went back to normal. Nevertheless, the incident deepened my concerns over how durable these early foldable screens are going to be.

Motorola Razr Foldable Flip phone

The durability of the hinge on the Moto Razr will be among the most important things to watch.

James Martin/CNET

3. The Razr is missing high-end features

While the 6.2-inch screen of the Moto Razr is almost as long as the Galaxy Note 10 Plus (with its 6.8-inch display), it's not nearly as wide. As a result, the on-screen keyboard feels far more cramped than those spacious keys on the Note 10 Plus. So while the Razr has the length of a phablet, its usability feels more like a standard smartphone than a high-end premium model. That extends to a lot of other features as well, which means you're paying a high-end price ($1,500) for the folding action, but you're not getting the latest and greatest smartphone features to go with it.

The Razr has one standard 16-megapixel camera on the back, for example, while the latest Apple and Samsung flagship phones have three-camera arrays that add zoom and ultrawide-angle cameras. The Razr has a 2,510-mAh battery, compared to the iPhone 11 Pro Max's 3,969-mAh and the Note 10 Plus' 4,300-mAh batteries. The Razr has a 15-watt fast charger, while the Note 10 Plus comes with a 25-watt charger and can charge even faster with a special 45-watt unit. The iPhone 11 Pro Max comes with an 18-watt fast charger in the box. Both the Samsung and Apple flagship devices support wireless charging, while the Moto Razr does not. Both flagships also feature face unlock, which the Razr doesn't offer. The Razr also comes with a much less powerful processor (Qualcomm Snapdragon 710) than the Samsung and Apple flagships. And it will not include 5G, which is expected to be featured prominently in Samsung and Apple flagship phones during 2020.

Motorola Razr Foldable Flip Phone

Unlike other high-end phones, the Razr only has a single camera on the back.

James Martin/CNET

4. The Galaxy Z Flip will be a powerful competitor

At its annual Unpacked event next week, Samsung is widely expected to launch a device called the Galaxy Z Flip that will reportedly be very similar to the Moto Razr. Samsung has been experimenting with folding screens for years, so it's not surprising that it would follow the vertically folding Galaxy Fold with a horizontally folding clamshell phone. While Motorola has gotten inspiration and support from its parent company Lenovo -- which features folding hinges in its popular Yoga laptop line -- it doesn't have the deep expertise in making screens that Samsung has. 

The Galaxy Z Flip is likely to be around the same price as the Razr -- although some reports have suggested it could be under $1,000. However, Samsung's clamshell device is rumored to include more high-end features than the Razr, such as a 6.7-inch screen, an additional ultrawide camera, wireless charging, a 3,300-mAh battery, a Snapdragon 855 Plus processor and a more dust-proof hinge. Since it's less than a week before Samsung is expected to announce the details of the Galaxy Z Flip at its Feb. 11 Unpacked event, we have to recommend anyone who's thinking about buying the Moto Razr to wait until we all learn the final details of what Samsung is planning.

This article was originally published earlier this week and has been updated.

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https://news.google.com/__i/rss/rd/articles/CBMiXGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmNuZXQuY29tL25ld3MvbmV3LW1vdG9yb2xhLXJhenItaGVyZS1idXQtbWF5YmUteW91LXNob3VsZC13YWl0LXRvLWJ1eS1oZXJlcy13aHkv0gFnaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuY25ldC5jb20vZ29vZ2xlLWFtcC9uZXdzL25ldy1tb3Rvcm9sYS1yYXpyLWhlcmUtYnV0LW1heWJlLXlvdS1zaG91bGQtd2FpdC10by1idXktaGVyZXMtd2h5Lw?oc=5

2020-02-06 19:00:00Z
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