RELATED : Carl Pei Continues Building Nothing Phone 1 Hype with a New Pre-Order Pass A display that’s good enough Rob Schultz The Moto E features a display that’s not all that bad for a low-end phone.Īs displays go, the Moto E’s could be worse. ![]() ![]() If all you’re looking for is a decidedly plain-looking, cybar-style smartphone, this is most certainly it. That’s the point of the Moto E: keep it simple. Its rubbery backside will keep it from sliding out of your h it fits into almost any pocket or purse. (And if you get really desperate for customization, there’s always shi Tape.) The Moto E’s rubbery backside. It’s not as customizable as its flagship counterpart, the Moto X, but you can easily swap out the bumpers to add your own little flair. The most adorable little smartphone The Moto E. ile this year’s Moto E will make a great first smartphone or backup device, its camera performance is so abysmal that Motorola might as well have left it off. At $150, Motorola’s cute-as-a-button, low-end device packs all the essentials you need from a smartphone: a quad-core processor, a bright display, 4G E data speed, a MicroSD expansion slot to tack on as much storage space as you damn well please. They say good things come in small packages in the second-generation Moto E’s case, that’s mostly true.
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