Software

Long ago, Motorola devices shipped with a custom Motorola UI known as Motoblur. It was one of the heavier custom Android interfaces, with many applications and widgets being included in addition to skinning the entirety of the Android interface. Naturally, it was also heavily criticized for slowing down devices and filling up storage with pre-installed applications. Over time Motorola reduced the amount of modifications they were making to stock Android, and by the time Google originally purchased Motorola Mobility before selling it again they had moved to shipping devices that were the closest to stock Google Android that you could find on a non-Nexus device. For the most part, you can find out about the Moto E software experience just by looking at our Android Lollipop review. That being said, Motorola does add a few apps and features to Android, and that's what I'll be covering here.

Motorola Alert is one of the first apps you'll see on your phone since the app drawer organizes your apps alphabetically. The app has a few different functions, and on a fundamental level it's really an app for keeping other people updated with where you are. This has fairly obvious use cases such as for elderly people and small children. When you set up the app, you'll be asked to pick some of the people from your contacts to be used as emergency contacts.

The Meet me button allows you to send a text message to some or all of your emergency contacts with a location that you are presumably travelling to and a prompt to meet you there. The Follow me feature is similar, but it instead periodically broadcasts your current location on a interval that you can specify in the settings section of the app. The Emergency button will send a special emergency message to your emergency contacts, and it will also bring up a button to either call your local emergency services number or a designated contact. You can also opt to have that number automatically dialed, and there's also an option to sound an alarm from your speakers to let anyone in the vicinity know you need help.

Motorola Migrate is another thoughtful app included by Motorola. It allows you to transfer much of your content from your older Android phone to your new Motorola device. While your Google account already allows for the transfer of things in the cloud and your applications, it doesn't move over your text messages or local photos and videos. That's where Motorola Migrate comes in. It supports transferring messages, photos, videos, music, contacts, and call logs from other Android devices, as well as contacts and calendar info from iOS devices.

When moving content from another Android device, you simply download the Migrate app on that device and scan a QR code which will be displayed on your new Motorola phone. This initiates a transfer of your files over an ad-hoc 802.11 link between the two devices, and once the transfer is complete you're ready to start using your Motorola phone. The procedure for iOS is a bit different, and it involves signing into your iCloud account which I'm just a bit wary of as you're signing into iCloud on a non-Apple device, and the migration service is actually powered by a third party company rather than Motorola. While it's most likely safe, I tend to err on the side of caution when using my Google account or Apple ID with any third party service.

Motorola has also seen fit to include their own gallery application. The reason I'm a bit confused about this is because the Moto E still ships with Google's own Photos app, and you can't remove it. Motorola's gallery isn't any worse than Google's app, but it doesn't really improve on it either. It even has the same issue of low resolution thumbnails that Google Photos does. Normally I wouldn't mind and would just hide the app, but on an 8GB device with only 5GB available to the user it's really frustrating to have a second gallery application taking up 45MB of space on the phone.

The rest of the software experience is really the same as you'll get on a Nexus device. Moto Display is a cool feature, but when your device uses an LCD instead of an AMOLED panel the power saving benefit of the dark appearance is lost. For me Moto Display isn't really a notable improvement over the standard Lollipop lock screen and how it displays notifications.

Moto Display also seems to be introducing a bug when picking up the device. The Moto Display screen will be shown briefly, and then the screen will show the launcher before suddenly drawing the standard Android lock screen. This represents a potential security flaw and I hope it will be fixed alongside a future Android 5.1 Lollipop update. I've also encountered some issues with memory usage causing the launcher to be evicted from memory. While the device is memory constrained, the memory management issues in early Lollipop releases are really Google's problem so I can't fault Motorola for it.

Battery Life and Charge Time WiFi, GNSS
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  • Kakti - Tuesday, April 21, 2015 - link

    Don't all companies have to unlock phones these days once you're not in a contract though? I personally use the month to month for $45, but figured if they ever scrapped it or raised the price I'd move to an MVNO.

    Also, I recently received a MS Nokia Lumia 635 from my work - that's another real nice cheap phone IMO. Was originally going to get one for my personal but went with the Moto E when I saw the price. Everyone complains about it at work (they all use Iphones) but I think it's great for what its intended purpose is i.e. make calls, read emails, read news, weather, etc. I dunno maybe I'm just getting old (get off my lawn) but the prices and specs of top end phones these days are so overkill. Having a 2560p 6.5" screen and then needing a 300g battery to power it? No thanks....
  • RealTheXev - Wednesday, April 29, 2015 - link

    Several people on XDA forums have been able to contact Verizon and get the phone added to their postpay plan. I would have gone that route myself if I could have unlocked the bootloader (but you can't with Moto's tools).

    All Verizon LTE phones should come unlocked, but I have no other carriers to try my mothers Moto E on (that would get reception no less).
  • Gunbuster - Tuesday, April 21, 2015 - link

    Would be nice to see a review of the new BLU Win JR LTE
  • Samus - Tuesday, April 21, 2015 - link

    Super nice phone for $150. Probably the only android phone id recommend to people like my parents.
  • grant3 - Wednesday, April 22, 2015 - link

    Does this phone respond to 3-button android headset controls?

    What is the sound quality on music playback?

    I'm disappointed that so much effort and detail was put into analyzing the display/software/etc. but there is nothing about the audio.
  • Kakti - Wednesday, April 22, 2015 - link

    Can't comment on android headsets but the sound quality through $10 earbuds is fine. Sounds the exact same as my previous phones playing FLAC files.

    Playing music without headphones is alright, it's definitely loud enough for most uses; I play music on it after most leave my office and can hear it probably 50-75 feet away. There's roughly 0.0% bass as expected....played some Omni Trio drum and bass and it was like listening to half the song ;) But that's a given for any cell phone speaker really. Playing rock music FLAC files sounded as good as I could ask for from a cell phone.
  • grant3 - Wednesday, April 22, 2015 - link

    The issue I had with a previous motorola droid was there was a lot of line hiss. i.e., if you were in the quiet portion of a song, you can hear a background hiss (sounds like when you're on a phone call and no one is talking)

    It's sometimes tricky to notice because the internal amp would shut off when music is paused. and usually people are listening to their phone in a place where there is some background noise.
  • Kakti - Wednesday, April 22, 2015 - link

    Just checked with some live concert soundboards - between songs it's pretty much silent and I didn't hear any hiss at volume levels that are comfortable to listen to.
  • ASEdouardD - Thursday, May 7, 2015 - link

    Why use FLAC files using $10 earbuds? I'd go high quality MP3.
  • CharonPDX - Wednesday, April 22, 2015 - link

    I'm curious - is lack of 5 GHz WiFi (n or ac) really that much of a problem in an ultra-low-cost phone?

    I understand it would be great for future-proofing, but how often are people looking at ultra-low-end phones going to have 5 GHz 802.11n, much less ac? Or the high-enough-speed internet to notice the difference?

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