In Tech: New Motorola Smartphones; Faster Future Memory Chip

Kilian Melloy READ TIME: 3 MIN.

Motorola is refreshing its Android smartphones with better cameras and other improvements as it seeks to lure customers who want lower-cost alternatives to leading smartphones from Apple and Samsung.

These new models - the Moto G, Moto X Play and Moto X Style - will appeal largely to people who have to pay full prices for phones, rather than discounted prices that come with two-year service contracts.

"We're about delivering great mobile user experiences at a price that doesn't break the bank," Motorola President Rick Osterloh said in an interview.

Motorola, which Lenovo bought from Google last year, said the new Moto G will retail in the U.S. for about $180 without a contract. Motorola hasn't announced prices for the Moto X models, but they are expected to be a few hundred dollars cheaper than high-end phones, which cost $600 or more without a contract.

In touting improved cameras, Osterloh was careful to say that they will deliver some of the best pictures "at this price point." Apple and Samsung, in particular, have been advancing phone-camera technology with better auto-focus and low-light performance. Their high-end phones also have other wizardry such as fingerprint sensors for bypassing passcodes.

The 5-inch Moto G will have a 13-megapixel camera, up from 8 megapixels in last year's model. Motorola says the phone will be able to withstand dunking in up to three feet of water for up to 30 minutes. All models will support 4G cellular connections; in the past, 4G models of the Moto G cost more.

The cameras on the Moto X phones will be 21 megapixels, up from 13 megapixels, but they won't have extensive water protection. The 5.5-inch Play model promises two days of battery life, while the company says the 5.7-inch Style should last more than a day. The Style will have a sharper screen than the Play and more customization options, including wood and leather backs for a higher price.

Only the Style version will be available in the U.S. Motorola says it should work with all major carriers. Contract-free phones are often limited to GSM networks such as AT&T and T-Mobile.

The Moto G goes on sale Tuesday, while the Moto X models will come out in the coming weeks.

- Anick Jesdanun, AP Technology Writer

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Chipmakers Intel and Micron Technologies say they've made a major breakthrough by creating a new kind of memory chip that's a thousand times faster than the "flash" memory now used in smartphones, tablets and high-end laptop computers.

Experts say the new 3D XPoint (pronounced "cross point") technology has enormous potential, but some caution that it won't be showing up in consumer products for some time.

So-called "flash" memory is already faster than the spinning disk drives that are still used in many desktop and laptop computers. The new memory, developed jointly by Intel and Micron, uses a three-dimensional chip design that lets computers store and retrieve individual bits of data far more quickly than with flash.

The companies said the new technology also has ten times the storage capacity of another format, known as DRAM or dynamic random access memory, which can be faster but more expensive than flash. In another benefit, they said, 3D XPoint doesn't require a constant flow of power, while DRAM does.

Intel and Micron say the new technology can help big organizations analyze vast quantities of data, as well as improve the performance of PCs and other consumer devices.

But tech analyst Martin Reynolds of the Gartner research firm cautioned that other breakthroughs in memory technology have stalled because of technical and economic hurdles.

Big companies like Google or Facebook will be eager to test the new memory in their data centers, Reynolds predicted. But he said flash memory should remain the dominant technology in consumer devices "for some time."

- Brandon Bailey, AP Technology Writer


by Kilian Melloy , EDGE Staff Reporter

Kilian Melloy serves as EDGE Media Network's Associate Arts Editor and Staff Contributor. His professional memberships include the National Lesbian & Gay Journalists Association, the Boston Online Film Critics Association, The Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Association, and the Boston Theater Critics Association's Elliot Norton Awards Committee.

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