Software: Oxygen OS

The OnePlus 2 ships with OnePlus's skin on Android. It's officially advertised as Oxygen OS, although I don't understand why it's branded like it's a separate operating system when it's actually one of the least intrusive Android skins that you'll see. Many of the additions center on customization, while the interface in general is pretty much unchanged apart from some tweaks to icons and the launcher.

During the setup you'll see that there are some additional screens that have been added which relate to setting up the fingerprint scanner and some additional inclusions like the option to use SwiftKey instead of the standard Google keyboard. On the topic of the fingerprint scanner, it seems to work fine. I find that it's not as quick as the latest Touch ID or Nexus Imprint, but it usually scans my finger correctly and you just have to touch the capacitive home button to wake up and unlock the phone. The set up process could use some work though. You need to touch your finger to the home button a great number of times, and there's no hints letting you know whether you're doing it correctly and if you're covering all the required parts of your fingerprint. I had to go through the process again and ensure that I scanned all the edges of my print, as initially I was having some issues with recognizing one side of my thumb.

Once you get into the core OS, you find something that's fairly reminiscent of Google's version of Android. OnePlus has obviously made some small visual tweaks and changed around some icons, but it's much more similar to a Motorola or a Nexus phone than a Samsung or LG phone. There are some tweaks that I simply don't understand though. For example, when swiping down the notification drawer from the right side of the display it will automatically go straight to the quick toggles. This is honestly just a hassle when you want to check your notifications. Swiping from the left side doesn't trigger this behavior, but the phone is so big that you will never find yourself swiping down from that position. This is the sort of thing that should really just be left alone, as it's altering behavior that is consistent and well defined on most other devices. Some may argue that this isn't an issue because OnePlus allows you to swipe down anywhere on the home screens to open the notification drawer, but that doesn't fix the issue when you're in the app drawer or inside of an application.

There are some nice additions that OnePlus has made to the OS. For example, you can make some changes to the icons in the quick toggle drawer, and you can enable or disable gestures like double tap to wake, or draw a V to toggle a flashlight. You can also choose to use software keys instead of the capacitive hardware buttons, which I personally wouldn't do but there's nothing wrong with having the option. An interesting addition is the ability to swap the order of the recent apps and back buttons, which is likely why OnePlus decided to not put any specific icons on those keys. That feature has actually really useful for me, as for some reason whenever I use capacitive buttons I immediately default to using them in that manner because that's how they're laid out on Samsung phones. There are additional customizations such as the behavior when long pressing the capacitive keys, but I haven't messed around with them very much.

A feature that's currently in beta which I've found to be quite interesting is OnePlus's Shelf feature. This is essentially a screen that takes the spot where Google Now would usually be, and it's a customizable area where you can pin widgets that you access frequently, along with some custom panes like frequent apps and frequent contacts. I actually don't use Google Now on my core Google account for privacy reasons, so I thought that this feature was kind of interesting. If you are a Google Now user I don't think it's as useful overall, and there's unfortunately no way to put Google Now there instead which is a shame. The feature is technically in beta so I don't want to be too critical of it, but one thing that continues to stand out is the seemingly hardcoded message at the top which wishes you a good morning, even when it's 11pm at night. I have had it show good evening once, but it was actually 8am at the time. I assume that's something that'll be worked out in a future update.

As for UI performance, I don't have much praise. What shocked me is that right out of the box I noticed that the OnePlus 2 felt really sluggish. Swipes weren't as responsive as many devices I've used recently, apps hesitated before opening, and there were noticeable frame drops. I remember remarking to Josh that the phone reminded me a lot of the Moto E and Moto G, in that it tends to feel like there's a longer touch delay and more load times than what we've come to expect from high end smartphones. After realizing that the phone is so hesitant to use its Cortex A57 cores, it's no longer a surprise that it feels like a Moto G, because both phones are doing almost everything on a quad core Cortex A53 cluster, with the OnePlus 2 just being 150MHz faster.

I admittedly never had much time with the OnePlus One to compare with CM11S, but as far as $400 devices go the OnePlus 2 doesn't offer acceptable performance even for basic UI navigation and web browsing. This is really the deal breaker for me. A phone like the Moto G offers similar UI and app performance for half the price, and at $400 you could go get a Nexus 5X or find a deal on a phone like the LG G4 or Galaxy S6, all of which offer far more responsive interfaces and just all around better performance. While these issues are due to the CPU management rather than the result of OnePlus's Android skin, they certainly impact how users will perceive the performance of the phone's software, and subsequently the performance of the device as a whole.

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  • grayson_carr - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    Here's my review. I owned a Moto X Pure for a couple months. Then I got a Nexus 5X. Now I'm selling the Moto X Pure. The Moto X Pure is fast in the sense that it opens and switched between apps quickly, but slow in the sense that its GPU has a tough time pushing that QHD resolution and it often has trouble maintaining a high framerate when scrolling in apps. The Nexus 5X is the opposite, which I vastly prefer. The 5X takes a little longer to open apps than the Moto X Pure, but it feels much smoother when scrolling in most apps and is better at maintaining a high framerate. Also, the Nexus 5X has an awesome fingerprint sensor, a vastly better camera in low light, faster updates, and a better calibrated screen (even with the Moto X Pure display in standard mode and not vivid). Battery life is similar between the two. The two things the Moto X Pure does have going for it over the Nexus 5X is build quality (which is very solid) and the speakers (which are excellent).
  • Landiepete - Friday, December 18, 2015 - link

    I can do that right now for you.

    1. It does not have a ingerprint scanner so if you absolutely want one, walk away.
    2. It doe not have wireless charging, so if you feel plugging it in to a wall socket is too much trouble walk away.

    What it DOES do :
    1. With marshmallow, battery life is about 2 days for me. If you use it intensively, I gather you will have to charge it every day
    2. The screen is excellent
    3. It's not metal, but it does not feel cheap
    4. The memory card is a great way to increase storage without paying the premium handset manufacturers charge for built in storage
    5. It DOES get warm to the touch if you use the fast cores, like when it upates or you use 4K filming, but it won't burn your paws
    6. Contrary to popular belief, the 808 is NOT too slow for the quad res screen. Caveat : I do not use it as a gameboy.
    7. Near stock droid, so no crapware or bloatware. I don't edit movies on my Phone.
    8. Very good camera
    9. It still has the usual USB connector, so your old chargers and car kits still work

    Conclusion : unless your prime goal is to sollicit oohhhs and aaaahhhs from onlookers, I thoroughly recommend it.

    Pete
  • aijazz - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    would be great to get a much awaited nexus 6p review.
  • Devo2007 - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    Given how late this review is, you'll probably be waiting until February.... :P
  • Brandon Chester - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    The Nexus 6P review is being done by Andrei and is almost complete. Look for it this week.
  • mcbhagav - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    <bait> Moto X Pure seems to be favorite among the kinda of users visit your site </bait>
  • amdwilliam1985 - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    thank you for the heads up, looking forward to the 6P review.

    I'm so glad I've got the 6P instead of OP2 :)
    When in doubt, go with Nexus ;)
  • zeeBomb - Tuesday, December 15, 2015 - link

    Thusday / Friday, lets get it!
  • Nexus6P - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    Maybe one day a review of me will be posted.
  • LemmingOverlord - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    You, Sir, are in that unique classe of "smartassphones" :D

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