한 시대의 끝. 새로운 것의 시작. 나는 Windows Phone이 역사상 가장 아름답고 인체 공학적으로 만족스러운 터치 인터페이스로 역사의 연대기에 남을 것이라고 굳게 믿습니다. 그러나 전화 지원은 더 이상 제공되지 않으며(데스크톱을 이와 같이 만드는 것에 대한 히스테리를 기억하십시오. 모두 헛된 것임) 새 모바일 장치가 필요합니다. 모든 좋은 이야기는 갈등에서 시작됩니다.
대략 두 달 전에 Lumia 950의 후속 전화기를 찾기 시작했습니다. 내 요구 사항은 그렇게 엄격하지는 않았지만 상당히 독특했습니다. 결국, 며칠 동안 온라인 조사, 읽기, 그리고 더 많은 읽기 끝에 Motorola One Zoom을 구입했습니다. 이제 세부 정보를 공유하겠습니다. 그리고 궁금하다면, 예, 이것은 극적인 산문이 포함된 적절하고 긴 스마트폰 리뷰입니다. 내 뒤에.
고려사항
나는 전화에 대해 그렇게 많이 신경 쓰지 않았습니다. 그들은 목적에 부합하지만 어떤 식으로든 완전한 마우스 및 키보드 컴퓨팅 경험을 대체한다고 생각하지 않습니다. 대신 전화는 가끔 전화를 걸고, 외국 땅을 탐색하고, 지루할 때 한두 페이지를 훑어보는 것과 같은 기회주의적 필요에 유용합니다. 이것은 스마트폰을 둘러싼 모든 종교가 나를 벗어났다는 것을 의미합니다.
그러나 나는 양질의 제품을 좋아합니다. 그리고 전화기에 카메라가 있으면 괜찮을 것입니다. 수년 동안 저는 몇 가지 정말 멋진 장치를 소유했습니다. 2011년에 저는 노키아 E6를 구입했습니다. 여전히 잘 작동하고 원래 배터리로 2주 이상 주스를 관리합니다. 터치, 풀 키보드, 듀얼 밴드 무선 및 카메라가 더 비싸고 더 강력한 스마트폰은 몇 년 더 젊습니다. 그러나 그것 역시 어떤 의미 있는 방식으로도 지속할 수 없는 죽어가는 생태계의 일부였습니다.
그래서 방정식의 다음 논리적 단계인 Nokia의 Windows Phone을 탐색하기 시작했습니다. 나는 멋지고 작은 Lumia 520을 구입했습니다(여전히 잘 작동함). 이것은 값싼 장치였으며 주요 목적은 새로운 플랫폼이 무엇을 할 수 있는지에 대한 느낌을 얻는 것이었습니다. 동시에 저는 광학 성능이 꽤 좋은 iPhone 6를 테스트했지만 다른 모든 것은 제 필요에 따라 엄격하게 제한되었습니다.
2016년 말, Lumia 950이 50% 할인된 가격에 구매하기로 결정했습니다. 이 시점에서 Windows Phone은 스토어에서 애플리케이션의 가용성이 지속적으로 감소하면서 죽어가는 생태계라는 사실을 잘 알고 있었습니다. 하지만 내 요구 사항에는 뛰어난 카메라, 뛰어난 인체 공학, 내가 원하고 필요로 하는 소프트웨어(완전 오프라인 지도 포함) 한두 가지면 충분했습니다.
3년 후 완벽하게 견고한 전화기를 버리기에는 너무 이르다고 느껴지지만 실제로는 플랫폼의 끝입니다. Windows 7과 같이 데스크톱에서 지원되지 않는 소프트웨어를 쉽게 사용할 수 있지만 휴대폰에서는 불가능합니다. 첫째, Windows 7의 시장 점유율이 엄청납니다. 둘째, 모선과 연결이 끊어진 상태에서도 소프트웨어가 실제로 작동합니다. 예, 그것은 사용자가 소프트웨어를 완전히 제어할 수 없는 현대 온라인 세계의 위험 중 하나입니다.
나는 이미 이전에 이러한 이동의 불가피성을 예상했기 때문에 Moto G4와 BQ Aquaris를 이미 많이 테스트한 것 외에도 Android 휴대전화인 다소 멋진 Moto G6를 구입하여 가장 작은 수준의 생태계. 이것은 또한 소음, 산만함, 낮은 IQ가 없도록 기본값을 조정하고 변경하는 것을 의미했습니다. 그 노력은 결국 Firefox와 adblocker를 기본 브라우저로 사용하고 실용성과 유용성을 손상시키지 않으면서 액세스할 수 있는 거의 모든 추적 또는 프로파일링 설정을 해제한 평화롭고 차분한 Android에서 절정에 달했습니다. 상당히 긴 Android 개인정보 보호 가이드에서 이에 대해 자세히 알아볼 수 있습니다. 거기.
그러나 최종 결과는 - 기뻤습니다. Android는 수년에 걸쳐 크게 개선되었습니다. 사실, 구성과 관련하여 인터페이스가 압도적이며 시스템을 길들이기 위해 거쳐야 하는 수많은 메뉴와 하위 메뉴에서 쉽게 길을 잃을 수 있습니다. 그래도 가능합니다. 완료하고 나면 매끄럽고 빠르며 강력한 운영 체제와 모든 필요에 맞는 무수히 많은 앱을 갖게 됩니다(필요한 것은 아님).
동시에 iPhone 6S를 테스트하고 플레이하는 데 더 많은 시간을 할애하면서 iOS를 사용하지 않기로 결정했습니다. 첫째, 장치가 엄청나게 비싸다는 것을 알았습니다. 그것은 식료품점 운영을 위해 슈퍼카를 사는 것과 같을 것입니다. 둘째, iOS도 수년에 걸쳐 많이 개선되었지만 여전히 Apple Store의 일부가 되어야 하며 이는 내가 원하거나 필요로 하는 것이 아닙니다. 여러 MP3 노래를 휴대폰에 로드하는 것과 같은 단순한 일도 사소한 일이 아닙니다. 바로 Android입니다.
이 시점에서 Moto G6를 생각할 수 있습니다. 글쎄, 그냥 G6를 기본 전화기로 선택할 수도 있었지만 카메라가 충분하지 않았습니다. 그래서 고품질 광학 장치를 갖춘 다른 장치를 찾기로 했습니다.
나는 항상 노키아에 애착을 갖고 있었고 회사가 안드로이드 폰을 제공하기 때문에 새로운 7/8/9 라인을 탐색하기 시작했습니다. Penta-camera 설정으로 Nokia 9 PureView가 매력적이라는 것을 알았지 만 전화에는 3.5mm 오디오 잭이 없었기 때문에 구입하지 않기로 결정했습니다. 네, 결국 5달러 물건이 500달러 구매를 결정했습니다. 이 작은 것이 잠재적인 (충성스러운) 고객을 외면했습니다. 그것이 인생입니다.
Nokia 7.2는 약간 빈약해 보였습니다. 노키아 8.1은 내 종류의 전화기처럼 보였지만 2018년 장치이고 구매할 새 전화기를 찾을 수 없었습니다. 이 시점에서 나는 새로운 Nokia 전화를 가질 수 없다는 것을 깨달았습니다. 그래서 저는 지난 몇 년 동안 저를 크게 놀라게 하고 꽤 잘 작동한 Motorola에 관심을 돌렸습니다.
약간의 고민 끝에 저는 One Zoom에 집중했습니다. 내 필요에 맞는 완벽한 선택처럼 보였습니다. 합리적인 가격, 총 48MP 및 3배 광학 줌을 위한 쿼드 카메라 설정(그래서 이름이 추측됨). 최신 하드웨어 및 3.5mm 오디오 잭. 듀얼 SIM. 좋아. 클릭, 구매, 모험이 시작됩니다.
사양
실제 장치에 대해 좀 더 살펴보겠습니다. 여기에는 많은 것이 있으니 참아주세요.
Motorola One Zoom은 6.4인치 화면에 403ppi 밀도의 1080x2340 픽셀로 구성되고 알루미늄 프레임에 무게는 견고하고 신뢰할 수 있는 190g입니다. 신뢰할 수 있습니다. 내 모델에는 SD 카드 슬롯으로 두 배가 되는 나노 하나와 마이크로 하나를 포함하는 듀얼 SIM 트레이가 함께 제공됩니다.
내부는 옥타 코어 프로세서로 구성되어 있으며, 2.0GHz에서 작동하는 2개의 Kryo 460 Gold 코어와 약간 낮은 1.7GHz에서 실행되는 6개의 Kryo 460 Silver 코어가 있습니다. GPU는 Adreno 612이며 기본적으로 바닐라에 가까운 Android Pie를 얻을 수 있으며 향후 버전 10으로 업그레이드할 것을 약속합니다. 또한 4GB의 RAM과 128GB의 내부 저장소가 제공됩니다. 앞서 언급한 SD 카드 슬롯은 최대 512GB의 웨이퍼를 수용할 수 있습니다.
센서 패키지가 인상적입니다. 48MP 해상도의 후면 카메라 4개, 25MP 해상도의 전면 렌즈 1개. 이에 대해서는 나중에 더 자세히 이야기하겠습니다. 듀얼 밴드 Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 5.0, NFC, 3.5mm 오디오 잭, 광학 지문 센서, 데이터 전송 및 터보 충전을 위한 양방향 Type-C USB 커넥터가 제공됩니다. 배터리는 4000mAh로 대용량인데 탈착이 안된다는 단점이 있습니다.
가격은 지역마다 다를 수 있지만 450달러 정도면 꽤 괜찮은 것 같습니다. 대체로 Moto G6 비용의 약 두 배이며 당시 새로운 Lumia 비용은 다소 낮습니다. 이것은 특히 G6에도 옥타 코어 프로세서가 있기 때문에 흥미로운 비교가 됩니다. 카메라 패키지일까요? 델타가 당신에게 무엇을 가져다 주는지 궁금합니다. 그럼 테스트할 시간입니다...
매우 좋지 않은 시작
결과적으로 나는 즉시 전화를 거의 파괴했습니다! SIM 트레이를 잘못된 방식으로 삽입하여 걸렸습니다. 이 시점에서 명사 바보를 자유롭게 사용할 수 있지만 몇 가지 세부 사항을 알려 드리겠습니다. 문제는 내 Moto G6에서 SIM 트레이의 방향이 다음과 같다는 것입니다. SIM 카드가 위를 향하고 꺼내기 위한 핀 구멍이 트레이의 오른쪽, 즉 바깥쪽에 있습니다. 이제 같은 제조업체의 다른 전화기가 있습니다. 모든 것이 동일할 것으로 예상할 수 있습니다. 아니! One Zoom에서는 핀 구멍이 안쪽으로 배치되고 SIM 카드가 아래를 향하도록 배치해야 합니다. G6에서 했던 것과 정반대입니다. 그래서 본능적으로 트레이를 다시 넣었습니다.
약 20분 동안 핀셋으로 케이스와 손가락을 부드럽게 긁으면서 케이스를 빼내려고 했습니다. 약간의 피를 흘리고 많은 욕설이 에테르 속으로 분출된 후, 전화기 내부에 큰 손상을 입히지 않고 트레이를 빼낼 수 있었습니다. 올바른 방법으로 삽입하면 모든 것이 잘되었습니다. 추가로 몇 번의 SIM 카드 삽입 연습으로 제대로 작동하는지 다시 확인했습니다. So the damage is mostly mental, some cuts on me fingers, some scratches on the top of the phone, nary an hour into its lifetime. But I was so close to just using a hammer to retrieve the SIM card, and buy a new phone. Luckily, that venue of nonsense and lifetime regrets was averted.
The silver marks of an intellectually challenged user.
Then I turned the phone on and went about my setup. Which had two stages:
- Porting my data from Lumia 950 onto my One Zoom.
- Taming the phone. Inline with my Android privacy guide, I spent a few hours going through EVERY SINGLE OPTION in the menu, reducing low-IQ noise.
The bad things didn't end with just bloodied fingers.
"Mobile" simplicity
My goal was to import as many settings as I could from the Windows Phone into the Android, but mostly, I wanted the contacts. The call history, the chats and all that are less important, but still. So first, I went about the Internet, looking for guides on how to move your stuff from one realm to the other, and I found myself swimming in bullshit. So many guides, so much wrong. Not one of them offered anything remotely accurate. As I expected, the very reason why I started Dedoimedo in 2006 was that I needed to make my own tutorials.
I tried first by configuring my Live account on the Android phone and vice versa, adding my new Android account to the Lumia. Hopefully, somewhere in this process, there would be data sync. But no. That didn't happen. Neither on the old phone nor on the new one was there any simple button that let me actually grab my data. I tried with Live, Exchange and 365 account options, because supposedly there are differences in how these work, and what type of data sync you get. Well, email, contacts, calendar, nothing.
I then tried by logging into the Windows account through a browser on the phone, to se whether there'd be some import or export option there. 아니요. But now, here's the funny thing. On the DESKTOP, when you log in, you get a much richer interface, and you CAN actually export your contacts as a csv file. I then tried to load this file onto my Android. The actual copy over USB went fine. I opened the Android Contacts application, but it only supports SIM card and vcf import. Not a bulk csv file thingie.
Now, here's ANOTHER funny thing. I logged with my new Android (gmail) account on the DESKTOP, and lo and behold, I was able to import the contacts using the csv file. And now, finally, I had my contacts on the phone. So, despite all this supposedly "modern" progress and "cloud" nonsense, it took a USB cable, desktop, and a text file to do a trivial thing. The mobile interfaces for these online accounts are lacking in functionality, and you can't really do this on the phone. That's 2019 (2020) progress for you.
But it doesn't end there.
One other app that I wanted to sync - WhatsApp. It's not a big deal, just some casual bullshit with a few nonexistent friends and such. But hey, hey, WhatsApp on Windows Mobile is kaput, so why not. And looking through the settings, it said that everything was backed up and all. However, when I authenticated on the new phone, not a single chat had been imported or synced. My contacts were there, fine, and my application configuration had been migrated, great. But no chats.
I spent some more time reading inaccurate information online on how to achieve this, and it turns out, it's not really possible. Different database formats, for the same application (on different platforms). What makes things worse is that once you move your number from one phone to the other, the old application gets "signed out" or whatever, so you can't really troubleshoot. And if you re-authenticate the old device, then the verification time windows you're allowed to use goes up from 1 minute to 8 hours, so suck it Gilliam. I wonder what would happen if I plugged a brand new and unassociated SIM card into the Windows Phone, and whether my contacts would see my credentials change. Then again, I am using the old number on Android, and things work fine there. So what happens then?
Eventually, I did it 1993 style. I went into each and every WhatsApp contact, tapped contact info, and then manually emailed myself a text version of the chat. Thus goeth the so-called encryption into the bin. To make everything worse, Outlook on Lumia wouldn't email with the Live account - I had to configure the new gmail account to be able to send myself the chats. And then we have the manual export of media files, too.
Two or three hours later, my new phone was ... new. I only had the contacts from the old device, but everything else was as though the Windows Phone never existed. If I had known this, I might as well have gotten a new random number and started fresh. All those cloud backups, a "wonderful" thing if, and only if, you're using the technology from the SAME vendor and stay in the safety and comfort of a closed ecosystem. Once you step out of it, stuff breaks. The whole protocol and data format redundancy that existed in 2009 still exists in 2019, and nothing has changed. Well, except you now work with stupidly simplified interfaces designed for simian touch.
Thus ended part one of my tribulation.
Taming the shrew
Things started improving once I got my hands deep into the candy. Almost everything that I outlined in my privacy guide holds. But then, not quite. Even though both phones come from Motorola, even through both run Android Pie, there were some differences. For instance, the bootloader sequence. Moto G6 has an early-boot password check. The One Zoom doesn't do that, and you're only asked to unlock the screen. Both use encryption, so I guess it has to do with how this is actually realized on the devices. Certificates and whatnot.
The Moto G6 had about 70 apps preinstalled, including a lot of Microsoft Office stuff. The One Zoom comes with about 40, and they are all Android and one or two Moto apps. This probably has to do with the stock vanilla thingie. More curiously, some system settings are different, things like Smart Lock, actions, suggestions, etc. Even though I did the exact same thing as before, I had to triple check my work, to make sure I didn't miss anything. Some options are more visible and easier to manage. Some are more obscure and/or better hidden.
Google Play did ask me to configure additional search engines and browsers, akin to the Windows setup back in mid-late 2000s. I guess it was called Windows N, part of some EU anti-trust or such. Well, you get the same thing on Android now. I did of course configure Firefox, because that's my favorite (or the less unfavorite) browser, and you can have add-ons, including adblocking, which means a quieter, saner, cleaner browsing experience, faster site loading and less battery juice drain. Then I also installed Here WeGo and VLC. And that's pretty much that. One or two extra apps, just to see how the phone behaves.
Silence of the apps
The first day was a bit noisy - notifications, nudges, suggestions, but they slowly went away, and the phone calmed down. I found the process a bit more pleasant than what it was on the Moto, and this is not me being more experienced or comfortable with Android. This is Google making the experience a bit more transparent. The main point is not to rush things, to carefully check options, and always look into the privacy policy and the small print, because that's where all the important toggles are. Still, it's a lot. No ordinary user will ever be able to manage the full range of settings on their own, or keep them in their head. That's only us nerds enjoying the false sense of control.
Patience is the key. Those blues go to grays, one by one!
There were still annoyances, of course. Slowly, carefully, methodically, I turned notifications down, including the screenshot popup, weather alert, disabled additional noise settings in various applications, and ended up with a tight, lean Android configuration, just as it should be. You must have the deep commitment to do all this, but it's possible.
Still more stuff; slide gently (but not swipe) to the right to see the action menu for notifications.
There are also some nice touches. For example, you can use Spotify or YouTube for your alarm. But you can then also configure custom sounds (or songs). Then, you have (reasonably) effective adaptive display brightness, color and font tuning. I don't necessarily like how Android looks, but I sure appreciate the ability to change and tweak the system look and behavior.
Camera
Now, this is going to be complex. Well, it has to be, given the monstrosity that One Zoom packs on the backcover. Since it's hard forcing the laws of physics to do more than is possible from small, thin optical elements that represent smartphone cameras, vendors have turned to a new solution to the old conundrum. MOAR cameras!
Motorola One Zoom comes with a rather unusual setup - four lenses on the back. The multitude of sensors is designed to offer better picture depth and color resolution, and allows for some neat tricks like zoom and ultra-wide shots. Indeed, One Zoom features three distinct photo modes.
The main camera comes with f/1.7 aperture and image stabilization, and it offers standard 1x zoom shots. By default, it takes 48 MP of information and compresses that into a single 12MP image. You then have a 3x zoom f/2.4 8MP telephoto unit, which makes it pretty unique on the market. Next, you can also make ultra-wide shots. This camera does 0.5x zoom for a 117-degree FoV, at 16 MP and 2.2 focal ratio. Lastly, the fourth camera is basically a 5MP depth sensor, designed to make pictures slightly less two-dimensional.
On the front, there's a 25MP sensor, which compresses mugshots into 6.25MP images. OK, selfies, yawn.
Sounds quite complicated, and I expected the camera interface to be crowded. Curiously, it wasn't. You have a button you can tap to switch modes (or use pinch zoom for a more fine-grained setting). By default, the camera app uses 1x zoom, then there's 3x telephoto and then 0.5x ultra-wide. You can also enhance photos with all sorts of AI tricks and HDR. Naturally, I disabled all these right away.
Why is the camera interface dark? I use a light theme.
Now, does it work?
예. I have to say. Quite well, in fact. The standard camera is nothing too spectacular, but it does produce reasonably true colors, and there's even a modest degree of depth to images. The telephoto camera is really nice, and it creates sharp, clear images. The ultra-wide one is a bit weird. The colors are washed out, and the perspective is a bit wonky, so unless you really need it, you probably shouldn't be using it.
One Zoom (top), Lumia (bottom); the Motorola has slightly brighter (and paler) colors but decent depth clarity.
One Zoom (top), Lumia (bottom); again, the Motorola device gives better depth separation and more focus.
And then, my staring-into-bright-light example (Lumia on the left). Almost no halo, excellent background separation, bright and true colors. So I do have to say I'm quite pleased, because I have found a device that offers me the camera functionality that I need. The Lumia is no slouch, and it's a dear thing, if one can or ought to attach emotions to bricks of metal and plastic and glass, but this successor is worthy of the Dedo throne, and I shall enjoy taking photos with it.
Finally, a side-by-side comparison with the Moto G6 device (right):
Now, I can't really compare the telephoto functionality, but it does a pretty reasonable job. About 10 cm distance from the object, you get vibrant colors, good focus, all the shebang to feel like you know what you're doing. This is THE camera. If possible, step back a little and use it, because it delivers the best results.
How's the experience?
좋은. I do have to say I am pleased with the phone and the operating system, and this is not just my brain justifying a non-trivial purchase. The performance is excellent. Everything responds instantly. Smooth, clean, no stutters. The screen detail quality is good. The sound is pretty rich and resonant, and there's no tinniness when you play music at high volume. Other improvements:Wireless scan-and-connect is FAST, not like what I experienced with the G6 after the upgrade to Pie. The quick-access icons in the overlay screen are more easily configurable than what I remember from the Moto. Could be small yet important operating system upgrades, but hey, I'm not complaining!
But then, my bad luck stream continued. I dropped the phone from about 1.5 meter height onto concrete, and then it bounced and landed in some bird poo. Luckily, the rugged custom cover I bought for the device (SCL) protected it from any damage, and equally luckily, the camera lenses weren't smudged with any droppings.
Notice the (light) scratches on the left side; took the brunt of the fall and saved the phone.
There were some software problems as well. GPS wouldn't work, even though it was turned on. A one-time glitch I guess. The old turn off/turn on trick (wax on, wax off) worked and fixed the issue. In the end, the phone was tame, fast and elegant, the scars invisible.
Using the phone, things are all right so far.
The Photo app is annoying though, because the buttons there don't have labels, so you kind of have to "accidentally" click them to figure out what they do. The crop function is odd, and I hate the AI suggestions in burst photos. I didn't find a way to disable it, plus it's awfully inaccurate and wrong, all the time.
Now, the biggest issue is ... the phone is big. Massive and heavy. It's not very comfortable in the hand, and you can feel the strain after using it for a while - comparing to say the Lumia or the G6. If you want to hold it slightly more comfortably, you'll end up with your fingers touching the lenses on the back. The camera element also protrudes a fair deal, so without a cover, you will likely end up scratching the lenses whenever you put the phone down. On the plus side, One Zoom is big and sturdy enough to wield as a weapon should you ever require it.
Battery life
I found this to be one of the best parts of my journey. True, Motorola One Zoom packs a massive battery at 4000mAh, but it gives you a lot of usage time in return. Of course, I am by no means representative, and my usage patterns don't reflect in any shape or form the typical simian. That said, with light utilization, combined with ad-less browsing, some music playback in VLC, roughly 200 photos taken (no Flash), some video chatting plus an odd phone call, the device managed a full week without a need to recharge. I had the Wireless, mobile data and location turned on at all times. And remember, the system has been calmed down, with lots of extras turned off or disabled. Practically, this means you will need to replenish the ions once every three days or so with some moderate usage of the browser and media apps. Excellent.
결론
시작합니다. I've had the Motorola One Zoom for about a month now, and I have to say it's a good phone. In fact, let's do it systematically. Pros:excellent camera, good sounds, fast performance, splendid battery time, configurable operating system that is steadily improving. Cons:the phone is super heavy and cumbersome to hold, you need a lot of patience getting everything configured and tweaked, especially if you care about privacy.
But did I accomplish my mission? 응 나는 했어. I have found a worthy successor to my Lumia. One Zoom matches and even supersedes some of the aspects of my previous phone, which makes me happy, as my degrees of freedom and my sense of nerdy control have not changed (for the worse). I really disliked Android many years ago, but it has evolved into a pretty solid system, and even someone like me, with almost zero interest in the mobile nonsense, can appreciate the improvements and advancements. You have the tools to change anything you like, and while the defaults are silly and lax, you can make Android work as you please.
Now, Android will most likely never be as clean and elegant as Windows Phone. But the super-rich app ecosystem does compensate for that. At the end of the day, it is a small compromise, here and there, but overall, 95% of things are just as good as they were, or even better. I'd say that qualifies as a pleasant and successful transition from one platform to another. It was a little bit traumatic due to the SIM card mistake and the manual data transfer, but I might even say that I'm cautiously, mildly enjoying it.
So there we are. An end of an era, and a start of a new one. Motorola One Zoom seems like a really nifty mid-range phone. I do wonder what high-end devices offer, but that's a story for another time. Meanwhile, if you want a capable, fast phone with lots of juice and a splendid camera with a real optical zoom, this is a really clever choice. 내 결정에 만족합니다. 9.5/10. Bye Lumia, welcome One.
건배.