If Moto's management can convince Google that having tens of thousands of employees making a nice but not special handset is a worthwhile use of Google resources, then yes.<p>But, in isolation, hells no. The moment this product was revealed, the product management process at dozens of 2nd and 3rd tier OEMs swings into action: "Make one like this, but faster and cheaper."<p>$200 is a nice price, but it isn't a stunning price. Moto isn't going to drive anything out of the market except, maybe, the Lumia 900, also $200, made by that other legacy high-cost OEM scrambling to stay in the top 10. Perhaps the lesson of Moto X is that it is a phone Nokia could have been making.