Huawei has embraced aluminium as a material, and has used it to good effect in their higher end handsets, basically with the years of experience in their handsets, they’ve put it to good use on the Nexus 6P making a very nicely finished handset. Over the last couple of years, Huawei has been slowly building their design chops from cheap, plastic bodied handsets to the more thoughtful and well designed handsets we’re seeing in the Mate, P and G series. Connectivity issues on Telstrhota (though these will be resolved).Screen seems to scratch more easily than it should.I’ve shared my initial thoughts previously, but it’s time to go in depth. The Nexus 6P has started making it into hands of consumers over the last couple of weeks and I’ve been lucky enough to have been using it for three weeks. Starting at $899, the Nexus 6P is a pretty decent price for a phone with the specs it has, but it also ranges up through $999 for 64GB of storage, right up to $1099 for a model with a groundbreaking, for Nexus, 128GB of on-board storage. The Huawei Nexus 6P has been rumoured to be the start of Google’s push back into the Chinese market – but at this stage, nothing has been mentioned on that front so at the moment what we’re seeing is an aluminium bodied follow up to last years Motorola built Nexus 6.īoth Nexus phones have seen a wide launch in Australia this year, with both Optus and Vodafone offering the phone on contract, and retailers Harvey Norman and JB Hifi both stocking the phone. Nexus represents the vision of Android that Google sees for the next year, incorporating hardware that best shows off the latest version of Android and the hardware features it will support.įor the history of Nexus, we’ve been treated to a single Nexus but this year we’ve been treated to two Nexus phones, the Nexus 5X built by LG which is the follow-up to the popular Nexus 5, which is being positioned as the entry level model at a good price and the Huawei built Nexus 6P, which is basically the ‘balls out’ high-end 2015 Nexus phone. So, just expect an upgraded Nexus 6P soon.Every year, the release of a Nexus phone is always of interest to the Android community. Nexus 6P and Nexus 5X were the first devices to run Android 6.0 Marshmallow. Just for the record, last year’s Nexus 6P came with a 5.7-inch Quad HD display and is powered by Qualcomm Snapdragon 810 octa-core processor. And as we have already known, Huawei has already trademarked the Huawei 7P, so there is a possibility that the phone spotted on Geekbench could be called has Nexus 7P. This year looks like Google is working with both Huawei and HTC to bring more Nexus phones in the market. HTC is building a pair of Android N devices for Google internally dubbed M1 and S1 #nexus Meanwhile, two new Nexus devices from HTC, called as Nexus M1 and S1 may also be launched during Google I/O, and both of these will be mid-range devices as Evan Blass just tweeted the names. However, it’s not sure whether the name will be same or Google will change it while announcing. The new phone may be announced during the annual Google I/O conference which will be held in May. Last year, the Nexus 6P was launched with 3GB of RAM and Snapdragon 810 chipset, so basically this will be just an upgrade. Along with that, we will get 4GB of RAM and also, it will run Android N or Android 7.0 out of the box. The new phone comes with Snapdragon 820 chipset clocked at 1.59GHz. The new phone will come with 4GB of RAM and Android N out of the box for sure, along with some minor changes. But suddenly the new Nexus 6P is something which no one could have predicted. There was also some sort of prediction that HTC may be building two Nexus phones. Another Nexus 6P on the way? Yes, probably as we have just spotted the Nexus 6P with some changes in specifications on GeekBench database.
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