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Those of you who may have seen my musings here on Ausdroid, or heard my rants on the Ausdroid podcast, will know that I am not a fan of manufacturer skins. To say this is an understatement. In the past they have been ugly, slow, bloated, complicated and overall a pain in the neck to use. The manufacturers, in my opinion, in an effort to set themselves apart from other Android manufacturers tried to spice up the once drab Android UI ended up creating ugly user interfaces that lagged even with the best hardware around.

The All New and Improved TouchWiz?

Samsung were once the worst of all manufacturers. They always provided great hardware for their phones but once they had installed all their ā€œvalue added softwareā€ (read bloatware here) the phone often ground to stuttering halt. How can this be? Surely the Samsung could optimise the software to the hardware they provided? Googleā€™s Nexus devices often smoked the bloatware-ridden devices from Samsung in real world use, and did it with lower “specced” hardware. Whenever someone asked my opinion on what phone they should get my response was always ā€œanything BUT a Samsungā€ such was my dislike for the abomination of pure Android that Samsung had produced.

That was 2014. Here we are in 2015 and itā€™s a whole new ball game. Samsung have redesigned TouchWiz on the Galaxy S6. Still being sceptical on a recent podcast I was challenged to try it out and thatā€™s what I did with an S6 Edge. I went in with an open mind, having recently used an Asus ZenFone 2 and being impressed with their take on Googleā€™s Lollipop, as well as their added apps/software. This Galaxy S6 was meant to be the best phone going around. It was apparently a total redesign, not just of the hardware but also the software.

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The Design

First letā€™s talk about Samsung and their TouchWiz design. The Android world, for the last 12 months has been in love with Material Design. I have to admit that I have been too. I would often only choose apps to install that were Material Design such was my liking for it. On the other hand, Samsung have done very little in the way of design to TouchWiz for several years now, with their UI being offensive to many peopleā€™s eyes, including my own. I am happy to say that with their 2015 iteration of TouchWiz the cartoonish look associated with Samsung has been dispensed with. TouchWiz, although not quite Material Design is a lot more palatable and less offensive on the eye than in previous years. The colours are a more mature shade and not the super bright greens and blues as previously. TouchWiz design improved, check.

The Bloatware

Next target on my hit list was the bloatware. Samsung have always been criticised for including so many gimmicks on their phones that it slowed the phone down. Iā€™d like to say that it has improved as much as the TouchWiz interface has. If I did that I would be lying. There is still so much seemingly useless crap on there that even with the best Exynos processor available and 3GB of RAM onboard there are still quite a few moments of slow down or lag when using the SGS6. Samsung seem to have attempted to minimise this by freeing up RAM with an aggressive task manager. Sounds great in theory but the amount of times it stopped my music player while listening to music in the background (Google Play Music) or simply closed all chat heads for no reason was too numerable to count. It got extremely frustrating after a while.

I have said before that I use the hell out of my phones. I usually use nearly every possible feature so in the past this may have affected the smoothness of my experience, but this is 2015. Processors are faster, RAM has increased to crazy levels now and yet a phone can still lag? Why is that? Could it be the bajillion (which is more than a bazillion but less than a kajillion for those wondering) Samsung services running in the background? I counted 19 services at one stage. I know that Samsung did a deal with Microsoft to get their apps installed by default on the device but do we really need OneDrive running in the background? There are a lot of ā€œfeaturesā€ with Samsungā€™s devices plus a lot of included apps. These take their toll on the everyday use of the device. While it may not affect a majority of users who only do the most rudimentary things with their phones it did affect me (and some other fellow Ausdroidians).

Decoupling is the answer I believe. Decouple all these ā€œfeaturesā€ and add them in as a ā€œlayerā€ ala Sonyā€™s layers (which has been merged into the AOSP). That way a user can have a minimal device if they require. Have them installed by default (as most users would not know one way or another how to install them) but allow them to be uninstalled by the user. This would also allow for faster updating as these features could be updated through the Play Store. Allow the user to free up space by uninstalling them. Google did a good thing a couple of years ago when they introduced the ability for the user to disable apps but it is difficult to know which can and canā€™t be disabled and the phone still run how it is meant to.Where to from here?

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Samsung have done a great job improving the design of TouchWiz but the bloat is still there. There is so much superfluous material that you wonder what they are thinking. A good artist needs to know when they are done. To stop adding to the canvas. Samsung seem to live by the opposite theory and put everything they can think of in there.

When I started using the Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge I was considering buying a non-Nexus (or more accurately a non-stock Android) device for the first time in a long long time (HTC Sensation was my last non-Nexus device). Now Iā€™m not so sure. I donā€™t mind the theme of the interface these days but the sheer volume of apps and bloatware ruin the experience for me. Sure I could root it and improve it possibly that way but doing this may result in losing the advantages of choosing a Samsung Galaxy S6, the camera. This is meant to be the flagship of flagships. It shouldnā€™t lag. Samsung are halfway there with TouchWiz in my opinion but still not quite.

After the issues Iā€™ve had with the S6 Edge Iā€™m not as keen on getting an LG now, instead maybe waiting for the stock Android feel of a OnePlus 2. LG have promised a hugely improved UI but from what I seen and read it seems that is just lip service to the major criticism of all their flagship devices in the past. It seems to be as ugly as ever. Will it function at a high level or will it lag ala TouchWiz? Time will tell but the manufacturers have a chance to make a smooth beautiful interface and set themselves apart that way. One only needs to take a look at a few of the Material Design apps on the Play Store to see how beautiful Android can be.

I used to hate Samsung’s TouchWiz. They have applied a bit of make-up to it and is now not the “cartoony” experience that it once was. It does not make me want to gouge my eyes out anymore but in my experience is as laggy as ever. I’m used to the snappy, fast experience of a pure stock Android phone. I’ve decided there is nothing, not even possibly the best smartphone camera on the market, that will make me settle for using a TouchWiz device. You can put all the lipstick you want on a pig but in the end it is still a pig. I’m sorry Samsung, but I still hate your TouchWiz.

/END RANT

Source: Evolution of the Samsung Galaxy Gif - GadgetLove.
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Grumpigeek

I’m with Scott on the unnecessary Samsung bloatware, a lot of which you can’t even disable, let alone remove.

It spoils an otherwise good, reliable hardware.

vtwkang

Nice troll title.

Anyway I would imagine that reducing background processes and improving general performance is something that Samsung is working on as we speak. It seems pretty evident that they want to go in this direction, but there’s only so much that can be done in one year, especially given that the bloat today is the result of several years of accumulation, so to speak.

Anthony

I personally don’t mind Touchwiz since the Lollipop update on all the Galaxy devices that have Lollipop. Feels Androidish enough. I just wish they fix them but stock ugly icons.

JeniSkunk

An excellent article, Dan. Are there any plans to do similar for HTC, Sony, LG and Huawei ? LG’s UX3 and now UX4 is a major improvement over how unusably foul UX2 was. I was surprised by how usable UX3 in KK is on my G3. I was expecting more of the extreme aggravation I experienced dealing with UX2 on my L7 II. Samsung, with the latest version of TouchWiz, are wasting time attempting to take baby steps on the path to fixing their mess. They need to Get Serious, and do the job, properly. The best way to handle… Read more Ā»

Montalbert_Scott

Thanks Jeni. It is a piece I’ve been thinking of doing for a while. I certainly hadn’t decided my slant on it until I’d been using TouchWiz for a while. I really wanted it to be better. I really wanted to like it. I’d love to do the same for other manufacturers. Asus I can say have done an awesome job with the zenfone 2 so I am really hoping they do in fact buy HTC. I am thinking of buying a G4 so might get one and do it (then fob it off on eBay if my conclusion is… Read more Ā»

JeniSkunk

If the apps loadout on the G4 is similar to the G3, then I think you’ll be pleasantly surprised.
Apart from the usual manufacturer replacements for GApps apps, and device relevant LG apps, I only had 2 third party apps on my G3. Box, and McAfee’s.
As for the LG UI alterations, as I said, LG are putting in some Effort to fix their failings.

Phil Tann

You know it was Scott that wrote this right? šŸ˜›

JeniSkunk

Sorry about that Dan.
I saw your share of it on G+ and made the mistake of assuming you posted the article on the main Ausdroid site.

šŸ™‚

Anthony

Is this article paid by Samsung?
My wife has an s6 with no apps installed and it’s laggier than my m7.

Daniel Tyson

Not at all – all our paid pieces are always clearly marked as such. If you need to go listen to previous podcasts to hear Scott rant about Samsung’s UI.

Paul

With a conclusion like “You can put all the lipstick you want on a pig but in the end it is
still a pig. Iā€™m sorry Samsung, but I still hate your TouchWiz.” If it was paid for by Samsung, I’m sure they wouldn’t be happy in the slightest

kungfutigerr

I’d like to see all manufacturer apps and widgets reside on Google Play. You could have a Samsung/Sony/HTC/LG etc… Store that would house all of the recommended manufacturer enhancements. The only added app on the phone would be a gateway app to these stores.

Google could encourage this by making a section for these manufacturer stores on the Play front page.

Manufacturers could add a launcher to improve the stock experience, but it could be uninstalled or changed if the user wanted to – exactly the same way that Action Launcher 3/Nova/Apex/Google Now and dozens of other launchers operate.

vtwkang

Problem for the OEMs is that if they did that, their apps would get lost in the noise of Google Play. There would be no software differentiation of their devices whatsoever, and even though most OEMs have become more relaxed about this I doubt they’d be willing to go all the way.

It would also make them more dependent on Google, which they don’t like.