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I 'm a bit intrigued by Motorola 's approach with the Moto G and at that price point and the cu...


G+_Marlon Thompson
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I'm a bit intrigued by Motorola's approach with the Moto G and at that price point and the customizations I believe it could be a big seller in developing markets like my country where the two original phones here were Nokia and Motorola phones. They would have to battle the giant that is Samsung but I believe they could do it. My concern is that the Caribbean is not seen as a priority market even though on average for example in my country Trinidad and Tobago we have more cell phones per person than Canada and our internet penetration is one of the highest in Latin America and the Caribbean. 

 

http://www.androidcentral.com/hands-new-moto-g-accessories

http://www.androidcentral.com/hands-new-moto-g-accessories

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J Grynd Actually, I have Droid RAZR Maxx on Verizon's network. LTE is everywhere for me. I think its a cool phone. May do very well for Moto. Just not for me. I need LTE. My phone battery lasts all day anyway. Jason Howell has had good battery life with his Nexus 5 also and it has LTE. It's still a bit of a drain on battery life, but not nearly the way it was when LTE first launched. I'll still be waiting on another option than this.

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J Grynd Yeah, Sprint's 4G is simply limited. No matter what technology they use. I bought a WiFi hotspot on their Clear WiMax network a few years ago. I kept it going for about 2 years now. Let's just say that the 3G coverage on my verizon phone was faster than their WiMax. More reliable too. I've since dropped it. I agree this phone is aimed at prepared customers. It should do well in that market.

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