Mobile

Motorola One Action Phone Slays Vertical Video

Motorola One Action Pairing

Die, vertical video, die! Motorola today announced a hilariously exciting new smartphone, the Motorola One Action, which turns its wide-angle camera 90 degrees so you can record horizontal video while holding the camera vertically.

I think this is hilarious; I also think it’s brilliant. A 117-degree, wide angle “action” camera shouldn’t take vertical video—you’d just get a lot of sky or ground. But people want to hold their phones vertically because it’s more stable. So pow, now we’re taking horizontal video with a vertical camera.

I’m putting “action” camera in quotes here because the camera only has electronic (not optical) image stabilization, and the phone isn’t rugged. The camera is made to be compatible with bike mounts, Motorola said, and bike mounts are vertical.

The 4-megapixel wide-angle camera is one of two main cameras on the back of the One Action. The other is a 12-megapixel, f/1.8 standard camera that takes video in a normally rotated way: vertically if you’re holding the phone vertically, and horizontally if you’re holding it horizontally. There is also a 5-megapixel dedicated depth sensor on the back.

Motorola One Action Camera

The One Action has another twist: it’s a very rare US phone with a Samsung Exynos processor. Not even Samsung phones in the US have Samsung Exynos processors! The Exynos 9609 processor in here appears to benchmark similarly to the Qualcomm Snapdragon 670 in the Google Pixel 3a. In this case, it just seemed to be a processor Motorola could afford with performance it liked.

The other specs are respectably midrange: 4GB of RAM, 128GB of storage with a MicroSD card, a 21:9, 6.3-inch 1080p LCD screen, 3500mAh battery, slow Cat 6 LTE (which would work on all four US networks except Sprint), and a 12-megapixel front-facing camera.

Confusingly given the phone’s name, the One Action won’t run Google’s Android One OS. Motorola said the phone will run Android One outside the US, but not on the US model because Motorola doesn’t want to adhere to Google’s monthly security update policy. Android One isn’t a “strong purchase driver” for the phone, and Motorola will continue to offer a very Google-y Android experience, including updates to Android Q and R, Motorola reps said.

“We’ve decided to test how Motorola One Action performs without Android One and re-invest taking into consideration our consumer’s needs. We will continue our strategic partnership with Google to deliver a clean Android experience and reinforce Google’s helpful innovations such as Assistant, Lens, Photos, and Digital Wellbeing,” Motorola said.

The One Action will come to the US unlocked in October. Motorola didn’t announce a price, but it costs $ 287 in Europe.

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