Re: Nexus 6p or IPhone 6s Plus
Good point - that could very well be the difference. The Galaxy S6 cold-boots faster than either the 6P or the iPhone 6S, so there is definitely more going on than just the hardware or just the OS.
Few more things to add to the OP, just from my personal experience with using both phones:
- Android handles notifications *way* better than iOS, which is important because who makes phone calls anymore? haha
- The 6P is simply a faster phone during actual use
- New versions of Android usually make old phones faster, rather than crippling them like iOS updates (even the iPhone 6 has performance issues on the latest iOS). You will get more life out of the 6P if you keep your phones a long time.
- You can't even attach multiple documents directly to an email from the email in iOS (unless they changed it very recently), among the most basic of activities, and was a daily frustration for me
- iTunes is perhaps the worst program I have ever encountered, but to be fair there are workarounds
- Still no quick charge for Apple (this will likely be on the iPhone 7 as an "all new" feature), and is perhaps my single most favorite feature about most new phones these days (and 1-2 years ago....)
- Marshmallow's battery management is nothing short of amazing, 6P battery life with my usage is significantly better than the 6S+ (this will vary person to person I imagine)
- Google's ecosystem just works better on Android (Gmail, Maps, searches, etc.)
Those are some reasons I chose the 6P over the 6S+ based on my personal preferences. YMMV.
Speaking of a slower cold boot between the two phones, I think the issue is that the 6P has the phone encrypted out of the box (it sets it up automatically on first setup) which will cause a slower boot up. I'm not sure is the iPhone is encrypted out of the box but if it isn't, then that's why there is a boot up speed difference. The phone has to go through a decryption process first in order to boot up.
Good point - that could very well be the difference. The Galaxy S6 cold-boots faster than either the 6P or the iPhone 6S, so there is definitely more going on than just the hardware or just the OS.
Few more things to add to the OP, just from my personal experience with using both phones:
- Android handles notifications *way* better than iOS, which is important because who makes phone calls anymore? haha
- The 6P is simply a faster phone during actual use
- New versions of Android usually make old phones faster, rather than crippling them like iOS updates (even the iPhone 6 has performance issues on the latest iOS). You will get more life out of the 6P if you keep your phones a long time.
- You can't even attach multiple documents directly to an email from the email in iOS (unless they changed it very recently), among the most basic of activities, and was a daily frustration for me
- iTunes is perhaps the worst program I have ever encountered, but to be fair there are workarounds
- Still no quick charge for Apple (this will likely be on the iPhone 7 as an "all new" feature), and is perhaps my single most favorite feature about most new phones these days (and 1-2 years ago....)
- Marshmallow's battery management is nothing short of amazing, 6P battery life with my usage is significantly better than the 6S+ (this will vary person to person I imagine)
- Google's ecosystem just works better on Android (Gmail, Maps, searches, etc.)
Those are some reasons I chose the 6P over the 6S+ based on my personal preferences. YMMV.
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