It just works. It's a line we mostly use to talk about Apple, but it's really the story of the Nexus 6P. This is Google's new flagship phone, one of two it made this year to show the world just how good Android can be. It's the best hardware Google (and its partner Huawei) can make, and the best software, all in a single slick package.
For once, a Nexus phone isn't about wacky superlatives. It's not holy-shit big, or holy-shit fast. It pushes a few boundaries, but mostly it cobbles the best things from the Android ecosystem into a single location. It's finally a Google phone you don't have to think about, or make compromises for. It's finally more than a developer playground, more than a black box. It's finally easy to tinker with and easy to use.
There is absolutely no reason not to buy this phone. None. Zero. The Nexus 6P is the closest thing there's ever been to a perfect Android device. Is the best Android device better than the iPhone? That's a different question. It has to do with security, app quality, customer service, accessory markets, and much more. The allure of the iPhone always has been about more than the camera. But finally, someone has solved the hardware part.
Figures it'd be Google.
The primary role of Nexus devices has always been to show off the latest version of Android. The 6P is Marshmallow minus skins, minus bloatware, minus whatever weird things Verizon does to your phone before you get it. It's a developer tool, and a chance for Google to show off a little.
Marshmallow mostly does small things. It's smarter about how your phone idles, for instance, so you should get longer battery life. Many of these changes, as always, are invisible to you.



