The OnePlus 6 was officially revealed yesterday. There's a video from Michael Fisher—aka Mr. Mobile—in
yesterday's news round-up, along with some other links. Basically we're looking at an incremental upgrade from late 2017's OnePlus 5T. Major specs are as follows:
Snapdragon 845 processor
6.28 AMOLED display (with notch)
6 or 8 GB of RAM / 64, 128 or 256 GB of storage
16 MP OIS and 20 MP rear cameras
16 MP selfie cam with EIS
3,300 mAh battery with Dash Charge
3.5 mm audio jack (!)
OxygenOS (Android Oreo 8.1)
Colours: Midnight Black, Mirror Black and Silk White
Starting Price: $529 USD / $699 CAD
Now if you'll indulge this current OnePlus user for a few moments, I'd like to offer my perspective on the latest from Carl Pei and company.
The Price
I certainly agree with Michael Fisher that OnePlus isn't the bargain that it used to be. Here in Canada a fully-loaded 6 will set you back a whopping $839 CAD, perilously close to the current $899 sticker price of a Pixel 2 from Google. You lose the tall screen and headphone jack, but you gain what everybody seems to agree is the best smartphone camera currently on the market.
I think a better comparison would be against the iPhone X. With a similar 256 GB of storage one of those would set you back an egregious $1,529 CAD, making the OnePlus 6 seem a bit more reasonable.
The Notch
2018's biggest fad will be yesterday's news as soon as OEMs figure out how to put fingerprint sensors underneath their displays. Had OnePlus gone the route of Samsung the 6 would age far more gracefully, I think, but at least its notch can be hidden with a software toggle. I'm not sure how well that's going to work, but given the AMOLED screen at least the pixels won't be lit.
The Camera
The return of optical image stabilization is most welcome, but what's up with that
other lens on the back? Carl Pei barely mentioned it in his presentation, and I can't help but think there would have been significant cost savings with one decent camera rather than two mediocre ones.
Should You Upgrade?
At this point I think the smartphone market has matured enough that everyone has found an OEM to call their own. If you're on Team Samsung or Team Pixel then OnePlus has really only its low cost of entry to lure you away. If, however, you're thinking of upgrading from an earlier OnePlus phone I believe I can offer some advice...
I'm currently using a 5T and don't see enough reasons to upgrade. If the 6's glass back supported fast wireless charging it might be a different story, but I'm perfectly happy with my current phone. But if you're coming from a OnePlus 5 or below then I'd say the 6 is a worthy upgrade—it's tall screen, especially with gesture navigation enabled, makes any 16:9 smartphone seem ancient by comparison.
... Or you could just hold out another six months for the inevitable OnePlus 6T
Here are the OnePlus 6 online stores for
Canada and the
USA.
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Still waiting for my box that they usually send...
Still waiting for my box that they usually send me to ship my phone to them. They finally got around to providing me with an order number and it says they sent the box so I’ll give ‘em a few more...
Fonmonkey Today, 04:41 PM