Mobile parts and cell phone parts are available online

in phoneparts •  3 years ago 

MPD Mobile Parts & Devices is a Motorola Authorized cell phone repair parts distributor with a mission to connect our clients with high-quality, certified OEM Mobile Phone Parts and Accessories for Cell Phone Repair. We deal in Motorola, Samsung, LG, Google Pixel, Huawei, Logitech, Hitachi, Alolo, Cirago, and more

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Motorola parts search, Motorola replacement parts

It's getting warm outside folks which means it's time to toss the same old stack Moto mods in my backpack and pretend once again, that the modular phone dream is still alive. That's right, Motorola just dropped the Moto Z4, but unless you're on Verizon Wireless, it's probably not the Moto Z4 for you. (light electronic music) Don't misunderstand, I still think modular phones are a cool idea and if you stick around to the end, I'll show you a few really interesting mods from Motorola and elsewhere, but this phone, the Moto Z4, doesn't make any sense to buy it unless you're already invested in the Moto mod ecosystem or again, you're on Verizon Wireless. But that's because this phone is basically Verizon's gateway drug to 5G. It's insanely affordable if you start a new line of service with Verizon. During the promo period, you can get the phone and its 5G Moto cell phone parts for under 500 bucks, and on top of that, Verizon will waive that 10 dollar a month charge for 5G if you do so. You might remember the 5G Moto mod from my preview video last summer. It slaps onto the back of the phone just like any other Moto mod, but instead of a camera or a speaker, it packs the radios antennas and modem necessary to make the phone work on Verizon's 5G network. Now, the phone beneath the mod, in some ways it's a tremendous value.

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No fingerprints, thanks to this nice matte finish on the curved Gorilla Glass three backplate. A display covering almost the whole face of the phone. Little things like a headphone jack for those who want it and a top-mounted speaker that makes it harder to accidentally cover up the sound when you hold it. More importantly, a couple of very big things too, like a battery that I just can't kill in one day, no matter how hard I try. No wireless charging, but there's a mod for that and if the battery is not big enough for you, I can't imagine that's true, well, there's a mod for that as well. No need to fall back to the old Hasselblad mod for your photos. Presiding over the Z4's backside is a camera with one of the highest resolutions on the market. I'll share more samples at the end of mobile parts. Phone calls are crystal clear and that display, well, it could be a lot brighter, is plenty colorful, and powering everything is the familiar, minimalistic Motorola software. I still love these features folks, but I also want to see more of them and it seems like Motorola has kind of stopped innovating here. There's still creative execution at work. Motorola found a cool ultrasonic method of detecting when your hand is nearby so it no longer has to drill holes in the faceplate for sensors, but the Moto display that pops up is the same one we've seen for years. Those gestures are again, the same ones first introduced six years ago and while Motorola genuinely deserves credit for making phones compatible with its Moto mods for even longer than it initially promised, we got no new Moto mods at this announcement.

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Let's take a second and contrast the Moto Z4 with the only other modular phone to even get close to the mainstream, the S90 from a company called Doogee. Less than 500 bucks get you a rugged Android handset with intense dust and water resistance, a massive battery, and four slap-on accessories. Similar to Moto, one of these is a battery and one is a gamepad. The other two though are wild. A night-vision camera for super low-light shooting and a PRS radio add-on that turns the phone into a walkie-talkie. Now look, to be 100% clear, I am not saying you should go buy a Doogee phone instead of the Moto Z4. The mods feel light and cheap, the phone has no oleophobic coating to fight fingerprints and the typos on everything from the stickers to the software make it very difficult to take this thing seriously, but I bring it up so that we can sort of remember together what it was like when modular accessories were still aspirational and I still love using Motorola's mods, printing goofy Polaroids, taking goofy or 360-degree photos, going a whole weekend without charging. It's not fun.

Are Motorola products made in the USA?
Does Motorola sell parts?
Is Moto better than Samsung?

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