Motorola RAZR i review: Intel's 2GHz processor in a small, Android ICS package -- Engadget
Engadget Review
We also had the chance to pit the RAZR i against the Droid RAZR M. Aside from the benchmark results outlined above, the Medfield entry offered a marginally faster response to most actions. Powering up both phones, the RAZR i landed at its home screen around 12 seconds ahead of the
Snapdragon sibling. Loading into the Chrome browser was around the same speed on both, likewise the camera app -- both launching and capture -- was equally swift on both. It's interesting to note that the color balance appeared more natural on the screen of the Verizon version, which matches up with our results in the camera test.
In addition to this admirable performance, we were interested to see how
Intel's mobile chip fared in terms of battery life -- with the
Motorola RAZR M sharing screen similarities and more, we can make a better judgement on whether those promises stand up. On our battery rundown -- video playback, 50 percent brightness, WiFi and 3G on, social networks and email on sync -- Intel's iteration lasted nine hours, compared with eight hours for the RAZR M. That's a marginal victory, but as with the LTE version, we were more impressed with how the phone managed to go the distance on typical or mildly intensive use. Ultimately, we never felt the need to seek out a charging port during a day's work.
I do not see anything about app compatibility which is surprising.
a valid comment from the post. motorola most likely designed this phone to feature hardware buttons. but they later switched to software buttons resulting in huge bezel at the bottom.
https://imgur.com/j0SUt