One year after the revitalization of Motorola’s most iconic phone, the company has released the Razr+ – the 2024 edition. This flip-style foldable knocks it out of the park in almost every aspect while maintaining one of the best foldable price points in 2024.

  • Ilandar@aussie.zone
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    4 months ago

    Even though I’ve very much enjoyed my time with the Motorola Razr+, there’s one thought that looms overhead. Motorola has recently been pretty bad at supporting newer versions of Android. The 2023 Motorola Edge+, for instance, was a fantastic device at launch. Unfortunately, it still runs Android 13 with no word on the promised Android 14.

    As a reminder, Android 15 is about to be launched by Google.

    So if the 2024 Motorola Razr+ launches with Android 14, when would Motorola upgrade it to Android 15? Well, it might be well after the version is actually launched and then sometime after other OEMs create individual versions and skins of it for certain devices. Motorola promises 3 years of updates, though it can’t be guaranteed that they’ll be timely.

    I own one of the 2023 razr phones and the update experience has been abysmal. Motorola has not delivered on a single one of its promises around frequency or version upgrades. I guess this will only deteriorate further from here, now that there’s a newer phone out.

    • f4f4f4f4f4f4f4f4@sopuli.xyz
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      4 months ago

      I have a Verizon Razr+ 2023 (on an MVNO), and it’s now running Android 14.

      Ask your service provider why they are holding back updates.

      Edit: 14 fixed one of my annoying issues with this phone; the outer screen did not play nice with certain keyboards and would force close them (I like Unexpected Keyboard). Now you can choose different keyboards for each screen.

      • Ilandar@aussie.zone
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        4 months ago

        Ask your service provider why they are holding back updates.

        It has nothing to do with service providers, we don’t all live in the US where you’re slaves to telcos.

        • f4f4f4f4f4f4f4f4@sopuli.xyz
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          4 months ago

          My bad. Well, obviously Motorola has 14 configured and available for this device, so I don’t know what to tell you.

          Luckily, my gov’t now forces providers to un-network-lock devices after a certain waiting period (60 days?), and the bootloader seems to be unlockable! I’m not feeling like a slave, just paying more for the phone than what I signed up for.

          Edit: I’ll always trust Motorola over, say, Samsung, where the Galaxy S-whatever (US version) and the same name device (International version) even have a completely different processor!