Software UI

In terms of software the 6P is able to sport the latest Android 6.0 Marshmallow, courtesy of course of being a Nexus device. There’s not terribly much to say about the OS that hasn’t been said already by Brandon’s analysis in the review of the Nexus 5X. This is due to the fact that all Nexus devices come equipped with the same software experience, but also due to the fact that Android 6.0 offers very little front-facing changes.

  

I’ll openly admit that I’m not too much of a fan of the stock Android experience: Over the years Google’s stock Android has always been praised as the “pure” experience and how Android should be. I find this a bit unfortunate as I find there’s a lot of usability flaws in the stock. It’s the simple things that most other OEM skins add that I find the most lacking in stock Android, examples being the lack of an auto-brightness toggle in the quick settings or even having a brightness slider directly available in the notification shade itself which reduces the motions to get to the settings.

My biggest gripe however are the navigation buttons and Google’s lack of an option to reorder them. While I understand the design decision and logic behind having a back button on the left, it makes no sense in terms of usability for the majority of people that are right-handed. The back button is by far Android’s most used navigation button, so I found the Nexus 6P’s larger size to exacerbate the issue as I need to always change grip or stretch my thumb to able to reach it properly. Still having this huge ergonomics issue after this many years is basically inexcusable – the notion that it’s more intuitive to have it on the left is a poor rationale as “unintuitive” use-methods can be learned and taught, but my thumb stopped growing a long time ago and I imagine so did everybody else’s. Virtually all OEMs recognize this issue and either come by default with reversed navigation buttons or by at least offering the option to rearrange them. Here’s hoping that Google listens and adds this as a stock option for future Android releases, similarly how they did for many other past features that were pioneered by third-party vendors.

Ambient display is a great feature that takes advantage of the 6P's AMOLED screen. Every time you pick up the device it will show you a minimalistic greyed out view of your current notifications without having to press any buttons. The detection is a bit finicky and sometimes goes off too easily as I often saw ambient display trigger itself while the device was just laying steadily on my table, and also sometimes when you do want it to go off when you pick up the device it might decide not to. However when it does work it works well, and it also enables you to directly unlock the phone from there. I do wish the display period had been configurable as sometimes where you have a lot of notifications the screen will go back off before you can read all of them.

Other than some of the aforementioned annoyances, the stock Android experience is a good one. In terms of performance, there were some concerns that I’ll reiterate in the PCMark writing sub-test but otherwise the device is fluid as you’d expect it to be. I may be biased when saying this but I just don’t think stock Android is an “exciting” experience or a platform where we see lots of innovation. I’m aware that there are groups who vehemently adhere to Google’s design decisions, but for me personally it just doesn’t do it as it comes with too many daily usability regressions.

NAND Performance

In terms of NAND storage, the Nexus 6P uses a Samsung eMMC module. In fact, this is the same “BGND3R” variant as found in this year’s HTC One M9. For testing I also ran the NAND benchmarks on an unencrypted data partition to be able to analyze Android’s full disk encryption overhead that is now obligatory for all new devices shipping with 6.0 Marshmallow.

Internal NAND - Sequential Read Internal NAND - Sequential Write

As we can see the unencrypted numbers perform as expected and within range of the HTC One M9’s performance. The encrypted numbers which come as default with the device are the more concerning ones as we see a decrease in read performance of up to 84% and write performance decreases by 43%.

The Nexus 6P uses software decryption, accelerated by ARMv8 cryptography instructions. Google claims that this method is actually faster than using Qualcomm’s Snapdragon built-in SoC dedicated hardware crypto unit, which points out to a possible severe lack of performance and readiness on the part Qualcomm's SoC. We were curious to determine if this was solely an issue for Qualcomm and re-did some encrypted and unencrypted runs on the Note 5 and found that the overhead of encryption on that platform is very minimal, pointing out to that the degradation seems to be limited to Qualcomm's SoCs. It would be interesting to see if the Snapdragon 820 will be able to offer improvements in this regard.

In the end, the Nexus 6P’s out-of-the-box performance on the encrypted data partition seems very lackluster and it may affect application speed. One has to remember that it’s only the data partition that is encrypted, as we see no degradation on the internal or system partitions as they remain unencrypted.

WiFi Performance

The Nexus 6P comes naturally with 802.11ac WiFi in 2x2 MIMO configuration, all powered by Broadcomm's BCM4358 WiFi SoC. This is the same chipset found in other devices such as the Galaxy S6, so hopefully performance will be similar.

WiFi Performance - UDP

And indeed we see excellent WiFi performance from the 6P as we reach up to an average of 467Mbps, up there among one of the fastest WiFi implementations in today's smartphones.

Introduction & Design System & CPU Performance
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  • Speedfriend - Thursday, December 17, 2015 - link

    "iOS's main "back" action is a simple right-swipe from left edge, which is the best implementation of all."
    It is crap. It doesn't work in all apps. The one app where I need it most (a trading app when the charting hangs) it simply doesn't work and which is why I have an Android phone as well
  • star-affinity - Sunday, December 20, 2015 - link

    I think that's pretty much the fault of the developer of that app, and mot the functionality of the feature.
  • star-affinity - Sunday, December 20, 2015 - link

    Not* (not "mot").
  • theduckofdeath - Monday, December 21, 2015 - link

    If it's a poorly implemented system feature it's surely a fault on Apple's side.
  • tipoo - Tuesday, December 22, 2015 - link

    It's inconsistent within iOS itself though. Go through a few settings pages and you'll find some support back swipe, some don't.
  • Jason Dick - Thursday, December 17, 2015 - link

    This has long been a complaint with Android, but I haven't had any issues with Google Now or Location services on my Nexus 6p. The new "deep sleep" mode with Marshmallow seems to prevent these from causing problems. I ran a little test for myself last week to see if I could go a full 48 hours without recharging the device. I used the phone for some light web browsing and navigation to/from work (total driving time ~1 hour).

    Using these services really shouldn't be a problem any longer.
  • eric3448 - Wednesday, June 15, 2016 - link

    I just don't know what the problem is.Surely its easy to just download an app if you want something the phone hasn't got
  • ACE76 - Wednesday, December 16, 2015 - link

    It's so sad to see Anandtech fall so far from grace since Mr. Shimpi jumped ship for Apple...I still don't understand why Anandtech doesn't at the vbery least point out the architectural differences when comparing smartphones....Android was built to be a true multi-tasking OS...Apple was not...anyone who knows hardware knows single threaded architectures will score higher...honestly, apple's A9 SOCs are nowhere near as powerful as Qualcom's 810 and newer SOCs...maybe if someone could get iOS to run on a Snapdragon SOC, we'd see the truth...kind of like when apple first jumped to Intel CPUs and saw increases of over 600% in performance.
  • tuxRoller - Thursday, December 17, 2015 - link

    While I've issues with this review (mostly tone related) I can't say that I've noticed a drop in quality from AT.
    Also, both ios and Android are "multitasking" but Android gives developers a bit more rope than ios does... sometimes to the detriment of the app.
    The A9 is simply the best soc for a phone around. No serious person is questioning this.
  • Ethos Evoss - Sunday, December 20, 2015 - link

    @tuxRo
    it is best but in draining battery in half day.. they didn't set any power saving modes so their soc ALWAYS runs at max. performance so that is why everybody thinks is best .. but it is all useless,everybody wants lasting long battery life

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