iPhone 6S vs the best of Android

Android has already seen its share of excellent flagship smartphones this year, offering up some cutting edge pieces of technology and plenty of general improvements over last year. Apple has now joined the fray with its new iPhone 6S and S6 Plus, so let’s see how they stack up against the very best that Android has to offer.

iPhone 6SXperia Z5 PremiumGalaxy Note 5Galaxy S6 EdgeLG G4HTC One M9

Display

iPhone 6S

4.7-inch LCD (720p)
iPhone 6S Plus: 5.5-inch LCD (1080)

Xperia Z5 Premium

5.5-inch LCD
4K (3840 X 2160)

Galaxy Note 5

5.7-inch AMOLED
QHD (2560x1440)

Galaxy S6 Edge

5.1-inch AMOLED
QHD (2560x1440)

LG G4

5.5-inch LCD
QHD (2560x1440)

HTC One M9

5.0-inch LCD
1080p

SoC

iPhone 6S

Apple A9

Xperia Z5 Premium

Snapdragon 810

Galaxy Note 5

Exynos 7420

Galaxy S6 Edge

Exynos 7420

LG G4

Snapdragon 808

HTC One M9

Snapdragon 810

CPU

iPhone 6S

2x 1.4GHz

Xperia Z5 Premium

4x 1.9GHz Cortex-A57
4x 1.5GHz Cortex-A53

Galaxy Note 5

4x 2.1GHz Cortex-A57
4x 1.5GHz Cortex-A53

Galaxy S6 Edge

4x 2.1GHz Cortex-A57
4x 1.5GHz Cortex-A53

LG G4

2x 1.8GHz Cortex-A57
4x 1.4GHz Cortex-A53

HTC One M9

4x 2.0GHz Cortex-A57
4x 1.5GHz Cortex-A53

GPU

iPhone 6S

PowerVR

Xperia Z5 Premium

Adreno 430

Galaxy Note 5

Mali-T760 MP8

Galaxy S6 Edge

Mali-T760 MP8

LG G4

Adreno 418

HTC One M9

Adreno 430

RAM

iPhone 6S

2GB (TBC)

Xperia Z5 Premium

3GB

Galaxy Note 5

4GB

Galaxy S6 Edge

3GB

LG G4

3GB

HTC One M9

3GB

Storage

iPhone 6S

16/64/128 GB

Xperia Z5 Premium

32GB

Galaxy Note 5

32/64/128GB

Galaxy S6 Edge

32/64/128GB

LG G4

32GB

HTC One M9

32GB

MicroSD

iPhone 6S

No

Xperia Z5 Premium

yes, up to 200GB

Galaxy Note 5

No

Galaxy S6 Edge

No

LG G4

Yes, up to 128GB

HTC One M9

Yes, up to 128GB

Camera

iPhone 6S

12MP rear
5MP front

Xperia Z5 Premium

23MP rear
5MP front

Galaxy Note 5

16MP rear
5MP front

Galaxy S6 Edge

16MP rear
5MP front

LG G4

16MP rear
8MP front

HTC One M9

20MP rear
4MP front

Display technology has seen some major advances this year. Samsung has brought its curved QHD AMOLED to the mainstream with its Edge range, Sony has pushed out the first 4K smartphone with the Xperia Z5 Premium and Huawei announced its Force Touch display with its Mate S.

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Apple remains behind the leading Android smartphones when it comes to display resolution (750 x 1334/326ppi on the iPhone 6S and 1080p on the 6S Plus), as more manufacturers push to QHD and beyond for their major flagships. Instead, Apple’s big display feature is 3D Touch, which appears to be a rebranded form of the Force Touch from the Apple Watch.

This new feature allows users to interact with the screen through deeper presses as well as just regular touches. The deep touches allow for features that are baked throughout iOS, like the ability to launch the camera into selfie mode by deep pressing its shortcut, or the ability to preview images and other elements without opening them. If it sounds familiar, it’s because many of these UI features have been used on Android in various forms, with long presses as a trigger.

There’s a similarly divisive split between the two groups’ approaches to processing technology. While all of this year’s Android flagships have bumped the core count up to at least six, Apple is sticking with just two higher performing CPU cores in its A9 SoC. The new A9 processor is touted to be 70 percent faster at CPU tasks and 90 faster at GPU tasks compared to the A8 from last year. There’s no confirmation yet, but it’s believed that Apple has decided to bump up the amount of RAM to 2GB in its latest iPhone, which would bring it closer to the 3GB standard found in these Android flagships.

None of these flagship handsets should struggle in demanding scenarios or when it comes to multi-tasking and will handle all of the latest games. Only small benchmark differences will be able to tell us the differences between these handsets.

The iPhone 6S also features bigger numbers when we look at the phone’s camera sensors. The 8-megapixel rear camera has been bumped up to 12 megapixels, although that still falls short of the resolution of the excellent sensors found in handsets from LG, Samsung and Sony. That said, more pixels don’t always result in better pictures, and it’s likely that the iPhone 6S’ camera remains one of the best around. The iPhone 6S also vastly improves its front facing camera, offering a more competitive 5 megapixels with of resolution that catches up to most Android flagships. The LG G4 is slightly ahead with an impressive 8MP sensor on the front.

iPhone 6SXperia Z5 PremiumGalaxy Note 5Galaxy S6 EdgeLG G4HTC One M9

Battery

iPhone 6S

1810 mAh (TBC)

Xperia Z5 Premium

3,430mAh

Galaxy Note 5

3,000mAh

Galaxy S6 Edge

2,600mAh

LG G4

3,000mAh

HTC One M9

2,840mAh

Fast Charging?

iPhone 6S

No

Xperia Z5 Premium

Quick Charge 2.0

Galaxy Note 5

Yes

Galaxy S6 Edge

Yes

LG G4

Quick Charge 2.0

HTC One M9

Quick Charge 2.0

Wireless Charging?

iPhone 6S

No

Xperia Z5 Premium

No

Galaxy Note 5

Qi and PMA

Galaxy S6 Edge

Qi and PMA

LG G4

Qi (optional cases)

HTC One M9

No

Fingerprint Scan?

iPhone 6S

Yes

Xperia Z5 Premium

Yes

Galaxy Note 5

Yes

Galaxy S6 Edge

Yes

LG G4

No

HTC One M9

No

IP rating

iPhone 6S

No

Xperia Z5 Premium

IP68

Galaxy Note 5

No

Galaxy S6 Edge

No

LG G4

No

HTC One M9

No

Dimensions

iPhone 6SXperia Z5 Premium

154.4 x 75.8 x 7.8mm

Galaxy Note 5

153.2 x 76.1 x 7.6mm

Galaxy S6 Edge

142.1 x 70.1 x 7mm

LG G4

148.9 x 76.1 x 9.8 mm

HTC One M9

144.6 x 69.7 x 9.6 mm

Weight

iPhone 6SXperia Z5 Premium

180g

Galaxy Note 5

171g

Galaxy S6 Edge

132g

LG G4

155g

HTC One M9

157g

When it comes to additional features, there quite a bit of diversity between the big Android brands, let alone Apple’s iPhone 6S. Sony remains firmly committed to water and dust resistance, which you won’t find with any of the other major flagships. Samsung still has the only dual-mode wireless charging phone in our flagship selection. With battery life still questionable, Apple’s choice for a small 1810 mAh battery might not suit power users who are used to 3,000mAh cells found in some Android phones. Extras like Quick Charging are useful here to make up the gap, but Apple doesn’t appear to be adopted a similar technology of its own yet.

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The Best

LG retains its unique camera laser autofocus features and also supports Qi wireless charging, providing that you buy an extra case. HTC seems to be the most barebones handset when it comes to extras, but its front facing BoomSound speakers are still some of the best in the business.

Fingerprint scanners seem almost like a must have feature these days, but you won’t find one on every Android flagship. Sony has joined the party with its Xperia Z5 range, but LG and HTC didn’t include them on their flagships this year. Extra services that use the fingerprint scanner, such as Apple Pay and Samsung Pay, are certainly worth considering when you’re spending big cash on a flagship smartphone.

I would say it’s the little extras that mark the major differential factors between today’s flagship smartphones, and there is still a lot of diversity in both the iOS and Android spaces. Those who love Apple’s extra services will certainly get the most of the iPhone 6S, while those looking for more interesting hardware options will probably be able to find something right for them in the broad Android ecosystem.

Where does the iPhone 6S sit with you?

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