Software

With the Nexus 9, Google has released the biggest upgrade to Android since 4.0. In some ways, Android 5.0 represents one of the biggest shifts in the design of the OS ever. While we’ve had JIT compiling on Dalvik since Android 2.2, this has remained largely static for the past few years during Android’s monumental growth. With Android 5.0, we see the introduction of Android Runtime, or ART. Instead of trying to compile the application right before execution, ART does most of the compilation well before the application is launched. This incurs higher storage requirements, longer app-install times, and longer first-boot times, but with great benefits to performance. Google has done a great deal of work in general to try and resolve performance issues, as we first detailed in our coverage on ART.

While performance is one major aspect of Android 5.0, Google has also fundamentally redesigned the interface. To replace Holo, Google has introduced Material Design, which emphasizes depth, physics, animation, and a new palette of colors. While it would be great to go over all of these aspects of the Nexus 9, it’s best to refer to Brandon's review of Android 5.0 Lollipop for these issues. Instead, for this review I will mostly focus on the Lollipop experience specific to the Nexus 9. This means that the focus will be on performance of the device in general usage, along with the app ecosystem for Android tablets.

Unfortunately, these seem to be sore points of the Nexus 9 and the broader Android tablet ecosystem. Without question, if we’re talking about tablet applications they definitely do exist for the Nexus 9. The problem is that there is a pervasive lack of applications that are truly designed for a 9 inch, 4:3 aspect ratio display. Applications like Twitter, Facebook, and other first-party apps are simply blown up versions of the phone application. There is some level of extra content presented, but a lot of applications just don’t scale correctly which wastes a lot of real estate on the display. While we found issue with the Nexus 6’s lack of phablet-specific layouts, this is an even bigger issue on the Nexus 9.

While it’s possible to point fingers at app developers for not supporting Android properly, Google seems to have these problems as well. The settings interface is a single large pane of options, instead of a dual-pane interface that allows for simultaneous navigation of the overall settings and individual settings. The Play Store application is mostly similar in this respect, and the YouTube app is possibly the worst example of these kinds of issues. For example, while there is a tablet-specific video view in landscape, most navigation, search, and video selection is identical to what we see on a smartphone.

Nothing really takes advantage of the screen size other than simply being bigger than before. There aren’t any multi-window modes that exploit the larger screen size, and in general the Nexus 9 doesn’t introduce any new functionality that clearly justifies the need for a bag/backpack to carry it. There are applications that take advantage of the larger display, but these are rare. For the most part though, this is effectively true for most tablets other than the Surface Pro 3 which is effectively in a different category altogether.

On the performance side, the story is better but it isn’t perfect either. Similar to Brandon’s experience with the Nexus 6, I often saw random stutters on animations such as the app drawer or while opening an application. It’s hard to say what the cause is at this point, as the Nexus 6 seems to have similar issues with lag even though the Nexus 5 has none of these issues. One might point to FDE causing worse performance, but even that isn’t quite accurate as a build of Lollipop with FDE disabled didn’t do all that much in the way of solving these problems. Overall though, the experience is somehow less performant than the SHIELD Tablet on Android 5.0, even if these issues mostly present themselves in the form of minor frame drops from time to time. I also noticed that there was a distinct lack of available memory over time, which suggests a memory leak as on reboot launcher redraws effectively disappeared.

While these are significant issues that need to be resolved, the experience isn’t actually as bad as it seems. For what it’s worth, Material Design is a great new design scheme to replace the somewhat dated Holo UI that has been in use since Honeycomb/Android 3.0. While there are issues with the tablet experience, if one is willing to look past these issues they will find that the Nexus 9 is a respectable software experience. There’s also the potential for the Nexus 9 to spur improved tablet experiences, although this would be a slow change that could take years to be meaningful.

Battery Life and Charge Time Camera
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  • hahmed330 - Wednesday, February 4, 2015 - link

    I meant 'running the DCO on small cores instead of using time slicing'...
  • Mr.r9 - Thursday, February 5, 2015 - link

    Ryan, you should neglect the whiners. I have never seen such negative feedback from people towards a forum/website (well, maybe VB5 forums). Just keep on providing thorough, quality reviews like always.
  • nafhan - Thursday, February 5, 2015 - link

    I'm going to vote for good content, late, over crap the day after a devices release. Thanks! :)

    I don't buy things on day one, anyway.
  • Hrel - Friday, February 6, 2015 - link

    It does seem like you guys have more and more articles that "fall victim to bad timing" as time goes on. It really does sound like you need to hire a couple-a few more people. Reviews of the depth you guys do are very time consuming, we all know and appreciate this fact. So you're faced with a decision, allow quality to continue declining or re-invest to bring it back up to it's peak.

    Cheers!
  • beastman - Friday, December 25, 2015 - link

    Thanks for the review. I just managed to find a 32gb WiFi version for $327. Will upgrade it to Marshmallow when it arrives.
  • tipoo - Wednesday, February 4, 2015 - link

    Come on now. They've never been the fastest to push reviews out, but are almost always the most in depth. Look at all the detail on Denver here. I find it a better model than pushing out day one vapid reviews, personally.
  • AP27 - Wednesday, February 4, 2015 - link

    Everyone already knew that the N9 fell a little short. The in-depth look into Denver is worth it, though.
  • UtilityMax - Sunday, February 8, 2015 - link

    Short of what? For the price, it's a pretty decent value. The only major issue is that there is no SD card slot.
  • akdj - Wednesday, February 11, 2015 - link

    The price is a joke. The storage silly and the 'app' selection Reminds me of Detroit.
    There's other options at 3/499 with REALLY 'decent value'. N9 ain't it
  • abufrejoval - Wednesday, February 4, 2015 - link

    Why, is the Nexus 9 no longer available?
    Actually I'm glad it's late but not as superficial as the other stuff, which was delivered on time, but all had little to say, except that the software didn seem quite ready yet.

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