Latest news with #Edge60Pro


Hindustan Times
10-06-2025
- Hindustan Times
Motorola Edge 60 with 50MP dual camera, Moto AI launched in India at ₹25999
Motorola has unveiled the latest addition to its popular Edge 60 smartphone lineup with the launch of the Motorola Edge 60 in India. The latest addition follows last year's Edge 50 and joins other devices in the series, including the Edge 60 Pro, Edge 60 Stylus, and Edge 60 Fusion. The new release features several upgrades, such as a larger battery and a 50MP front camera. While the phone debuted in some global markets back in April with the MediaTek Dimensity 7300 processor, the Indian version arrives with an upgraded MediaTek Dimensity 7400 chipset. Let's take a closer look at its specs, features and pricing. The Motorola Edge 60 features a 6.67-inch quad-curved p-OLED display with a resolution of 2712 x 1220 pixels. It offers a smooth experience with a 120Hz refresh rate. In terms of optics, the Motorola Edge 60 features a 50MP Sony LYT-700C main sensor equipped with optical image stabilisation (OIS). It also includes a 50MP ultrawide lens and a 10MP telephoto lens that supports 3x optical zoom. It also has a 50MP camera on the front, which comes with selfie enhancement capabilities. Also read: Motorola Edge 50 Neo review: The best Android experience under ₹30,000? Under the hood, the device is powered by the MediaTek Dimensity 7400 SoC paired with 12GB of RAM and 256GB of built-in storage. Additionally, users can expand storage by up to 1TB through a dedicated microSD card slot. The handset runs on Android 15 with Motorola's Hello UI layered on top. The company is committed to providing three years of Android updates and four years of security patches. Also read: Motorola Edge 60, Edge 60 Pro with 50MP camera launched globally; India launch imminent On the other hand, the Edge 60 houses a 5500mAh battery with 68W fast charging support. It also carries an IP68 and IP69 rating for water and dust resistance and meets MIL-STD-810H durability standards, according to the company. The device also offers Water Touch 3.0 and SGS Eye Care protection for the display. Moreover, the Moto Edge 60 features stereo speakers with Dolby Atmos support and Moto AI functionalities. Also read: Motorola teases first laptop launch in India, hints at bold entry into competitive market Motorola Edge 60 is priced at Rs. 25,999 for the single 12GB RAM and 256GB storage variant. It comes in two colour options: Pantone Gibraltar Sea and Pantone Shamrock. The phone will go on sale starting June 17, and users can purchase it through Flipkart, Motorola's official website, and offline retail stores. Additionally, buyers can also avail an instant discount of ₹1,000 using select bank cards, which will bring the effective price down to Rs. 24,999.


The Hindu
10-06-2025
- The Hindu
Motorola Edge 60 launched in India with 10 MP telephoto lens. Features, price and sale
Motorola on Tuesday (June 10, 2025) launched the Edge 60 smartphone in India. The new Motorola Edge 60 fits under the Edge 60 family with already launched phones like Edge 60 Pro, Edge 60 Stylus and Edge 60 Fusion. The mid segment phone has MIL-STD-810H military-grade certification, IP68 + IP69 water and dust protection, and Gorilla Glass 7i on its quad-curved display. Motorola Edge 60 has a 6.7 inch 1.5K Super HD quad-curved pOLED display with a 120 Hz refresh rate and 4,500 nits peak brightness. Motorola Edge 60 ships with a 5,500 mAh battery, supported by 68 W charger in the box. It has stereo speakers with Dolby Atmos and Hi-Res Audio. (For top technology news of the day, subscribe to our tech newsletter Today's Cache) Motorola Edge 60 runs on the MediaTek Dimensity 7400 chipset with 12 GB LPDDR4X RAM and 256GB UFS 2.2 storage. It operates on Hello UI based on Android 15. Motorola Edge 60 sports a 50 MP main camera along with a 50 MP ultrawide + macro lens and a 10 MP telephoto lens with 3x optical and up to 30x digital zoom. It holds a 50 MP selfie camera. The phone offers 4K video recording on all cameras. The Motorola Edge 60 comes in Pantone validated Gibraltar Sea (smoky blue) and Shamrock (fresh green) shades. It will sell on Flipkart, Motorola and leading retail stores across India, from June 17, at ₹25,999. Motorola also launched a new Pantone Mykonos Blue finish Edge 60 Fusion at ₹23,999. It will sell on Flipkart, Motorola and leading retail stores across India, starting June 13.


GSM Arena
06-06-2025
- Business
- GSM Arena
Motorola Edge 60's India launch date announced, coming with different specs
Motorola launched the Edge 60 Pro in India in April, and today, the brand announced it will introduce the non-Pro model to the Indian market on June 10. It will be sold through Flipkart, Motorola's official website, and offline retailers. Motorola hasn't revealed the Edge 60's Indian price, but the smartphone's listing on the brand's official website reveals that its processor and battery size will differ from those of other global models. Meet the all-new Motorola Edge 60Packed with the segment's only 3 X 50MP Pro-Grade AI camera with 3X optical Zoom, it's built for creators who see the world differently. Launching on 10th June on Flipkart | | leading retail stores. — Motorola India (@motorolaindia) June 6, 2025 The global models of the Motorola Edge 60 come with the Dimensity 7300 SoC and a 5,200 mAh battery, while the Indian version will have the Dimensity 7400 chip at the helm with a 5,500 mAh battery - the same capacity as the Chinese Edge 60. Motorola Edge 60 Circling back to the processors, the Dimensity 7300 and 7400 are essentially the same chips, as the former features four Cortex-A78 cores clocked at 2.5GHz, while the latter has those with a slightly higher clock speed of 2.6GHz. Motorola Edge 60 Pro The Motorola Edge 60 will be sold in India in a single 12GB/256GB configuration, with two color options - Pantone Gibraltar Sea and Pantone Shamrock. Motorola Edge 60's color options in India The rest of the Indian Edge 60's specs are the same as other versions, meaning you get a 6.67" 1.5K 120Hz quad curved pOLED display, Android 15, 68W charging, IP68/69 rating, and MIL-STD-810H certification. The Motorola Edge 60 also comes with an in-display fingerprint scanner, stereo speakers, and Dolby Atmos audio enhancement. The smartphone features four cameras for photography - 50MP primary, 10MP telephoto, 50MP ultrawide, and 50MP selfie. You can read our global Motorola Edge 60's review to know more about it. We also have a video version of the review, which is included below.


Mint
06-06-2025
- Mint
Motorola Edge 60 launching in India on 10 June: What to expect?
Motorola has confirmed that its latest budget phone, the Edge 60 is launching in India on 10 June. The Lenovo sub-brand has also shared a number of details about the latest Edge device which will join the Edge 60 Stylus and Edge 60 Pro in the budget lineup. Motorola Edge 60 will come with a 6.7 inch 1.5K Quad Curved pOLED display with HDR10+ support and 100% DCI-P3 colour gamut. It will come with IP68 + IP69 rating, meaning the phone can withstand being submerged in up to 1.5 meters of water while also being able to handle cold/hot water jets from any direction. The teaser images shown by Motorola suggest that the design of the Edge 60 will remain largely similar to what we have seen on ther Edge 60 lineup devices this year with a vegan leather back and square camera module. Apart from that we'll have to rely on the leaks to figure out what to expect about the upcoming device. As per tipster Abhishek Yadav on X (formerly Twitter), the Edge 60 will be powered by the MediaTek Dimensity 7400 chipset which is the successor to last year's Dimensity 7300 SoC seen on many mid-range phones from CMF Phone 1 to Infinix Note 50s and Lava Agni 3. It could come paired with UFS 2.2 storage and LPDDR4x RAM. The phone is said to run on Motorola's own UI based on Android 15 with a promise 3 years of OS updates and 4 years of security patches. As for optics, it could feature a 50MP Sony LYT700C primary shooter with OIS and a 50MP ultra-wide angle lens with 3x optical zoom. There could also be a 50MP shooter on the front for selfies and video calls. The phone could pack a 5,500mAh battery with support for 68W of wired fast charging. It isn't yet clear if there will also be support for wireless charging or not.


Stuff.tv
04-06-2025
- Business
- Stuff.tv
I was amazed by the Motorola Edge 60 Pro's epic battery life – and you will be too
Stuff Verdict One of the longest-lasting mid-range phones is also a great all-round performer. The Motorola Edge 60 Pro rejects modern design trends and faces stiff competition, but impresses where it matters most. Pros Consistent and capable rear camera trio Excellent battery life and fast charging Streamlined take on Android with useful AI additions Cons Some hardware regressions from the last-gen model Curved-edge display won't be to all tastes Only average long-term software support Introduction It took a few tries, but Motorola's Edge series has finally found its niche. Sitting above the best mid-range phones but not quite in true flagship territory, they're an appealing blend of Eastern and Western phone philosophies. Where else can you get both streamlined software and distinctive design, and big batteries with rapid charging speeds? The Edge 60 Pro continues that streak. Beyond one of the largest battery capacities you'll find in its class, the successor to the Edge 50 Pro brings more power and upgraded cameras. There have a been one or two backwards steps elsewhere on the spec sheet, but Moto has managed to reign in the price as a result. At £599 it undercuts both the Google Pixel 9 and OnePlus 13R's retail price (though both can now be had for less if you shop around), and is significantly easier on your wallet than a Samsung Galaxy S25. As ever, Motorola US is doing it's own thing, so the closest comparison is the Motorola Edge (2025) – though that makes do with lesser MediaTek power, and isn't such a battery behemoth. In countries where you can buy one, though, the Edge 60 Pro might just be the left-field alternative to draw you away from the usual suspects. How we test smartphones Every phone reviewed on Stuff is used as our main device throughout the testing process. We use industry standard benchmarks and tests, as well as our own years of experience, to judge general performance, battery life, display, sound and camera image quality. Manufacturers have no visibility on reviews before they appear online, and we never accept payment to feature products. Find out more about how we test and rate products. Design & build: smell for leather Only true Moto geeks will spot the differences between this phone and the last-gen Edge 50 Pro. The overall design is largely unchanged, with the same quad-curved front glass (this time protected with Corning's Gorilla Glass 7i for extra drop resistance), and similar materials on the back panel. This time you get either leather or nylon-effect finish, depending on whether you go for the Shadow grey, Dazzling Blue or Sparkling Grape purple colours. They're all Pantone-approved, of course, and more fingerprint-resistant than almost any other phone I've used recently. I'm expecting the finish to hold up over time better than the Alcantara used on the Razr 60 Ultra. The central frame is polycarbonate now, which feels like a step back from the metal one seen on last year's phone. A cheaper Pixel 9a arguably feels more lavish as a result. It does help keep the weight in check, though; at 186g this is a light phone for its size, and the way the edges curve inwards makes it feel slimmer in your hand, too. The Moto has a nicer unboxing experience than the Pixel, as the packaging is perfume scented (yes, really), and the colour-matched case is a nice inclusion. It's the new shortcut key on the right side of the phone that marks the Edge 60 Pro out as a child of the AI age. A press-and-hold brings up the Moto AI menu, while a double press can trigger one of a few functions. More on those in the software section. It's great to see both IP68 and IP69 ratings, meaning this phone can withstand the elements as well as the best flagships on sale right now. I'll never buy a phone with a lesser rating again, after my wife managed to ruin her handset with a trip through the washing machine. I can't fault the under-display fingerprint sensor, which is as quick and accurate as any optical sensor you'll find for this sort of money. There's face unlock too, but not the secure kind you can use with banking apps. Screen & sound: colourful curves You'll need to take a magnifying glass to the spec sheet to see where the Edge 60 Pro and Edge 50 Pro differ on displays. Both have 6.7in OLED panels, both have 1220p resolutions and both curve inwards at the edges in a subtle enough way they don't awkwardly cast light reflections. While the outgoing phone had a 144Hz refresh rate, though, here you're getting 120Hz. Personally I didn't notice a difference, as the Edge 50 Pro would usually reserve its highest setting for games. 120Hz still feels perfectly smooth when scrolling or gaming on the Edge 60 Pro, with no obvious stalling or stuttering when swapping the refresh rate based on what was happening onscreen. On the plus side, colours are well-judged using the Natural preset (which is active out of the box) – which is no surprise, given Pantone's involvement. Contrast and black levels are as good as any mid-range OLED, and viewing angles leave nothing to grumble about either. maximum brightness has also more than doubled from last year, to a retina-searingly bright 4500 nit peak. Even though you're never going to see that in typical use, the automatic brightness could push things impressively high. I put this up there with some flagship phones that cost twice the price for outdoor visibility. HDR10+ support really comes into its own here, letting streaming shows balance engaging highlights with deep shadows. It helps that the down-firing main speaker and earpiece tweeter get decently loud, so you won't have to scramble for earbuds just to enjoy a box set or three. There's a bit of distortion at maximum volume, but there's enough oomph at 70% that I never really needed to crank it to the max. Cameras: wide eyed Quite a few phone firms have stepped up their ultrawide camera game lately. Motorola is the latest, swapping the Edge 50 Pro's lowly 13MP unit for a far more capable 50MP snapper, complete with autofocus for macro photography. It joins the 50MP lead lens (which now uses Sony hardware instead of Omnivision) and 10MP telephoto, which is good for 3x optical zoom shots. The laser autofocus module has been ditched in the process, but I can't say I missed it. This phone is quick enough to lock onto static subjects and has a software-enhanced action shot mode that deals with moving targets pretty effectively, as long as you lead your shot a bit to account for some mild shutter lag. Colour, contrast and exposure consistency between the three lenses is rather tidy, with just a little variation around very bright highlights. Dynamic range is good across the board, and there's not a huge quality gap between the 10MP telephoto and the other two higher pixel count cameras, at least in good light. Motorola's image processing isn't quite as nuanced as the best cameraphones in this price bracket, but it's arguably as close as it's ever been here. Motorola Edge 60 Pro, Ultrawide lens Motorola Edge 60 Pro, main lens Motorola Edge 60 Pro, telephoto lens Pantone's colour science is in full effect, with natural-looking hues in pretty much all lighting conditions. Skin tones are accurate and textures are well preserved by the main lens. There's plenty of detail on show, and lots of natural bokeh for close-up shots. The portrait mode does a decent job when it comes to edge detection and faux background blur, too. I took a lot more ultrawide shots than I normally would with a phone at this price, as it does a great job of squeezing out detail – even for far-off subjects and more expansive architecture. Everything stays sharp to the edge of the frame, too. Motorola Edge 60 Pro, Ultrawide lens Motorola Edge 60 Pro, main lens Motorola Edge 60 Pro, telephoto lens The telephoto lens loses some lustre at night, where its lower pixel count starts to work against it. In contrast, the main camera keeps noise to a minimum and balances exposure well, keeping highlights without sacrificing shadows. Zoom snaps in general are this phone's biggest weakness on the photography front, as 3x really is your limit; the camera app makes you manually pinch in further, rather than offer up a 6x shortcut, and zooming that far is hitting the limits of what a 10MP sensor can capture. 2x snaps from the main sensor were noticeably less crisp than native 1x ones, though, suggesting Motorola has some work to do on its cropping and processing algorithms. No autofocus for the selfie camera is another regression from the Edge 50 Pro, but it didn't seem to harm the phone's ability to take sharp shots through its punch-hole lens. I still think keen photographers will gravitate to a Pixel 9, but Edge 60 Pro owners won't feel at all short-changed by the shots it can produce. Software experience: get smart The Edge 60 Pro doesn't get off to the best start, forcing a bunch of third-party apps on you during the initial setup. Then it encourages you to download a bunch more before you first reach the homescreen. The stock weather app is loaded with ads, too. This isn't a cheap phone, so it's disappointing to see – especially given Motorola usually has such a delicate touch when it comes to customising Android. Hello UI mixes up the icons, menu layouts and fonts from Google's default, and there's no shortage of customisation options and gesture shortcuts if you want them. You can pick from a (fairly limited) set of widgets to appear on the lock screen, and a handful of Motorola's productivity-minded tools are waiting for you in the app drawer, but otherwise you're largely looking at Google's stock app selection. Moto AI is the major new feature, which expands on Google Gemini and Circle to Search with a bunch of tools accessed by the physical shortcut key on the side of the phone. A press-and-hold brings up a menu with things like 'remember this' which stores a screenshot in memory so you can ask about it later, and 'take notes' which records audio with fast and fairly accurate transcription. I like having everything under a single banner, rather than having to swipe around the operating system to find each function, but Motorola still needs to work on teaching its 'update me' message summaries to understand context before it's properly helpful. The firm is also lagging behind on long-term software support. You're still only getting three years of new Android generations, which is half what Google and Samsung now offer. Moto will be forced to improve for its next generation if it wants to comply with new EU rules, but that won't have any effect on existing products. If you keep your phone for the long haul, that's something to consider. Performance & battery life: weekend warrior Motorola has shifted from Qualcomm to MediaTek power for the Edge 60 Pro, but has still stuck with a mid-tier chip. The Dimensity 8350 Extreme might sound like it has extra oomph over the regular version, but the name seemingly just marks it out as having a slightly different set of behind-the-scenes tools when it comes to gaming. Don't think that makes it any sort of slouch, though. The Edge 60 Pro trades back and forth with the Pixel 9a depending on the test, and easily keeps pace with the rest of the mid-range pack. Day to day performance feels right on the money, with apps opening quickly enough and multitasking not feeling like a burden. The 12GB of RAM surely helps on that front. If outright power matters most a OnePlus 13R remains your best choice, but there's comfortably more grunt here than you'll get from either a Samsung Galaxy A56 or the Nothing Phone 3a Pro. Motorola Edge 60 Pro benchmark scores Geekbench 6 single-core 1377 Gekbench 6 multi-core 4406 PCMark Work 3.0 18454 3DMark Wild Life Extreme 3107 The Motorola comfortably edges out the Pixel on gaming performance, with even demanding 3D games being perfectly playable. Frame rates weren't as consistent as a flagship, but I didn't have to dial the detail levels back at all. The phone warmed up under load but never got toasty, so the fps didn't drop after a particularly long play session. You can really get your game on for a while with this phone, too. Motorola has managed to squeeze a 6000mAh battery inside the Edge 60 Pro, which is comfortably 20% more capacity than you'll find from Samsung, Nothing or Google. It easily lasts a full day of heavy use, and will get pretty far through a second day if you tone things down a bit. There's little else in its price bracket – and nothing as slim – that can last as long between trips to a plug socket. A OnePlus Nord 4 comes closest, but is still several hours of constant video playback behind. Charging speeds have dipped a bit from last year; maybe because of the new battery chemistry? That said, 90W is still good enough for a full charge in under an hour through a compatible power brick. Wireless charging has taken a bigger hit, down from 50W on the Edge 50 Pro to 15W here, which could be frustrating if you've got a suitably speedy Qi puck. Motorola Edge 60 Pro verdict The Edge 60 Pro is a proper antidote to identikit smartphones with flat sides and screens. Motorola's mix of unique materials and curved-edge glass really help this phone stand out, and what's underneath is pretty convincing too. There's ample performance, the software is simple without being basic (with AI enhancements you might actually want to use) and it's as weather-resistant as they come. It's a shame to see some of last year's specs dialled down, notably charging speeds and selfie camera autofocus, but nothing has dipped low enough that it loses ground to close rivals. In all other respects photography has stepped up from the previous generation, helping Moto close the gap to the current class leaders. Battery life is ultimately the Edge 60 Pro's biggest draw. If you're after a does-it-all device that can last entire weekends between refuels and won't cost as much as a flagship, it absolutely deserves to be on your shortlist. Stuff Says… Score: 4/5 One of the longest-lasting mid-range phones is also a great all-round performer. The Motorola Edge 60 Pro rejects modern design trends and faces stiff competition, but impresses where it matters most. Pros Consistent and capable rear camera trio Excellent battery life and fast charging Streamlined take on Android with useful AI additions Cons Some hardware regressions from the last-gen model Curved-edge display won't be to all tastes Only average long-term software support Motorola Edge 60 Pro technical specifications Screen 6.7in, 2712×1220 OLED w/ 120Hz CPU MediaTek Dimensity 8350 Extreme Memory 8/12GB RAM Cameras 50MP, f/1.8 w/ PDAF, OIS + 10MP, f/2.0 telephoto w/ PDAF, OIS, 3x optical zoom + 50MP, f/2.0 ultrawide w/ PDAF rear 50MP, f.20 front Storage 256/512GB on-board Operating system Android 15 w/ Hello UI Battery 6000mAh w/ 90W wired, 15W wireless charging Dimensions 161x73x8.2mm, 186g