Nexus launch day is a cutthroat time when mere moments can make the difference between a speedy shipment and weeks of waiting. While quick...
Nexus launch day is a cutthroat time when mere moments can make the
difference between a speedy shipment and weeks of waiting. While
quickly comparing the Nexus 5X and 6P to decide which one to order, many
have noticed that the 6P lists an RGB notification LED, but the 5X
doesn't. Well, we've confirmed there's an LED on the 5X too. How? We
bothered Google VP of Engineering Dave Burke via email. He was kind
enough to explain what's going on.
The omission of the LED from the 5X's spec list is a mistake, but it should be corrected soon. The LED is behind the speaker grille on the bottom of the phone. Burke explains that this is a real notification LED, not like that fake LED on the Nexus 6 that only worked with root. Apps can use the LED API to produce any color they want, but the system uses ambient display by default. You can see the LED in the image below, which apparently came from a network test unit.
So if you get the 5X, you'll be able to get LED notifications from
apps. You could use something like Light Flow to customize and manage
them, but the system favors ambient display. The Nexus phones will also
use that LED as a "sign-of-life indicator" in the event something is
wrong with the hardware. That's all the Nexus 6's LED was used for, but
these are much more capable.
Source: Nexus 5X, Nexus 6P
The omission of the LED from the 5X's spec list is a mistake, but it should be corrected soon. The LED is behind the speaker grille on the bottom of the phone. Burke explains that this is a real notification LED, not like that fake LED on the Nexus 6 that only worked with root. Apps can use the LED API to produce any color they want, but the system uses ambient display by default. You can see the LED in the image below, which apparently came from a network test unit.
Photo via Reddit
Source: Nexus 5X, Nexus 6P