<div class="clear"></div><div class="review-content-navigation"><div class="review-content-pag"><select class="review-content-pagination-selbox" name="reviewSelect" id="reviewSelect" onchange="if (this.value) window.location.href=this.value" ><option value="/mobile/motorola-new-moto-x-first-look-the-phone-with-best-voice-commands-019322.html">PAGE 1 OF 4: Form Factor & Operating System</option><option value="/mobile/motorola-new-moto-x-first-look-the-phone-with-best-voice-commands-2-019323.html" selected="selected">PAGE 2 OF 4: Processor & Benchmark</option><option value="/mobile/motorola-new-moto-x-first-look-the-phone-with-best-voice-commands-3-019324.html">PAGE 3 OF 4: Camera & Video</option><option value="/mobile/motorola-new-moto-x-first-look-the-phone-with-best-voice-commands-4-019325.html">PAGE 4 OF 4: Battery Life & Verdict</option></select></div></div>
Motorola New Moto X - Operating System and Connectivity Options
Initially there were rumors of a Snapdragon 805 CPU, but Motorola has gone for a quad-core Snapdragon 801 processor. However, the chipset is clocked at 2.5 GHz and Adreno 330 GPU to accompany with. The phone has a healthy 2GB of RAM but only 16GB of ROM. Unfortunately, the handset doesn't support microSD card slot, which could be a big issue for some.
When tested the device for a brief period of time, it performed surprisingly smooth and nippy. We do have high hopes from the new Moto X, at least, in respect of performance.
The connectivity on the new Moto X is strong with GSM/GPRS/EDGE, UMTS/HSPA+, Bluetooth v4.0, GPS with A-GPS and more.