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Posts tagged ‘Nexus 6’

17
Jun

Moto X and Nexus 6 both heavily discounted in the UK


new moto x first look aa (20 of 21)

Motorola has regularly discounted its Moto X smartphone this year, leading many to speculate that the company is preparing a hardware refresh. Motorola is continuing to cut not only the price of the Moto X but also its larger Nexus 6 flagship too. Both have gone on sale in the UK at their lowest official prices ever.

Kicking off the deal is a £80 discount on the Nexus 6, bringing the price tag down to a very reasonable £399. For this price you’ll have your choice of Midnight Blue or Cloud White color options and 32GB of internal storage, or you can upgrade to 64GB internal memory for a total price of £469, which is still £80 of the RRP.

The ever popular Moto X sees its price cut from £395 down to £229, complete with your pick of plenty of color options via the Moto Maker. Special back cover material still cost extra, around £20 each, and you can upgrade to the 32GB internal memory option for an extra £40.

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Those are some pretty significant savings, especially when you consider that just last month Motorola was offering £70 off the Moto X and £50 off the Nexus 6, and that was quite a good deal. For a closer look at both of the handsets, be sure to check out our full reviews here (Moto X) and here (Nexus 6).

Motorola’s latest deal is running between June 17th and June 30th, giving you a couple of weeks in which to mull the discount over. Who’s biting?

17
Jun

The Moto X and Nexus 6 have never been cheaper in the UK


Moto X

Motorola’s no stranger to flash sales in the UK, but its latest price drop could well be the one that clears its remaining stock ahead of a hardware refresh. Following the phone maker’s two-day sale back in May, which saw it introduce healthy price cuts to the Moto X and Nexus 6, Motorola has gone even lower in an attempt to get you to buy a new phone. The Moto X has been cut by £166, pushing the 16GB model down to £229 and the 32GB version to £269 (with Moto Maker customisation included too). The newer Nexus 6 gets an £80 reduction, meaning you’ll pay £399 for 32GB and £469 for the 64GB model. It’s a significant drop when you consider that you would have paid an additional £70 for the Moto X and £50 more for the Nexus 6 during last month’s sale. If Motorola has piqued your interest but you want a little time to think things over, it’s giving you until the end of June to make a decision.

Filed under: Cellphones, Mobile

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Source: Motorola

16
Jun

Google offers up to $38,000 via its Bug Bounty Program


Want to earn some cold hard cash from Google? Then be sure to participate in their Bug Bounty Program for Android. The Bug Bounty Program was announced at the Black Hat Mobile Security Summit in London, and Google is looking for some help from folks outside of the walls.

There are a few different categories that these rewards fall into, meaning that the Bug Bounty Program will only cover vulnerabilities found within Nexus devices that are available for sale through the Google Play Store and Nexus 9. There are also different reward categories to differentiate and determine how much money you can win.

$500 is the least amount that you can earn for reporting a moderately sever bug, and go up to $8,000 for those who find and report a serious vulnerability. There are also bonus rewards for bugs found that run the risk of affecting TrustZone or Verfied Boot, as well as anything that can cause issues from installed apps and such. For the TrustZone or Verified Boot bugs, folks can win up to $30,000 for depending upon the severity.

Bug Bounty Program

Google provides a table that breaks down how much someone can win when finding a bug. For example, a “moderate bug” can fetch $500 if just found, $750 if you can provide a test case, $1,000 if you can provide a CTS or a patch for the bug, and $2,000 if you can provide a CTS AND a patch for the bug.

Google is offering a boatload of money to those who are willing to help find vulnerabilities in their software for their Nexus devices. To date, since the inception of its Bug Bounty program in 2010, Google has paid out more than $4 million. If you’re looking to find out more information about Google’s Bug Bounty program, check out the link here, and see what you can do to help out Google and your fellow Nexus users.

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The post Google offers up to $38,000 via its Bug Bounty Program appeared first on AndroidGuys.

16
Jun

AT&T Nexus 6 currently being updated to Android 5.1.1


nexus 6 first impressions (13 of 21)

Nexus devices are known for being the first devices to get any update, but things can be more complicated in practice than they are in theory. At least that is the case in the USA, where carriers have total control over most phones’ updates, and they just so happen to always take their sweet time with them.

The AT&T Nexus 6 has been stuck on Android 5.1.0, even though other carrier versions of the handset already got the latest update (Sprint and US Cellular). The wait is finally over, guys. Reports of AT&T Nexus 6 smartphones getting Android 5.1.1 have been spreading across the net, and chances are yours is ready too.

nexus 6 review aa (14 of 14)

This would bring the Nexus 6 firmware up to version LMY47Z. The update is not exactly game-changing, but it should weigh about 81 MB, which makes WiFi not only a requirement, but also your best bet. The OTA update adds “stability improvements and disables Smart Lock feature when EAS password policy is enforced.” So you won’t exactly notice any huge changes in your user experience, but it’s always nice to be on the latest software. That is one of the main reasons why you even buy a Nexus phone, after all.

If your device is already eligible for the update, you can just go to your Settings app and check for updates. You will get a message saying your device is up to date if your handset is not ready, though. Once your Nexus 6 is eligible and you are connected to Wifi, the update will come into effect and you will get the usual notification and update prompt. Let it download and simply select “Install”.

Have you gotten your update yet? Do hit the comments and let us know if it’s all working as it should.

10
Jun

[Deal] Motorola knocks the Nexus 6 to $499 through June 23


motorola_nexus_6_discount_june_2015

Now through the early afternoon on June 23, Motorola will sell you the Nexus 6 at a very good price. Motorola, who manufactures the Nexus 6 for Google, has knocked the price of the handset down to $499 for the 32GB model. The 64GB model has also been discounted to $549. This means that buyers of the Nexus 6 from Motorola’s site will save $150.

Does $499/$549 still feel like too much money? Then take advantage of Motorola’s financing option and pay around $28 per month for eighteen months.

The sale ends at 11:59AM ET on June 23.

[Nexus 6]

Source: Motorola (Twitter)

Come comment on this article: [Deal] Motorola knocks the Nexus 6 to $499 through June 23

4
Jun

Amazon and Best Buy slash $150 off the price of the Nexus 6


nexus_6_att_rear

If you’re looking to pick up a shiny new Nexus 6 in the not too distant future, you may want to listen up, as Amazon and Best Buy are both currently offering the handset with a whopping $150 discount — meaning you can bag yourself one for just $499.

With regards to its internals, the device packs a 5.9-inch Full HD display, a Snapdragon 805 chipset, 3GB of RAM, an Adreno 420 GPU, a 13-megapixel rear-facing camera, a 2-megapixel front-facing shooter and a 3,220 mAh non-removable battery.

Straight out of its box, the Nexus 6 runs the latest build of Android 5.1.1 Lollipop, which brings several security improvements to the handset, along with support for multiple accounts, improved notifications, a smoother multitasking experience and the recently-announced Material Design guidelines.

If you like the sound of the Nexus 6 and want to pick one up for the discounted price, hit the links below.

Come comment on this article: Amazon and Best Buy slash $150 off the price of the Nexus 6

4
Jun

The Android M Preview makes for a surprisingly usable daily driver


Late last week, I fired my up Mac’s Terminal, pecked out a few half-remembered commands, looked them up, typed them out more slowly and that was that. After a few moments of silent finger-crossing, I was the proud owner of a Nexus 6 running the Android M Developer Preview. I then did something I didn’t really expect to: I turned off my iPhone and made the snap decision to use Android M — unfinished as it is — as my main squeeze until Google I/O came to an end. The show’s long over by now, but I’ve still (mostly) left my iPhone off to see how this highly incomplete version of Android stands up in day-to day-use. And you know what? For something that’s very clearly a preview, it doesn’t make for a bad daily driver.

First things first (and this should go without saying): Don’t install the Android M preview and expect to see all the whiz-bang features from the keynote working in perfect harmony. They won’t, mostly. As was the case with the Android L preview from last year, this isn’t a build meant for wowing your iOS devotee friends. It’s about giving developers an early chance to hook their apps up to Google’s modified vision, so Android Pay, Direct Share and almost all the rest are nowhere to be found. The most crushing omission in my book is the lack of Now on Tap, a conceptually dead-simple feature that provides an informational Now card based on what you say or what’s on screen. I fell in love so hard with this feature that its absence is almost palpable — some might call it creepy, but I’m more than happy to let Google decide what I want before I can.

So what is there to pay attention to? Well, there’s a revamped app launcher, for one. Instead of the discrete cards displaying your apps you swiped through in Lollipop, you’re now left with a scrolling list with apps lumped together by name. The four apps you use most often live in an ever-changing top row that does a good job keeping up with your changing moods. The quick-launch bar also makes an appearance whenever you type something into the Google Search widget, although I can’t honestly remember the last time I needed to search for something online and jumped into one of those apps instead. If you dig into the developer settings, you’ll also find a System UI tuner that — for now — only lets you rearrange the Quick Settings slots that live above your notifications shade. Device makers like LG have let us fiddle with these little bits for ages now, and it’s nice to see Google take inspiration from what others have already done to Android. (You could also be a contrarian at look at this as Google cribbing notes from OEM innovation, but that’s a debate for another time.)

One of Android M’s other big draws is its much smarter take on app permissions — the days of agreeing to permissions before you’d even used an app are over, or at least they will be down the road. You’ll still have to sign off on a manifest of permissions requests, but you can jump into the Apps menu in the settings to manually disable certain permissions. Sorry Airbnb, you’re never touching my camera again. As you can see in the above screenshot, Android is going to nag you; after all, most of the applications you’ll try this trick on won’t play nice.

I left most of my apps well alone, but I spent more than enough time coming to grips with Google’s improved sound and notification controls. You see, in the days before Lollipop, you could crank your volume all the way into a vibration-only mode, and one more click would make the phone completely silent. Now, with M, that one last click brings you into a Do Not Disturb mode that you can play with from the Quick Settings shade. Android’s original implementation felt damned-near perfect, but M’s is a step in the right direction: More often than not I’d just leave things in Priority Only mode so I could filter everything but work messages.

Beyond all that lies mostly minor changes: Your lockscreen font is a hair thicker than it used to be, and swiping from the left corner of your locked phone’s screen brings up Google’s Now voice interface instead of the dialer. If M’s insistence on white interface elements is doing a number on your retinas, you can fire up a dark theme… but that only changes the way the settings menu appears.

Now, let’s take a moment to step beyond what’s new: How well does Android M as a package actually work? If you used the Android L preview as your daily driver right out of the gate last year, you were in for world of potential, unstable hurt. That’s not at all the case this time: My sacrificial Nexus 6 generally ran as well as it did before I started fiddling with it. Almost about all of my apps were peachy after re-install, though you’ll run into lagginess and force quits more frequently than before you took the plunge. Some users have reported that their 64GB Nexus 6s were only reporting 23GB of storage space, but you can apparently fix that with a spin in the command line. Just par for the course, chums.

Thing is, when M works well, it works really well, which makes those moments of computational confusion stand out even more. Case in point? My T-Mobile LTE connection worked like a charm, say, 90 percent of the time. There were a few puzzling moments when I’d see the cell signal indicator go completely dark and my connection would go dead even though I had full service just moments before. Sometimes a quick restart would coax the connection back to life, but more often than not I just had to wait for it to decide to work again. Oh, and once or twice while using the Nexus 6 as a mobile hotspot, I kept getting routed to Google Ireland whenever I tried searching for something — I still haven’t figured that one out. None of these issues have gotten to the point that I’d call them dealbreakers, but they’re probably just enough of a headache to keep novices away.

As I’ve mentioned, If you can scarcely wrap your head around a command line, you probably shouldn’t muck around with Android M yet. It’s far from finished, and it strips away the sort of polish you’d want out of a device you carry around on the regular. Here’s the kicker, though: If you don’t mind the occasional (and usually very temporary) headache, the Android M developer preview makes for a thoughtful, mostly stable day-to-day companion. When I first fired it up, I was more surprised at how whole it feels rather than how incomplete it actually is. Several days in, that feeling hasn’t disappeared.

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2
Jun

Google Play Store “Dads and Grads” sale, $150 off the Nexus 6 and Free Shipping


If you’ve been longing to get your hands on the Nexus 6 and the sweet, stock Lollipop, but the hefty price tag has kept you from your dream, I’m happy to report that a sale has popped up on Google’s Play Store today to celebrate “Dads and Grads“.  They’re shaving off $150 off the price of the Nexus 6, bringing the starting price for the 32 GB version to $499.  Like before, the 64 GB version is $50 more, at $549.  And to also sweeten the deal, Google is also throwing in free shipping, with the promise that your device will “leave the warehouse in 1-2 business days”.

This is a great deal for a still capable and relevant device, especially with the recent speedy Android 5.1 update.  And may I remind you that it’s the only device as of now that will work with Google’s promising wireless service, Project Fi.

The sale also covers $100 off the Moto 360, which we have seen last week and a suggestion in our Dads & Grads Buyer’s Guide.  There is also $50 off the Sony Smartwatch 3, $20 off the Nexus Player, $70 in offers with the Chromecast, and $50 Google Play credit with the Nexus 9 tablet.

 

 

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2
Jun

Deal: Google discounts the Nexus 6 to $499, throws in $50 Play Store credit with the Nexus 9


nexus 6 first impressions (13 of 21)

The Nexus 6 is a great piece of hardware, though it’s still a tad too expensive for many users. But if you’ve been waiting for the price to drop on the Motorola-made phablet, now may be your best bet. Right now, you can pick up a Nexus 6 in Cloud White or Midnight Blue from the Google Store for $150 off. That means you can grab a 32GB variant for only $499, or a 64GB version for just $549. To make this deal even better, Google will throw in free shipping with your purchase.

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Additionally, if you’re looking to purchase a Nexus 9, Google will also throw in $50 of Google Play Store credit at checkout. This offer is available for both the 16GB and 32GB variants. To take advantage of this offer, you’ll have to place your order by 6/23/15. We’re not sure how long the Nexus 6 promotion will be available, so you better act fast!

Be sure to head to the links below if you’re interested.

Buy the Nexus 6 from the Google Store

Buy the Nexus 9 from the Google Store

2
Jun

[Deal] Google celebrates ‘Dads and Grads’ with Nexus 6 discount and Nexus 9 bonus


google_store_dads_and_grads_promo_2015

Right now, the Google Store has promotions running for both the Nexus 6 and Nexus 9.

The Nexus 6, which normally starts at $649, has been discounted by $150 for a limited time. This puts the 32GB model at $499 and the 64GB at $549. Since there is not a promotion label anywhere on the product’s Google Store listing, we would assume that it will not be sticking around for long. Not a bad price considering that software updates are guaranteed for the Nexus 6.

Purchasing the Nexus 9 does not come with a discount, though. The Google Store will instead include a $50 Google Play credit when the tablet is purchased by June 23. The code for the credit will be emailed upon the Nexus 9 shipping and must be redeemed by September 23.

All items include free shipping.

Here are some other promotions that the Google Store is running in honor of ‘Dads and Grads’:

  • Save $100 on the Motorola Moto 360
  • Save $50 on the Sony SmartWatch 3
  • Save $20 on the Nexus Player
  • $70 in offers with Chromecast

[Nexus 6] [Nexus 9]

Source: Google Store (Twitter)

Come comment on this article: [Deal] Google celebrates ‘Dads and Grads’ with Nexus 6 discount and Nexus 9 bonus