Boot up a fresh new Moto G5 and get ready to be at least a little confused.
Check out the home screen for a new and you'll find the usual Google Apps folder full ofbloatware useful Google-made apps, and on the other side of the Moto app you'll find an icon for . We know that Google exercises quite a bit of control over how an Android phone with the Google Play Services onboard needs to look, with some special emphasis on the home screen.
It's not unusual for Google to want to show off new apps, so it's not too odd to see Duo on the home page instead of in the Google folder, but Duo is alone on the home screen. There's no Allo to be found. In fact, it's not even installed on the phone.
Google's messaging strategy for the future should be super clear by now. and Duo, the chat and video messaging service unveiled at Google I/O last year, are the default apps for consumers. , the re-branded counterparts every Android user has seen for the last couple of years, is for businesses or large groups. There's no law saying you must use one or the other if you prefer, but the dividing lines have become fairly clear and Google seems committed to building Allo and Duo up to offer something unique and useful to users.
So why is it the new budget-friendly and surprisingly capable Moto G5 Plus, complete with Android 7.0, doesn't reflect that strategy when you boot the phone for the first time?
Seriously, I don't know. You tell me.
Check out the home screen for a new and you'll find the usual Google Apps folder full of
It's not unusual for Google to want to show off new apps, so it's not too odd to see Duo on the home page instead of in the Google folder, but Duo is alone on the home screen. There's no Allo to be found. In fact, it's not even installed on the phone.
Google's messaging strategy for the future should be super clear by now. and Duo, the chat and video messaging service unveiled at Google I/O last year, are the default apps for consumers. , the re-branded counterparts every Android user has seen for the last couple of years, is for businesses or large groups. There's no law saying you must use one or the other if you prefer, but the dividing lines have become fairly clear and Google seems committed to building Allo and Duo up to offer something unique and useful to users.
So why is it the new budget-friendly and surprisingly capable Moto G5 Plus, complete with Android 7.0, doesn't reflect that strategy when you boot the phone for the first time?
Seriously, I don't know. You tell me.
- Current OS version: Android 7.0
- Current security: Jan. 2017 ()