The time has come for Google to unveil its latest Pixel lineup, starting with a second generation of its Pixel smartphones and a refreshed laptop for the new season. It’s also been more than a year since the company released its Google Home speaker with Google Assistant built in, and we’re expecting to see some updates this year to the device as well. Follow along here for all the latest hardware news out of San Francisco today.
3 best and worst features of the Google Pixel 2 and Pixel 2 XL

Photo by James Bareham / The VergeGoogle on Wednesday took the wraps off its new Pixel 2 and Pixel 2 XL phones, the sequels to the first-ever Google-designed Android handsets. Both devices look sharp, minimal, and sport what the company says is one of the best mobile cameras on the market, with original Pixel buyers able to testify the device line’s prowess in the picture-taking department.
But perhaps you’re still on the fence. Maybe you own an Apple product, and you’re simply fed up with iOS, or have no intention of buying the iPhone 8 or shelling out for the iPhone X. Or perhaps you’ve been looking for a cleaner, simpler, and bloatware-free Android phone, but not sure you want to get something quite as premium as Pixel 2. It does start at $649, and can get as expensive as $949 for a 128GB Pixel 2 XL.
Read Article >Bluetooth won’t replace the headphone jack — walled gardens will

Photo by James Bareham / The VergeYesterday, Google announced the Pixel 2 and Pixel 2 XL, two phones I’ve been excited about for a while now. They have big screens, a delightfully playful design sensibility, and what promises to be a fascinating upgrade to the previous Pixel’s best-in-class camera.
They also don’t have headphone jacks.
Read Article >Pixelbook vs. MacBook vs. Surface Laptop: how do the $1,000 laptops stack up?

Photo by James Bareham / The VergeGoogle’s Pixelbook is the revived image of a high-end Chromebook, a top-shelf version of a Google laptop running Chrome OS that’s meant to stand shoulder to shoulder with devices like Apple’s MacBook or Microsoft’s Surface Laptop.
The Pixelbook starts at $999, which isn’t exactly cheap by Chromebook standards, especially when considering that the price doesn’t include the $99 Pixelbook Pen stylus. But if you can work with Chrome OS — something that gets easier and easier with each passing day as Google’s operating system gets more and more capable — it might just be worth the price.
Read Article >The Pixel’s missing headphone jack proves Apple was right

Photo by James Bareham / The VergeWhen it launched the iPhone 7 a year ago, Apple confidently declared the headphone jack obsolete technology that we could learn to live without. I disagreed with the necessity of its removal then, and I disagree with it now, but with Google joining the ranks of jack-less phone makers, I think it’s time to accept the inevitability of the 3.5mm port’s demise. According to the two towering US giants of mobile tech, the future is wireless (or, in emergencies, dongle-shaped) and even though that will make our lives less convenient and our tech less compatible, we should all just come along for the ride.
I’m not okay with this, but it isn’t my choice to make.
Read Article >How Google’s Pixel Buds compare to Apple’s AirPods


Yesterday, Google announced the second round of its very own Pixel phones, but it also expanded its small universe of “Made by Google” hardware. One of the new products under that umbrella, and a first for Google, are the Pixel Buds. They’re around-the-neck wireless earbuds (or “neckbuds”) that, in some ways, resemble Apple’s AirPods.
Much like Apple, Google has done away with the headphone jack on its new phones, so selling a pair of its own wireless headphones makes sense. They’re even priced exactly the same as AirPods, at $159. However, there are plenty of differences between the Pixel Buds and AirPods that are worth elucidating at the outset, even if we’ve only gotten a very brief chance to try them so far, and can’t really say much about the sound quality just yet. (If you want to know much more about Pixel Buds alone, check out our own exclusive first look at the product.)
Read Article >Google is already running out of Pixel 2 stock
It’s been only three hours since Google’s Pixel 2 event wrapped up — but if you’re planning to buy one and haven’t gotten around to it yet, you’re already late enough to be on the waiting list.
Many models of the Pixel 2 and every model of the Pixel 2 XL have already seen their delivery dates slip past the phone’s October 19th launch date. Here’s the current situation in the Google Store:
Read Article >Google’s Pixel 2 phones are the first to use built-in eSIM technology
You’ll be able to use Google’s newest smartphones, the Pixel 2 and Pixel 2 XL, without needing to pop in a SIM card, the company announced today. As long as you’re a Project Fi subscriber, Google will use the devices’ built-in eSIMs to authenticate your cellular account. Prior to today, no smartphone has ever used the eSIM standard. The relatively new technology has typically been reserved for LTE-equipped tablets, smartwatches, and other cellular wearables.
“This means you no longer need to go to a store to get a SIM card for wireless service, wait a few days for your card to arrive in the mail, or fumble around with a bent paper clip to coax your SIM card into a tiny slot,” writes Joy Xi, a product manager for Project Fi, in Google’s official blog post on the subject. “Getting wireless service with eSIM is as quick as connecting your phone to Wi-Fi.”
Read Article >Google will email customers when Pixels are back in stock
Correction October 5th, 2:15PM ET: It turns out, Google hasn’t changed the ordering process this year — the company will still email customers when stock returns and then sell them on a first-come, first-serve basis; you won’t be able to hold a place in line. That’s too bad, since the Pixel 2 is already out of stock in some configurations. The original story is below.
It ought to be at least a little bit easier to get a Pixel this year. Google says it’s updating its online store so that if the Pixels are out of stock, you’ll be able to reserve one and hold a place in line.
Read Article >Google guarantees three years of Android software updates for the Pixel 2
Google’s tech specs page for the Pixel 2 seems to indicate that buyers of the company’s latest smartphones can expect to receive Android software updates for three years from the time of release. Previous Nexus devices and the original Pixels were guaranteed updates for at least two years.
This extension went completely unmentioned during today’s keynote, so I’m really hoping it’s not a mistake. It’s written in the footnotes of the Pixel listing at Google’s own store, albeit with somewhat confusing wording. Both software updates and security updates are mentioned as offered for three years:
Read Article >Google launches a ‘Made for Google’ certified accessories program

Image: GoogleGoogle just announced onstage during its Pixel event that it’s launching a “Made for Google” certification program for third-party accessories. The news, which was reported earlier this week by 9to5Google, means that the company will adopt a similar approach to how Apple handles recommending things you might want to plug into (or slap onto) your phone.
Made for Google will include everything from phone cases, to USB-C earbuds, power adapters, and more, many of which are already available in the Google store alongside the company’s new hardware. The new program shouldn’t be confused with Made by Google, which is what the company uses when referring to the galaxy of its own hardware products.
Read Article >Google hardware is no longer a hobby


Rick Osterloh has been on the job as the senior vice president of hardware at Google for just over 17 months now. In that time, he’s had to repeatedly answer the same questions from reporters like me: just how serious is Google about making its own hardware? Is it a hobby or is it going to genuinely affect Google’s financial bottom line? Is the company sure it won’t repeat the same mistakes it made with its ill-fated Motorola acquisition and subsequent sale years ago?
He’s heard it all before: Osterloh was actually president of Motorola for a time under Google. In an hour-long interview, his answers to those questions haven’t changed since last April. They might not stop us from asking them over and over, but the consistency of the answers is important. And if there was any doubt about Google’s ambitions in hardware, the company definitively put it to rest by acquiring 2,000 or so phone engineers from HTC last month, along with some IP and equipment.
Read Article >Google’s new Daydream View is designed for your couch, not your bag


The first thing I noticed about Google’s new Daydream View VR headset is the pink controller.
In the original View, all plastic parts were beige or gray, even if you got the model wrapped with rich crimson fabric. Now, they’re coordinated: if you buy the colorful “Coral” edition, you’ll get a coral remote, too. It’s not a big change, but it’s emblematic of Google’s overall goal: re-creating last year’s carefully engineered mobile headset, undoing a few mistakes, and making its individual parts a little nicer.
Read Article >Google’s Pixelbook is the first high-end Chromebook in years
Chromebooks mostly exist in two camps. The first is the education market, where an entire generation of students have been using cheap, low-end laptops to get their schoolwork done. The second camp is the direct-to-consumer market, where manufacturers like Samsung and Asus have been introducing higher-end models that creep up into the $500 range, but don’t have the power or flexibility of a proper Windows or Mac laptop.
Now, for the first time since Google discontinued the Chromebook Pixel last year, it’s back in the top end of the market with the Pixelbook, a laptop that starts at $999 and can be priced all the way up to $1,649. And if you want, you can spend $99 more on the Pixelbook Pen, a stylus designed specifically for this laptop.
Read Article >Up close with Pixel Buds, Google’s answer to AirPods
Google is making wireless headphones that are specifically designed to be the first and best option for people who buy Google phones — just like AirPods are designed for iPhones.
The new Pixel Buds borrow a lot of ideas from Apple’s AirPods: they have a new, easier way to pair with your phone, they come in a little battery case, they use touch controls, and they have tight integration with an intelligent assistant. They’re also priced exactly the same, at $159, and are coming out in November.
Read Article >Sundar Pichai says the future of Google is AI. But can he fix the algorithm?


Unbeknownst to me, at the very moment on Monday morning when I was asking Google CEO Sundar Pichai about the biggest ethical concern for AI today, Google’s algorithms were promoting misinformation about the Las Vegas shooting.
I was asking in the context of the aftermath of the 2016 election and the misinformation that companies like Facebook, Twitter, and Google were found to have spread. Pichai, I found out later, had a rough idea that something was going wrong with one of his algorithms as we were speaking. So his answer, I think it’s fair to say, also serves as a response to the widespread criticisms the company faced in the days after the shooting.
Read Article >New $99 Google Daydream View VR headset announced with three new colors


Google has announced a new generation of Daydream View virtual reality headsets alongside its Pixel 2 phones. The new Daydream headsets still look like squishy, cloth-covered mobile headsets, with the same controller and basic features as the first Daydream View. But they’ve got a new look and a few design tweaks, as well as new (and per Google, improved) lenses. They’ll sell for $99 apiece, slightly more than the $79 original View, and now come in “charcoal,” “fog,” and “coral” editions. Preorders open today, with the headsets launching on October 19th.
The first Daydream View was released in November of 2016 exclusively for the Google Pixel. Several phones have added Daydream support since then; there are now over a dozen Daydream-ready Android devices, including the new Samsung Galaxy Note 8 and upcoming LG V30. Google initially envisioned Daydream as a platform with multiple headsets, but so far, the View is the only one available in the US. The new View will launch in 11 countries: the US, Canada, the UK, Germany, Australia, India, Italy, France, Spain, Japan, and Korea.
Read Article >Google’s Pixel Buds are the company’s first wireless headphones
Google-branded earbuds are coming. The company announced at its annual hardware event today that it’ll be releasing truly wireless earbuds this fall called the Pixel Buds. The circular Pixel Buds feature gesture controls, including swipes or touches to switch songs, answer phone calls, or adjust volume levels. Touching the right earbud will activate the built-in Google Assistant, which can be used to get directions, set reminders, or access music and messages. They should last for five hours on a single charge.
Just like the Pixel phones, the earbuds come in three colors: black, white, and blue. They’ll cost $159. Google’s online store says the blue and black versions will ship in six to seven weeks but lists the white as “out of stock.”
Read Article >Google is turning Stranger Things characters into adorable augmented reality stickers
Google is adding augmented reality stickers for the Pixel, including official collections based on Stranger Things and Star Wars, among other franchises. The company says its Pixel 2 phones’ cameras are specifically optimized and calibrated for high-quality augmented reality, and it showed this off at today’s event with a variety of AR apps. One lets you watch League of Legends in augmented reality, and another lets you play with augmented reality Legos, similar to an app that already exists for Google’s Daydream VR platform.
In AR Stickers, character stickers can interact with each other — if you put Stranger Things heroine Eleven in a scene with her nemesis the Demogorgon, for example, she’ll quickly vanquish it. You can record these little scenes and send them to friends, in addition to watching them in real time.
Read Article >Google follows Amazon with multi-step smart home routines and kid-friendly accounts
Google today announced that products from its fellow Alphabet-owned company, Nest, will be more deeply integrated with its family of Home smart speakers, allowing for multi-step “routines” you can trigger with simple phrases like “good morning.”
If you’re not a Nest owner, Google says the feature should work with over 1,000 smart home products from over 100 brands. The company also announced new kid-friendly accounts for Home, so kids can have their preferences saved as part of a large linked family account. The news was presented onstage at the company’s Pixel 2 hardware event in San Francisco.
Read Article >Google announces high-end Pixelbook laptop with a stylus for $999
Google is bringing back the Chromebook Pixel, with a slightly different name. The new Google Pixelbook is a high-end Chromebook 2-in-1 that looks like a cross between a Lenovo Yoga laptop and Microsoft’s Surface Book. Just like the leaks we saw last month, Google’s Pixelbook has a blocky design with big keys, a wide trackpad, and a 12.3-inch display. It’s the new premium Chromebook that we haven’t seen for a couple of years now, and it’s priced starting at $999.
That’s a lot of money for a Chromebook, but Google think it’s worth it. Google’s Pixelbook flips around like a Lenovo Yoga PC to become a tablet, offering up different modes for tablet or laptop. While most PC manufacturers are moving to displays with thinner bezels, Google has opted for a tall 12.3-inch display with a 3:2 screen aspect ratio and rather large bezels. On the base model, priced at $999, there’s a 7th generation Intel Core i5 processor, 8GB of RAM, 128GB of storage. There are two USB-C ports for charging or accessories, and if you’re using a Pixel phone you can even set it to automatically tether data.
Read Article >Google Home Max is a supersized version of the smart home speaker
Google has announced the Home Max, a larger version of its Home smart speaker designed to compete against Apple’s HomePod and Sonos. The Home Max is a stereo speaker running Google Assistant that resembles Apple’s old Hi-Fi speaker from over a decade ago.
Home Max features two 4.5-inch woofers alongside tweeters covered by a fabric speaker grille. It also includes far-field microphones that Google says will be able to hear you when the music is playing.
Read Article >Google now lets you send messages through the Google Home to unsuspecting roommates
Here’s a great update to the Google Home: you can now send messages to your Home speakers and have all of them speak it aloud. Google calls the feature “Broadcast,” because it lets you broadcast a message from your phone and out through all of your Home speakers.
To use the feature, you just say, “Hey Google, broadcast ‘What’s everyone up to?’” and your message is supposed to automatically be sent through. It’ll be read aloud in the Assistant’s voice — not your own.
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