Not exact matches
I've had the Asus Fonepad for just
over 2 days and in that
time I've been through the OS, the built - in ASUS applications, downloaded my usual suite of
Android apps, I've run a few
performance reports and even written a blog post with it.
This should become more apparent
over time, as Huawei claims its
performance won't degrade like other
Android phones.
Only
time will tell if this
performance holds up
over time, or if, as with many other
Android phones, it somehow feels a lot slower after six months of everyday use.
Moreover, Huawei says it's implemented some custom optimizations to improve the Mate 9's
performance over stock
Android, promising not only that your phone will not slow down
over time, but that it will get faster.
Android phones have a bad habit of quickly deteriorating in
performance and battery life
over time, but those issues are basically non-existent on the Pixel.
The first is thanks to a new
Android Runtime that offers up to four
times the
performance over the same app running Dalvik (with the right optimizations).
The result should be a phone that retains a
performance edge
over time, as similar
Android devices begin to slow down with age, Huawei says.
We later found a problem that TRIM (which was introduced into
Android 4.3) helped, and kept
performance from degrading
over time.
One of the biggest claims is that Huawei's AI processing will be able to significantly reduce the phone's
performance degradation
over time, which the company has identified as a major problem with
Android devices in general.