Google Launches the Pixel 3 & Pixel 3 XL
by Andrei Frumusanu on October 9, 2018 2:00 PM EST- Posted in
- Smartphones
- Mobile
- Pixel 3
- Pixel 3 XL
It has likely been the most leaked phone in existence, and while there’s a lot we’ve known about the new Pixel 3’s – today Google has finally officially announced the new devices at its launch event in New York. Here’s the summary of the new hardware of software of Google’s new flagship smartphone for the end of 2018.
The Pixel 2 phones have been relatively successful phones for Google and grown to have a notable following. Today’s launched Pixel 3 devices iterate on last year’s phones, improving on aspects that differentiated Google’s phones from other manufacturers, such as the camera.
Google Pixel 3's | |||
Pixel 3 | Pixel 3 XL | ||
SoC | Snapdragon 845 4x Kryo 385 Gold (Cortex A75 based) @ 2.8GHz 4x Kryo 385 Silver (Cortex A55 based) @ 1.76GHz |
||
GPU | Adreno 630 @ 710MHz | ||
DRAM | 4GB LPDDR4X | ||
Display | 5.5" AMOLED 2160 x 1080 (18:9) |
6.3" P-OLED 2960 x 1440 (18.5:9) |
|
Size | Height | 145.6 mm | 158.0 mm |
Width | 68.2 mm | 76.6 mm | |
Depth | 7.9 mm | 7.9 mm | |
Weight | 148 grams | 184 grams | |
Battery Capacity | 2915mAh | 3430mAh | |
Wireless Charging | Qi | ||
Rear Camera | 12.2 MP, f/1.8, 27mm (wide), 1/2.55", 1.4µm, OIS, dual pixel PDAF |
||
Front Cameras | Dual 8MP modules Regular f/1.8 75° & wide angle f/2.2 97° FoV lenses |
||
Storage | 64 GB / 128 GB | 64 GB / 128 GB | |
I/O | USB-C | ||
Wireless (local) | 802.11ac Wi-Fi + Bluetooth 5.0 LE + NFC | ||
Cellular | CAT 16 (1Gbps DL / 75Mbps UL), 5x DL CA, 4x4 MIMO, LAA, 256-QAM DL and 64-QAM UL |
||
Splash, Water, Dust Resistance | IPX8 (Water resistant up to 1m) |
||
Dual-SIM | nano-SIM | ||
Launch Price | 64 GB: $799 / £739 / 849€ 128 GB: $899 / £839 / 949€ |
64 GB: $899 / not avail. / 949€ 256 GB: $999 / £969 / 1049€ |
Hardware wise the new Pixel 3 and Pixel 3 XL are powered by this year’s Snapdragon 845 processor. We already saw Qualcomm’s SoC in a mass of handsets from a variety of vendors, and it performed excellently in every one of them. For the Pixel phones, what would likely be a bigger differentiation, is how Google will handle the software side of things. Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 845 scheduler differentiated a lot from the “vanilla” Android kernel – and I think Google will want to continue to use its own scheduling.
The device comes with 4GB of LPDDR4X. I don’t think this is an issue, even if some flagship devices this year sport larger capacities. Onboard storage comes in 64 and 128GB options.
Starting off with the design of the Pixel 3, Google has elongated the screen aspect ratio to 18:9 and reduced the top and bottom bezels compared to the Pixel 2. Over this updates the design with the trend with what we’ve seen in 2018, as phone’s screen-to-body ratio continues to grow.
The Pixel 3 XL is where Google is definitely taking a large design risk: The new XL also increases the screen-to-body ratio over the 2XL, however this comes with the introduction of a massive new screen notch. Now I can’t really be accused of being anti-notch, as I found it to be a complete non-issue on all of this year’s reviewed devices, including Huawei’s P20’s, the OnePlus 6 as well as the LG G7. However Google’s take on the notch is definitely weird: It’s almost twice as high as that of other vendors, which makes one question exactly how this will actually look in daily app usages and if it’s actually of any benefit in terms of notification bar space. Subjectively, it does look ridiculous, but we’ll hold off definitive conclusions until we’ve had time with the phone.
The new Pixels now introduce wireless charging, and this is thanks to the new all-glass backs of the phones. Google achieves the two-tone look by applying a new method that just etches part of the glass, leaving a similar glossy top as on the Pixel 2’s.
This year’s water resistance has been raised to an IPX8 rating, up from the IP67 of the Pixel 2’s. Google seemingly didn’t certify this year’s devices for dust resistance – hence the missing number in the IP rating. As a reminder, this doesn’t mean that the resistance is any worse.
Where the Pixel 2 XL didn’t shine is the screen: LG’s POLED panel on last year’s big phone suffered from large issues, with the biggest one being the screen’s terrible performance in low brightness, where it would just not be able to display darker colours and instead just clip to black. The new Pixel 3 XL at first glance seems to have improved a lot in this regard, and hopefully addresses what was in my opinion the Pixel 2 XL’s biggest issue.
The camera on the new Pixel 3’s sports the same hardware characteristics: a single f/1.8 12.2MP rear module with a 1.4µm sensor as well as OIS. We don’t have much information on the sensor or how the camera hardware improved at the time of writing.
What is clear though is that Google has vastly improved the software of the camera. The three highlight features are “Top shot”, “Super res zoom” and “Night sight”.
Top shot looks to be a continuous shooting mode buffer around the time you are pressing the shutter button. The phone saves pictures even before you pressed the button, and allows you to choose the best shots in a series.
Super resolution zoom is something I’m very excited about: Even though the new Pixel 3’s don’t have a dedicated zoom camera, they still provide a zoom functionality with increased image quality. What Google is doing here is taking multiple shots in a very fast burst (or either using a continuous camera stream), and making use of the slight spatial variations caused by the movement of the camera to get multiple shots. These are then interpolated together with help of the Pixel Visual Core’s processing capabilities to create a higher resolution image. It would be very interesting to see if Google is able to produce higher resolution shots not only when just zoomed in, but also at full frame.
Finally “Night sight” is something that sounds akin to Huawei’s new night mode – where the camera takes several exposures and recombines them in a stacked result that vastly improves the low-light performance of the phone.
As for the Pixel Visual Core – we’re not sure if this is the same silicon as last year, or if Google has iterated and provided with a successor chip.
The front-facing camera system has seen the addition of new wide-angle module, on top of the regular selfie camera. Both are 8MP units, with the regular one coming with an f/1.8 aperture and the wide angle offering an f/2.2 aperture.
The new Pixel 3’s speakers are said to have also been vastly improved, being 40% louder as well as being calibrated for better low and high frequencies.
Overall, today’s Pixel 3 launch event was very much centred around the camera, which Google confidently now calls the “best camera on a smartphone”. Certainly in terms of computational photography, it seems Google made big leaps, and I’m especially eager to see the new super resolution zoom and night sight modes work in practice.
Google offers the Pixel 3 starting at $799 for the 64GB model, and $899 for the 128GB model. The Pixel 3 XL starts similarly at $899 and comes in at $999 for the larger capacity. The Pixel 3’s are available for pre-order now, with full availability in the US starting on the 18th, and European and other countries starting on November 1st.
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ryedizzel - Tuesday, October 9, 2018 - link
he said the same price, lolvarase - Wednesday, October 10, 2018 - link
Hey ... Pixel has a bigger notch!ss96 - Tuesday, October 9, 2018 - link
Andrei, do you have any idea if the P-OLED displays are using the new DDICs that Synaptics introduced at CES?mode_13h - Tuesday, October 9, 2018 - link
LOL. Google seems to think they're Apple.Pixel 2 was already about twice what I'd pay for a phone. Pixel 3 pushes it up to about 3x. Let's see if Pixel 4 will even surpass Apple's pricing!
Great_Scott - Tuesday, October 9, 2018 - link
At this rate, Nokia (sorry, HMD) is going to end up with 70% market share all over again. The more things change...Lavkesh - Tuesday, October 9, 2018 - link
And it can only be good. Atleast they design their own hardwareGreat_Scott - Tuesday, October 9, 2018 - link
I'm lost about the low-light performance of newer phones. This is a solved problem: a larger sensor, fewer pixels, or some combination of the two.I mean, it's great that you can use spare memory and processing power to merge together exposures in some kind of gimpy facsimile of how Astrophotography works (I hope your subject didn't move and ruin the shot!) - but there's no need.
It's a better idea to simply have less pixels in the first place - I've viewed modern cellphone pictures at their proper resolution (on a 4K monitor, because you can't otherwise) and they're a hot mess of hot pixels. Better than full-color TV static, but not by much. There's no details there, the extra picture size isn't accomplishing anything.
mode_13h - Wednesday, October 10, 2018 - link
Larger sensor either requires more bulky optics or results in more distortion (which you can correct, at the expense of more blur).Fewer pixels means lower resolution, and that'll be a tough sell. More resolution is especially helpful for digital zoom.
It's not a telescope - it's a phone. You can design a telescope around the camera's requirements and constraints, but there's only so much you can do to a phone's shape without jeopardizing public acceptance. To that end, the answer isn't simply longer exposures, because people like to take pictures of moving stuff, and the phone is also in motion. You can correct for a little bit of motion, but there are obviously limits.
I haven't followed much about Google's photo post processing technology, but I think they're using deep learning to filter a lot of the noise you mention, without sacrificing too much detail.
Tams80 - Wednesday, October 10, 2018 - link
They absolutely can use a bigger sensor though. We're not talking about a 1" sensor here, they're far from that.At the end of day it's called PHOTOgraphy. You need light, and the more you can get, the better the image, bearing in mind that you need it at the same time to prevent blurring.
But oh no, we NEED slim phones apparently. Or so the phone makers tell us.
Zoolook - Thursday, October 11, 2018 - link
There is no zooming in digital zoom, and companies should be sued for false advertising for using it, it's cropping, and if you want a lower res on your picture you'd be better of with fewer but bigger pixels in your sensor.