On the back you'll find a large
circular camera lens that protrudes out of the body about one millimeter and makes the phone feel a bit off balance at times when using it on a flat surface.
The volume rocker and lock button will be on the left side of the device, while the rear will have
a circular camera lens and horizontal antenna lines.
The back has a nice premium finish, complete with Moto's logo right below
circular camera lens, and magnetic pins further down below.
On the back is
a circular camera lens and flash.
Not exact matches
Snap has prototyped an aluminum design with more
circular lens frames and two
cameras that would allow for 3D - like depth effects in videos.
An oval shaped fingerprint sensor rests below the
circular rear
camera lens and a LED flash.
Motorola has really gone for a prominent
camera unit on this one with its
circular design and the flash placed below the
lens.
There's no significance here other than pretty branding — though around the
camera lens is a dual - LED
circular flash which mimics that of a professional photographer's to provide even distribution of light for indoor and night shots.
The back cover has prominent antenna lines on top and bottom with a
circular fingerprint sensor right below the
camera lens.
Standard
camera lenses use at least five aperture blades to keep the aperture roughly
circular throughout many f - stop adjustments.
There is a
circular camera hump on the back that features two
lenses and a dual flash.
Both devices have a single
lens rear
camera within the glass section, a rear - mounted
circular fingerprint sensor below the glass section within the metal body and «G» branding at the bottom too.
Both are built from a combination of glass and metal, with the top third of their rear featuring a glass panel that houses a
circular fingerprint sensor and the
camera lens, while the bottom two thirds is metal with «G» branding and an antenna strip.
The
circular fingerprint sensor sits on the rear panel, leaving the front piece almost completely devoid of detail, aside from the speaker, front
camera lens, and ambient light sensor.
On top is the
camera lens encircled by a chrome ring and a
circular protrusion that's reminiscent of the HTC One X, although the one on the latter juts out more.
A physical home button is positioned beneath the display of the Moto X4, incorporating a fingerprint sensor, while the rear sees the signature batwing «M», as many Moto fans will now expect, along with a raised
circular camera housing that features dual -
lenses and a flash.
The dual -
lens camera comes complete with a Colour Correlated Temperature dual - LED flash, also built into the
circular camera module.
The front is clean and beautiful thanks to the button - free design, and around back you'll find the large
camera sensor and
lens centered horizontally on the device near the top with the dual - tone dual - LED flash to the left and
circular fingerprint scanner underneath.
Opting for such a slim body has resulted in a very prominent
circular camera bump on the rear, which protrudes several millimeters out to accommodate the 12 - megapixel sensor and f / 1.7
lens.
A dual - rear
camera setup is present with a
circular fingerprint sensor beneath the
camera module again, though the flash is positioned to the right of the
lenses this time round.
Compared to the Moto E3 announced last year, the Moto C features capacitive buttons and adopts a
circular camera stack that incorporates the
lens and flash.
It is a
circular lens module, said to come with five options for focal lengths, and looks a bit like the
camera on the rear of the four - year - old Nokia Lumia 1020.
The unique
circular lens on this
camera lets you shoot video in 360 degrees, and you can point the
camera forward for wide - angle 180 - degree still photography as well.
It shows a very bulky
camera setup with a large
circular lens area.
The protruding bump, for example, is
circular and mimics a large
camera lens.
On the back of the Moto E4 Plus there's a single speaker grill offset to the right and the familiar
circular camera module up top, this time featuring a single
lens and only the slightest of
camera bumps.