October 4th was a date marked on every techies calendar, as Google promoted and teased a great unveiling. Inclusive of all the hype and premeditated leaks, calling yesterday a great unveiling still constitutes as a mild understatement. Ditching the popular Nexus line, Google revealed what they say was a project nearly ten years in the making with the new Pixel lineup. You might be asking, “So, why the change?” That’s a good question! Google states, the Nexus program was a tool showcasing the latest and greatest versions of Android, devoid of skins and unadulterated, paired with the best hardware of OEMs (original equipment manufacturers) such as LG, Samsung, HTC, Motorola, and Huawei; all previous Nexus phone designers. For a six year period, the preset goals were achieved as these fusions provided us in the tech community some of the greatest phones of their respective years. Granted, some where greater than others, hmm, I’m looking at you Nexus 6, but overall a successful campaign nonetheless. Now, Google wants to shift gears from not just providing a clean Android experience, but also designing and making its own devices. Enter the new Pixel and Pixel XL phones, accompanied by the Google Home, Google Wi-Fi, Daydream View VR Headset and Chromecast Ultra.
Occupying certain niche needs, I anticipate great success for the Google Home and Wi-Fi. Both allow for the continued push towards more technically sound and interactive homes, and I think both achieve this in grand fashion. Granted, these are merely Google’s interpretation of products currently on the market, namely the Amazon Echo and OnHub Blue, but at their perspective price points, could provide competition for consumer attention. I wasn’t as impressed with the Daydream VR Headset as I honestly believe this is still a gimmicky-purchase and not a must have for any buyer, but much like the home products, the price point would make this hard to ignore come holiday time. I still prefer Samsung’s VR Headset because the more impressive build, but Daydream does allow a greater experience across all apps in the Android market over the former. Not much needs to be said about the Chromecast Ultra, other than it’s an upgraded version from previous incarnations, with allowance for 4K UHD (ultra high definition) picture quality. Again, for anyone with a 4K compatible television and $70 to burn, this is a fantastic option.
But you’re probably wanting info on the stars of the the event, the Pixel and Pixel XL phones. Still reeling from the abrupt Nexus divorce, my honest feelings for these devices are lukewarm; at least for the time being. The new 4.7″ and 5.5″ devices looked like a re-hash of phones already on the market, thus lacking a new approach I was anticipating. I kept telling my buddy that they looked like the freakish three-way combination of the HTC 10, iPhone 6s and Honor 8. All are great looking devices, but just don’t look quite right together. Whenever I get my hands on review models, my initial thoughts may change, but if this the “girl” we decide to date after our great relationship with Nexus, she may need to put on a little more makeup before we go out. Just saying! However, the new color names are extremely catchy with the Very Silver, Quite Black and Really Blue. Again, the overall phones look odd to me, but the Quite Black color scheme with the two-toned silver bottom accent looked cool. In their totality, not anything groundbreaking with the hardware as we have 1080p and Quad-HD AMOLED panels, with the Snapdragon 821, 4 GB of RAM, bottom mount speakers, Gorilla Glass 4 and 32/128 GB ROM options; so solid if not spectacular. But much like the Nexus phones, the newest Android version Nougat 7.1, will be the differential from other devices. Being the first shipping with this version baked in, 7.1 is utterly fantastic and a major step forward. Newer launcher, Google Assistance, and revised Google Now functionality make this a near must-buy, as I was blown away with how intuitive the operating system has become. I was ready to hand over my credit card right there on the spot! Then Google announced the pricing and my credit card couldn’t find its way back into my wallet fast enough. Starting at $649 for the lower-end variant and going up to $799, these seem destined for a similar fate of the Nexus 6 as a good device until you look at the price-to-value aspect. Google does believe these are premium devices competing with the likes of Samsung’s S-line and the Apple iPhone, and I agree somewhat, as this is great software and hardware, but this seems way too pricey. Using the Nexus pricing as a baseline, if these were in the $399-$549 price range, I could see this being hard to keep in stock. But as much as $799? I just see a slew of competition from other makers like Oneplus, Alcatel, Huawei/Honor, and LG being more enticing buys and keeping more Benjamins in your pocket. Additionally, knowing a ROM for the still glamorous Nexus 6p (or other Nexus devices), should be available soon makes this any even harder recommend. At least for me.
There you have it! Stay tuned for the upcoming reviews of all these devices.