I have not really had any lag on mine (but I also have not used a 6p...so maybe it's a perception issue).
I will say this - people seeing issues on this device (and the 6p) is not surprising to me. Issues are pretty much a given when using the first major release of any software. This is something that people don't mention enough when it comes to Nexus devices. If you buy a Nexus out of the gate, you ARE Google's testing ground for the first few updates of a release. You are also acting as a beta tester for 3rd party developers who have not optimized their apps for 6.0 yet (see: facebook, snapchat, etc). I am confident this will get worked out as I have been through it before. But this is part of the tradeoff for being on the bleeding edge of software.
Did you have a case? Without a case, a phone falling off a table on to a hard surface causing a cracked screen sounds right to me. With a case (a real one, not one of those slim cases that barely cover the back), then that may be a bit surprising.
As for the lag, I feel your pain. I came from the original Nexus 5 which could be left on for months at a time without any lag, but I find that if I don't reboot my 5x once a week, I get a lot of lag. It's not a big deal for me because rebooting once a week is not a hardship, but it was surprising at first. And I don't think it's Marshmallow, because my wife now has my original nexus 5 with Marshmallow, and she does not need to reboot.
So, is your phone laggy even an hour after a reboot, or after a few weeks of continual uptime? If the former, then it's not just you. If the latter...maybe just you?
Really? I have lag switching apps, but not within the apps themselves. the only app that lags launching up fully or running well is actually Google's Camera app... and even that is only slower to resolve (or never resolves) if I launch it from the double-power tap instead of through the GUI.I think the biggest issue is not the OS, which in safe mode or out of the box should run fast and smooth, but more the fact that apps are not yet optimized for our version of the OS.
I fully realize this and embrace it, which is why I haven't come in here being all "Lag issues! What a piece of crap phone this is!" But I do believe there are more acceptable reactions than "Lag issues! What a piece of crap phone this is!" and "Lag issues? There are no lag issues... you're doing it wrong!"I will say this - people seeing issues on this device (and the 6p) is not surprising to me. Issues are pretty much a given when using the first major release of any software. This is something that people don't mention enough when it comes to Nexus devices. If you buy a Nexus out of the gate, you ARE Google's testing ground for the first few updates of a release.... But this is part of the tradeoff for being on the bleeding edge of software.
I'm a new arrival to Android today after many years on Windows Phone and had a question concerning the statement:
"apps are not yet optimized for our version of the OS"
How does one find out whether a given developer/publisher has optimized for the latest OS release, particularly as it might relate to something like power/memory management? Scour release notes in case they mention it?
Really? I have lag switching apps, but not within the apps themselves. the only app that lags launching up fully or running well is actually Google's Camera app... and even that is only slower to resolve (or never resolves) if I launch it from the double-power tap instead of through the GUI.
I personally think for most apps, that is a cop-out statement. If the OS is changing so radically with every release that apps have to be "optimized" then it's not a platform that is ready for widespread use. I'm sure there are specific improvements that can be taken advantage of, but as a dev, it could create a support mess or cut off previous Android versions for apps. In most cases, I think there are apps that perform poorly and create performance problems on the device.
It's not like the apps that aren't "optimized" don't run and just crash on startup. I've been running all the same apps on my Nexus 5x that I ran on my Moto X 2013, and they all run just fine. I don't know that they've all been "optimized" for Marshmallow (in which case maybe they'd run even better?), but they work for sure.
Just wondering, ... are the same apps that you are running the 5X the same version of the app that you are running on the Moto X 2013?
My point wasn't that Android isn't ready - though it certainly has its problems. I'm saying in the majority of cases, certainly not all, app problems have less to do with OS updates and more to do with bad coding.
Some of them have been updated since, but, yes, as far as I can tell.Just wondering, ... are the same apps that you are running the 5X the same version of the app that you are running on the Moto X 2013?
I think bad is a bit too evaluative instead of descriptive. The truth is any time you change something, something else can be affected—that's just how programming works, and even if you're a "good" programmer, you still make mistakes or have oversights. That's what patches and new versions are for. What matters the most is good testing, debugging, and then prompt fixes. You can't prevent incompatibility or lack of optimization by coding the "forever-will-work-with-Android" app.My point wasn't that Android isn't ready - though it certainly has its problems. I'm saying in the majority of cases, certainly not all, app problems have less to do with OS updates and more to do with bad coding.