Skip to main content

I found a hidden way to turn your Motorola phone into an iPhone

A Motorola phone next to an iPhone.
Joe Maring / Digital Trends

Well, folks, things certainly are getting busy in the mobile tech space. Samsung recently launched new foldables and wearables, Google’s Pixel 9 series will be here before you know it, and it won’t be long before we have to turn our attention toward the iPhone 16.

But I want to take a quick break from all of that to talk about Motorola. No, the company hasn’t launched a new phone or anything like that. I recently discovered a hidden setting on my Motorola Razr Plus 2024. It’s a setting that lets you make part of your Motorola phone look like an iPhone. It’s weird, unexpected, and possibly a sign of other big changes coming to Motorola phones in the future.

Recommended Videos

Turning your Motorola phone into an iPhone

The Motorola Edge 50 Pro's screen and software.
How the quick settings on a Motorola phone normally look Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

By default, the quick settings/notification panel on Motorola phones looks a lot like they do on Google Pixel phones. You have large bubbles for your quick settings, a horizontal brightness slider, and notifications below all of that. It’s clean, simple, and familiar to anyone who’s used an Android phone over the last couple of years.

However, there’s a way to completely change this. On any Motorola phone running Android 14, simply follow these steps:

  1. Open the Settings app
  2. Tap on Home & lock screen
  3. Tap Control center

Here, you’ll see that Classic style is selected by default. Below it, tap the Modern style option. Once you do this, you’ll see that your quick settings look completely different. In fact, they look awfully similar to the Control Center on an iPhone.

A Motorola phone with the modern style quick settings enabled.
A Motorola phone with the “Modern style” quick settings Joe Maring / Digital Trends

How so? Connectivity options for Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and mobile data now live in a large bubble near the top. Next to it are vertical sliders for volume and brightness. Below those is a media player, plus small shortcuts for all of your other setting toggles. The gestures are also a bit different. With Modern style selected, you swipe down from the top right of the screen to see your quick settings, while swiping down from the top left shows your notifications. Again, just like how it works on an iPhone.

iPhone comparisons aside, this design has its advantages. Compared to the Classic layout, you see a lot more settings at once. It’s also a bit more customizable, giving you options to hide/show the media player and the text labels for your toggles. It’s not a lot, but they’re nice touches.

A sign of what’s to come?

Two Motorola phones next to each other, showing the quick settings on both.
Modern style (left) and Classic style quick settings Joe Maring / Digital Trends

OK, so there’s an extra design for the quick settings on new Motorola phones. What’s the big deal? There may not be one; this could just be Motorola expanding the customization options for its phones. If that’s the case, cool! However, I do think this could be a sign of bigger software design changes to come.

Although Motorola’s Android 14 update doesn’t look dramatically different from its Android 13 interface, there are subtle visual changes here and there. The “normal” quick settings/notification panel, for example, has a transparent/glass-like design. That transparent background is also found on many of the new widgets introduced with the Razr 2024 and Razr Plus 2024 this year. The Settings and Moto apps have updated designs, too, featuring stark white backgrounds with bold, black text.

Combine all of that with the iPhone-like quick settings layout, and I can’t help but wonder if these are signs of bigger visual changes to come in future Motorola phones and software updates. I asked Motorola about this in an interview earlier this year, and Jeff Snow, the company’s executive director of global innovation and software experiences, indicated that wasn’t the case.

“I don’t think it’s an indication of us finding all of the different ways we can modify Android,” he said. “I think Android does certain things well, and we don’t want to necessarily try to redo that.”

Still, the mind wanders. Maybe Motorola really doesn’t have any other big visual changes planned, and maybe I’m reading too much into this quick settings design. At the very least, it’s a fun one-off way to make your Motorola phone look a little bit more like an iPhone. Surprises are rare with smartphones in 2024, but this certainly was one of them.

Joe Maring
Joe Maring has been the Section Editor of Digital Trends' Mobile team since June 2022. He leads a team of 13 writers and…
If your iPhone can handle iOS 18.2, it can probably handle iOS 19
An iPhone 15 Pro Max running iOS 18, showing its home screen.

The last few iPhone updates have brought a lot of changes with them. Just take a look at iOS 18.2: It introduced a ton of AI-powered features that had never before been available. If you have an older phone, it's easy to worry that its hardware won't be up to snuff for the next round of updates. For now, you can breathe easy: If your iPhone can handle iOS 18, then it should also work with iOS 19, according to a new leak.

The news comes from the French site iPhoneSoft. Although Apple guarantees five years of support for its devices, some devices get supported for longer periods of time, but this tip suggests that any phone currently capable of downloading and installing iOS 18 will also work with iOS 19, although some features could be limited.

Read more
Have an old iPhone or iPad? You can no longer use this iCloud feature
An iPhone 6S in gold held against a red pipe.

If you own an older iPhone or iPad, it may be time to consider upgrading. As of December 18, the minimum requirement for using iCloud backups is iOS 9 or later, as support for iOS 8 and earlier versions has ended. This information was initially communicated to Apple users in November.

As noted by MacRumors, while iCloud support for devices running iOS 8 or earlier has ceased, you can still create manual backups on a Mac or Windows PC. If your device is currently on iOS 8, but can upgrade to a newer version, your iCloud backup capabilities will be restored.

Read more
Tips to keep your smartphone just as safe as a government official’s
Safety check on iPhone

It’s the holiday season, and that means an onslaught of bad actors trying to ensnare digital shoppers into their scams. Even Google had to publish a self-pat-on-the-back alert covering celebrity scams, fake invoice traps, and digital extortion. Of course, Big G took the opportunity to regale the virtues of Gmail’s anti-spam tricks.

The government, however, is dead serious about the threats, which extend well into the domain of intricate cyberattacks and telecom breaches targeting high-ranking officials and senior politicians. To that end, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has issued a set of guidelines to protect smartphones.

Read more