Most of the buttons offer a nice, solid tactile feedback, apart
from the standby button, which has a sense of looseness to it.
Not exact matches
It would sometimes not wake up
from sleep, or it would wake up, but the WiFi antenna would not power back up, or it would not go to
standby when I pressed the power
button.
This will fire up the camera
from standby, a little like a long press on the camera
button on Sony Xperia devices.
There's a microSD card slot along the other edge, along with the central power
button and a physical camera shutter
button, with the latter also letting you insta - launch straight into the camera app
from standby.
And aside
from the
standby and power
buttons on the side, there are no others.
This isn't so much a Marshmallow feature as it is a new Nexus, but there's the option to launch the camera
from a double press of the
standby button.
Moving around the sides, the power /
standby button sits above the volume rocker on the right side of the device, while the top features a center - mounted 3.5 mm headphone jack — a design element we've come to expect
from Motorola devices.
Aside
from the volume rocker and
standby switch, both of which are suitable clicky and responsive, the phone is free
from other
buttons.
Or, if you want to be even faster, double press the
standby button when the camera is open to switch
from front to back.
This will fire up the camera
from standby, a little like a long press on the camera
button on Sony Xperia devices.