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No doubt many users will be looking to upgrade from a smaller screen device, and will be interested in knowing if the extra cost to upgrade to the 6P is worth it. What I will focus on, though, is how the Nexus 6P feels as an upgrade to a year old flagship like the Z3. I won't delve too deeply into the Marshmallow ins and outs, as these aspects have been covered many times over the last few months, and besides, there's nothing new to report in this area. My Z3 is also running Sony's Marshmallow Concept release, so fairly even ground in terms of performance and look and feel on the software front for me to get an idea of how they both compare in practice. I have owned the Sony Xperia Z3 since launch, and this review will compare loosely against it from the perspective of a user looking to upgrade to a newer flagship. And so began the month long wait for shipping. I had to have one, in fact within days of the keynote, I had placed my pre-order. So when rumours emerged that the new Nexus will have 128 GB of storage, and possibly a MicroSD card slot, it was checkmate.
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I travel often, so don't always have stable data coverage, you see. I need large capacity storage for music and other media. I've always wanted a Nexus phone, but there has always been an important aspect missing for the way I use a smartphone. Now that the dust left from the Nexus hype-train has settled, I thought it would be an ideal moment to get this short review up of Huawei's first entry into the Nexus game.