The Moto X is the first phone designed by
Motorola since its takeover by Google last year
Google-owned Motorola
has announced a phone that is "always listening" for the owner's
voice commands.
Saying "OK Google
now..." will prompt the Moto X's Touch less Control system to listen for
instructions.
The phone will be
manufactured in the US, with customers given extensive customization options.
The device is the
first to have been designed from scratch since Google's $12.5bn (£7.9bn)
takeover of Motorola last year.
Industry analysts said
the release could prove disruptive to the Android market, as many other
manufacturers using Google's operating system are struggling to turn a profit.
Motorola CEO Dennis
Woodside describes the new features of the Moto X
The hardware will be
manufactured in the US at a newly-built plant in Texas, making Motorola the
latest in a growing number of firms keen to bathe in positive "Made in
USA" public relations.
It also means
customers can change their customization options - with multiple colorings, and
personalized engravings to be on offer.
The company said there
were over 2,000 possible combinations for what could be created.
Gaining
control
The Moto X is the
first handset fully designed by the company since Google took it over in May
last year.
While the company has
released handsets since then, they had all been at least partly in development
before the takeover.
It means the phone has
been seen as the first real indicator of what Google itself thinks is possible
on its own mobile platform.
Francisco Geronimo, a
mobile phones analyst at market intelligence firm IDC, said the company had
targeted the basics - changing how a phone is controlled.
"The interaction
with the phone, the way we speak, the way we activate the functions - it can be
done in a different way," he said.
"Users have large
screens, they have voice control - so at the end of the day what may attract
users to replace their current Smartphone is a completely new experience. In my
opinion, it's one of the biggest trends of the next year."
Typical voice command systems
require the user to press a button before saying commands, this system is
triggered by saying the words "Ok Google now..." followed by the
order.
"If I have a
device that just gets activated with one command, then that will be a lot
easier," said Mr. Geronimo.
"It's not a
question of hardware; it's a question of user interface."
Samsung
politics
The Moto X launch has
again raised questions around the delicate relationship between Google and
Samsung.
As the dominant vendor
- by a huge margin - in the Android market, Samsung finds itself in something
of a polite tug-of-war with the search giant.
The Moto X will be manufactured in the US
"Samsung
represents 60% of total Android shipments across the world," said Mr. Geronimo.
"They are basically dependent on each other."
For this reason, the
release of the Moto X is interesting strategically, as while Google will want
the phone to be a success; too much of a hit risks unnerving Samsung.
"What prevents
Samsung from launching their own operating system using Android?" Mr. Geronimo
added.
"A completely
different ecosystem could be built overnight. Google needs to keep Samsung very
close. What made Android popular was not the just the operating system itself -
it was the money Samsung put into their devices."
In the first three
months of 2013, Samsung captured a 95% share of all profits in the global
Android smartphone market - highlighting the prospect of a whopping hole should
it decide to change direction.
Samsung has never said
it may consider that move, but last week, it announced it would be holding its
first developers conference - an event where experts come together to discuss
and learn about creating software and hardware to work for a specific platform
or product.
Samsung's handsets dominate sales of Android
Mr. Geronimo said he
believed the Moto X launch was Google preparing itself for the possibility that
Samsung may not always be an industry partner.
"For Google, it's
a question of not letting Motorola die, making it profitable as soon as
possible.
"Before Motorola
they had no strong experience with building hardware, but now they are learning
how to develop a high-end Smartphone.
"This will give
them the skills they need, and tools they need, in the future in case they see
a strong movement towards a different operation system."
The Moto X will be
released in the US, Canada and Latin America starting in late August or early
September, the company said.
It will cost $199
(£130) when bought as part of a two-year contract deal.
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