Here is the Android 6.0 Marshmallow release news for Moto G 2015, Moto X Pure Edition, Moto X Style, Moto X Force and Moto X 2014.
According to reports, at present, the Moto X Pure Edition is receiving the Android 6.0 Marshmallow update with carriers like US Cellular, Sprint and Verizon. Some mobile carriers will get the update before others, therefore, it is possible that T-Mobile and AT&T may in fact have the update by now.
Reports also suggest that the Moto G 2015 will get the Android M update in the coming weeks for Sprint and AT&T. Unlocked versions have started getting the update since first week of January in Brazil, India, United States and some European countries.
Furthermore, several reports suggest that the Moto X 2014, Moto X Force and Moto X Style are currently getting the Android 6.0 Marshmallow update. However, some carriers have not pushed the Android Marshmallow update through yet.
Also, the Moto X Pure Edition (2015) was in the approval process, therefore, it may have got the Android 6.0 M update update by now.
Moreover, Moto X Play has also got the latest Marshmallow update. The update has given the handset a much-needed boost in performance.
Motorola Moto X Play, which was released in July last year, sports a 5.5-inch screen with a resolution of 1080 pixels x 1920 pixels.
The device is powered by 1.7GHz octa-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 615 processor and it has 2GB of RAM. Furthermore, Motorola Moto X Play has 16GB of internal storage that users can expand to 128GB via a microSD card.
The smartphone sports a 5-megapixel front shooter for selfies and a 21-megapixel primary camera on the back.
It runs Android 5.1.1 Lollipop operating system and has a 3630mAh non removable battery, Engadget reported. The Moto X Play, which weighs 169 grams, measures 148.00mm x 75.00mm x 10.90mm.
Meanwhile, Android Marshmallow, which was released in early October, is on 1.2% of Android devices, according to a 9to5Google report. This is a notable rise from 0.7% share seen one month ago.
The slow adoption rate is a side effect of a complicated upgrade process. Wireless carriers and smartphone manufacturers should test every new version from the search giant for each device before executing a rollout. So Android users frequently have to wait for months for the newest version.