The storage type used by recent Pixels likely isn’t making a difference. The older Pixel 2 fared much better at 55s each way. The OnePlus 7T Pro, for comparison, managed 77 and 40 seconds in the same tests - a substantial difference. The Pixel 4, for example, required 125 seconds for a computer to copy a 10.8GB test file to the device over USB Type-C using MTP, and took 84s for the same file to be read back in testing. Compared to the Mate 30 Pro, OnePlus 7T Pro, Galaxy S10e, and Honor View 20, Google’s last couple of Pixel flagships take much longer (over twice as long, in some cases) to transfer files. Precise speeds sadly weren’t measured, devices tested were limited to what they had on-hand, and we don’t know how many times they measured the results, but the differences seem clear. Android Authority ran tests on eight devices in total, and although the 2016 Pixel and Pixel 2 fared well enough, Google’s Pixel 3 and Pixel 4 took twice as long to copy a 10.8GB file compared to several other phones.
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