The Motorola Atrix HD runs Android 4.0.4 Ice Cream Sandwich, which has been lightly customized by Motorola. The overall Android experience feels like one with a stock UI in more than one occasion - starting from the on-screen Android buttons, all the way to the app drawer and its transition effects.
Check out the handset in action below.
The first part the interface which has been customized by Motorola is the lock screen. Pressing the unlock button gives you four shortcus - you can simply unlock the smartphone, or go straight to telephony, text messaging or the camera apps. You can also turn the device's sound on and off from the lock screen.
The lock screen has plenty of options
The homescreen consists of side-scrollable panes. There's a small indicator above the docked icons, which disappears when not needed.
When adding or removing a homescreen pane, you have two options - start with a blank or use a preset one. The preset ones are geared towards specific activities such as social networking, entertainment, or managing your AT&T services.
Adding panes to the homescreen
Removing homescreen panes is as easy as swiping them upwards. No surprises here.
In a true Ice Cream Sandwich fashion, long pressing the homescreen gives you the option to change the handset's wallpapers. You can do so for both the lock and the homescreen.
The app drawer has been taken straight from the stock version of Android ICS. It features two tabs - Apps and Widgets, each of which consists of several side-scrollable pages. If you scroll past the available apps you move into the Widgets tab. There's also a Google Play store shortcut next to the tabs, for quicker access to Android's official app repository.
You can create folders in the familiar ICS way. All you have to do is swipe the icon over the one you want to pair it with.
There aren't too many preloaded widgets. However, Motorola's own Circles widget is one of the most comfortable ones we've encountered. It offers you access to the clock, weather in different cities, as well as a battery indicator in a customizable shell.
As part of its homescreen customizations, the Motorola Atrix HD allows you to access the logs of some of the most commonly used applications. They include the web browser, the messaging app, the Motorola email app, the telephony, as well as the phone book. We found this feature to be particularly handy.
Swiping some homescreen icons gives you options
The notification area is taken straight from the stock ICS UI. It shows you icons next to the notification, such as the picture of the person who called or messaged you. There's a Settings shortcut to make up for the fact that you can't go Menu > Settings.
The notification area allows you to enter to phone's settings
The overall user interface experience with the Motorola Atrix HD is quite pleasant. The UI has been customized lightly, but cleverly. This helps it retain a lot of pure Googleness to it - not a bad thing in our opinion.
The Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 chipset of the Motorola Atrix HD is the same as the one found in any top shelf device currently on the US market, including the Galaxy S III and the HTC One X. Having the same silicon as its competition shows in the benchmark scores as well, as the Atrix HD offers performance on par with the competition.
Lower is better
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Higher is better
Higher is better
Lower is better
Higher is better
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