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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL review: Google’s AI gateway device
7:00 am | August 21, 2024

Author: admin | Category: Computers Gadgets Google Pixel Phones Phones | Tags: , , | Comments: Off

Google Pixel 9 Pro XL: Three-minute review

Google Pixel 9 Pro XL

The Pixel 9 Pro line in Rose Quartz and Porcelain (Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)

If you feel like new Pixel phones arrived sooner this year, you're right. Google's August Pixel hardware event gave us not a duo, but a quartet of new phones; starting at one end with the new baseline Pixel 9, and freshly topped with the Pixel 9 Pro Fold.

Into larger phones? Then the 'XL' nomenclature should tip you off as to where you might want to spend your money. This is the direct successor to last year's 6.7-inch Pixel 8 Pro.

It's the biggest (flat) Pixel yet and it sports a new design that marks a relatively significant shift in the series' aesthetic; the camera bar introduced with the Pixel 6 series is gone and instead we have the camera 'pill.' 

The fit and finish have unquestionably been elevated, with the phone's polished frame adopting a much flatter form that's decidedly iPhone-like in its execution, and Google says new construction methods and material choices make it twice as durable as its predecessor.

In reality, the Pixel 9 Pro XL feels great, with the best build quality I've seen from Google to date; not to mention it looks superb, thanks to an updated Super Actua Display that boasts higher peak brightness than anything Apple or Samsung has to offer. The move to an ultrasonic fingerprint sensor is welcome too, delivering on Google's promised speed improvement.

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The same seven-year commitment to OS and security updates helps the Pixel 9 series stand apart from rivals from Apple and Motorola. The phones' earlier-than-usual arrival in the calendar year means that this is the first generation of Pixel in a long time that doesn't debut with a new build of Android. It will benefit from the same future releases of Android as the Pixel 8 line, and likely no more.

Beyond the usual fare of a clean Pixel experience, AI is all Google is talking about. With an updated Gemini Nano model that is multi-modal and three times more capable running on-device, you'll find AI-generated features throughout the user experience.

Most notably, there are three new apps to play with: a new Weather app that's richer and more customizable, with AI-generated weather reports; a new Screenshots app that – as well as helping organize your captures – allows for semantic search; and Pixel Studio, which allows for on-device text-to-image generative AI that Google pitches as a new creative tool. Feel free to reconcile your feelings about using AI-generated imagery in your own time.

The cost of the Pixel 9 Pro and Pro XL also includes a year's access to Google One AI Premium with Gemini Advanced and its new Gemini Live feature. Gemini Live is a decidedly ChatGPT 4o-like conversational experience with Google's off-device AI. It works well for things like how-to guidance and recipe help, but still comes with limitations surrounding how it can actually action on-device tasks for you.

All the on-device AI experiences are powered by Google's new Tensor G4 SoC, paired with a new higher RAM ceiling of 16GB. Previous Pixels already felt fast in day-to-day use, but existing users will notice speed improvements for things like image processing and app load times; even if these gains are seemingly slight. Benchmarks only put the Tensor G4 about 10% ahead of the G3, in terms of CPU performance, with more noticeable graphical gains and, of course, NPU gains for AI tasks.

The other big aspect of any modern, AI-enhanced Pixel phone is the camera experience. The hardware looks, for the most part, similar to the Pixel 8 Pro, albeit with a much higher resolution selfie snapper and a tweaked ultrawide on the back. However, Google claims to have reworked its HDR+ pipeline end-to-end, meaning more true-to-life imagery.

In daylight, I had few complaints, and the Pixel 9 Pro delivers great detail and accurate colors and with dynamic range. Night Sight ensures low-light shooting is almost always rescued from unusable to usable, even if it can still be a little heavy-handed in its post-processing.

The expansion of that HDR+ pipeline to panoramas (paired with a new capture UI), means much better results, especially as Night Sight is now supported here too, although I do wonder whether this upgrade will simply manifest as a Feature Drop update for previous Pixel models in the near future. 

Another Pixel 9 Pro exclusive is Video Boost, which can now scale 4K footage up to 8K and proves particularly useful when zooming up to the phone's 20x limit.

Google Pixel 9 Pro XL and Pixel 9 Pro side by side with screens on

Pixel 9 Pro and Pixel 9 Pro XL (Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)

There's another side to the imaging experience on recent Pixels: Magic Editor. Beyond moving elements around in a shot or turning a blue sky to golden hour, the new Reimagine button lets you enter text to generate completely new elements in a shot. It's unquestionably fun and creative, but it also throws out any semblance of authenticity to shots you've captured yourself. Unlike Samsung, there's no AI watermarking going on with edited images, either.

Although that Tensor G4 chipset doesn't mark a huge leap forward in raw horsepower, it certainly has helped with power efficiency, with the Pixel 9 Pro XL serving up almost 70% more screen-on time compared to the Pixel 8 Pro. 

The jump from 30W to 37W wired fast charging speeds is a small but welcome bump too, although it looks like you'll have to grab Google's 45W charger for the absolute quickest recharge times, based on my testing with similar chargers.

Perhaps the biggest benefit the Pixel 9 Pro line offers is that – beyond the XL's larger screen and physically bigger battery – there's no compromise across both sizes. If you're happy with the premium, the Pixel 9 Pro XL is the most unapologetic, bombastic Pixel experience you can have right now, outside of foldable land.

Even if the jump from the Pixel 8 Pro isn't as significant as I would have liked, and it feels like this is more a means for Google to cultivate new Gemini Advanced subscribers, I can't help but appreciate the Pixel 9 Pro XL for being greater than the sum of its parts. It may only be just enough of an upgrade, but it is enough.

Google Pixel 9 Pro XL review: Price and availability

Google Pixel 9 Pro XL review back handheld

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)
  • Priced from $1,099 / £1,099 / AU$1,849
  • On sale from August 22, 2024
  • Pro Pixels now start above $/£1,000

While Google announced four phones at its August 2024 event, the standard Pixel 9 and the Pixel 9 Pro XL are the two that hit the market first, on August 22. Meanwhile, the Pixel 9 Pro and Pixel 9 Pro Fold arrive on the scene September 4.

In the UK, you can pick up the Pixel 9 Pro XL directly from Google, with double the storage at no extra charge on purchases made before September 5. US buyers can nab $200 in-store credit if ordering before August 28, and Australian buyers can pick up a limited edition poster with purchases made before August 25 (tough break, Australia).

The addition of the new smaller Pro model this year (which starts at a similar launch price to the larger Pixel 8 Pro), helps Google justify its decision to render the Pixel 9 Pro XL the most expensive candy bar Pixel to date: it starts at $1,099 / £1,099 / AU$1,849. It's practically like for like, when compared to equivalent storage options of the iPhone 15 Pro Max, truly putting an end to the notion that the Pixels are the 'affordable' flagship option.

For the asking price, you also get a year's access to a Google One AI Premium (2TB) plan which, as well as granting access to Gemini Advanced (which leverages the Gemini Pro 1.5 model) and Gemini Live, includes more general Google benefits like Fitbit Premium access, Nest Aware, 10% back on Google Store purchases, and unlimited Magic Editor saves in Google Photos.

  • Value score: 4 / 5

Google Pixel 9 Pro XL review: Specs

Google Pixel 9 Pro XL review: Design

Google Pixel 9 Pro XL review buttons angled

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)
  • New Pixel aesthetic: the camera bar is dead
  • 100% recycled aluminum frame
  • Improved build quality

A Pixel in iPhone font – that's the shorthand I keep coming back to with the new Pixel 9 series' design language. The size and feel of the XL's new squared aluminum frame immediately reminds me of Apple's current iPhone 15 Plus and iPhone 15 Pro Max in the hand. Does that polished metal attract fingerprints? Absolutely, but not anywhere near as badly as expected.

This new squared form, paired with the heaviest build of any candy bar Pixel yet (221 grams, the same as an iPhone 15 Pro Max), leads to a more premium look and feel overall. This is helped further by the Pixel 9 Pro XL's slimmer profile compared to the Pixel 8 Pro, and side by side with my wife's old Pixel 6 Pro, the jump in build quality is truly impressive.

One update I'm not sure I love quite so much is the loss of the camera bar, which is replaced in this generation with a camera 'pill' that protrudes out of the phone's rear panel at 90 degrees. It makes for a more bold and confident aesthetic, but it's not as quickly identifiable as the bar.

As well as the cosmetic changes, Google also claims that the Pixel 9 Pro XL's new mid-frame design, not to mention its 100%-recycled aluminum outer frame, Gorilla Glass Victus 2 front and rear panels, and IP68-certified protection against dust and water ingress, make the new phone twice as durable as its predecessor. In my time with the Pixel 9 Pro XL, by trying to keep it out of harm's way as much as possible, the finish has remained unscathed, but whether it'll age as gracefully as its titanium-clad competition from Apple and Samsung remains to be seen.

Both sizes of Pixel 9 Pro come in four colorways, with Obsidian pictured most prominently in this review. The Hazel finish most closely apes the iPhone 15 Pro's Natural Titanium look and the Galaxy S24 Ultra's Titanium Gray, while Porcelain and Rose Quartz offer decidedly more vivacious options.

  • Design score: 4.5 / 5

Google Pixel 9 Pro XL review: Display

Google Pixel 9 Pro XL review front handheld

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)
  • 6.8-inch Super Actua LTPO OLED
  • Improved HBM and peak brightness
  • New ultrasonic fingerprint sensor

The Pixel 8 Pro's Super Actua Display felt like a noteworthy upgrade from the panel on its predecessor and while not as earth-shattering an improvement this generation, the Pixel 9 Pro XL's screen is a great refinement, yet again.

Although it sports the same resolution as the Pixel 8 Pro's panel (technically not as sharp as the Pixel 9 Pro), both high brightness and peak brightness levels have been cranked up to 2,000 and 3,000nits, respectively, meeting or beating key rivals in a spec-for-spec comparison.

Add to that the panel's flat design, its thin, equally-proportioned bezels on all sides, and its excellent viewing angles, and the Pixel 9 Pro XL's Super Actua display is a thing to behold.

As before, the use of an LTPO OLED panel facilitates a dynamic refresh rate from 1 to 120Hz, making it ideal for always-on display functionality, thanks to the implied power saving benefits, while also still serving up a snappy user experience when swiping around the UI.

One of the more prominent changes you might not immediately notice is the fingerprint sensor. Instead of the optical module used since the Pixel 6 series, Google has gone the way of Samsung and instead kitted the Pixel 9 Pro XL's display with an ultrasonic sensor. I didn't notice a huge difference when making the switch from my Pixel 7 Pro, but in side by side comparison is lives up to the promise of a 2x speed improvement. Perhaps more useful is the greater reliability, especially with damp fingers or when used in the rain.

  • Display score: 4.5 / 5

Google Pixel 9 Pro XL review: Software

Google Pixel 9 Pro XL review Pixel Studio

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)
  • Seven years of OS & security updates
  • Launches with Android 14
  • Gemini AI is woven throughout the user experience

One side effect of this latest-generation Pixel launch happening earlier than usual is that the whole series runs Android 14. Typically, Google times the arrival of its latest smartphones to coincide with the release of the next Android, but the Pixel 9 debuts on the same Android 14 foundation as the Pixel 8.

At least the company's ever-impressive commitment to seven years of updates persists, meaning the phone's price tag includes excellent long-term support for both future releases of Android and subsequent security patches, an area where many rivals still fall short.

As a long-time Pixel user, the look and feel of Android on the Pixel 9 Pro XL is characteristically clean, easily navigable, pleasantly customizable (without being overwhelming), and dressed with helpful everyday features that aren't guaranteed on other phones. 

That said, the Pixel 9 Pro XL does get some Pixel-exclusive additions that up the ante, all of which lean on Gemini AI.

There's a new dedicated Weather app that generates dynamic weather reports to make insights into each day's weather more digestible than ever. The ability to drag and drop the various in-app widgets for things like UV index, ten-day forecast, and air quality is a nice perk too.

Next up is the new Pixel Screenshots app, which seems like an odd addition at first, but for list-makers, students, and journalists (like yours truly), it offers surprising depth. You can add notes to individual screenshots and group them into Collections, too. The app can index screenshot content across text and images, making it searchable. This allows for semantic search and object recognition, as well as recognizing WiFi passwords and QR-code information.

Pixel Studio uses an on-device variant of Imagen 3's diffusion-based text-to-image generative AI, allowing you to create imagery seemingly from scratch. You can remix results using pre-defined style prompts, or sculpt a completely original prompt if you prefer. 

At launch, Pixel Studio won't render people, but it's fine with objects and animals. It also managed to render legible text without much artifacting, a challenging test that I've seen other image generators fail. Right now, the application proves novel enough but there's scope for everything from messaging to graphic design work, depending on your feeling towards the use of AI-generated imagery.

Google Gemini

The price of the Pixel 9 Pro XL also includes a year's access to Gemini Advanced, meaning you can interact with its latest off-device model in Gemini 1.5 Pro and gain access to Gemini Live: Google's conversational AI experience.

My family tested it's abilities on a bean salad recipe – including suggestions on preparation and accompaniments – all without any obvious breaks in conversation or AI hallucinations. I also had it explain how to change various Gemini and Android settings, although its inability to take actions on many features feels like a missed opportunity, or at least an area that Google should focus on as its expands the assistant's functionality.

A couple of other sprinkles of AI magic on the Pixel 9 Pro XL include text-based summaries of YouTube videos that I didn't have time to watch and Zoom Enhance image upscaling (although results were mixed). I'm also intrigued by the Call Notes feature shown off at launch, that'll summarize phone calls, however, this wasn't ready during review.

The most obvious criticism of Gemini on the Pixel 9 Pro is that it feels consistently slower when asked to carry out the same tasks I would have previously asked of Google Assistant. The trade-off is much richer results and more insight, provided you trust the source data Gemini's pulling from.

  • Software score: 5 / 5

Google Pixel 9 Pro XL review: Camera

Google Pixel 9 Pro XL review camera

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)
  • 50MP-led triple rear camera setup
  • New 42MP front-facing camera
  • New AI-supported features like Add Me and Reimagine

Nowhere is AI more prevalent across the Pixel 9 Pro XL's user experience than the camera. While it might have gone by 'machine learning' in the early days of the Pixel camera experience, AI-powered post-processing has been the secret sauce that has helped elevate the reputation of the Pixel cameras over the past four years, to the point where they regularly sit among the best camera phones.

As Google has focused its efforts on AI more directly, the proposition of a Pixel camera has changed somewhat, with capture and editing becoming two distinct facets of the experience.

If you're looking for a great all-round camera phone, the Pixel 9 Pro XL is right up there. A revised HDR+ pipeline puts into practice the company's learnings from previous entries, paired with new training data to create images with a more true-to-life appearance, better exposure, dynamic range, detail, contrast and color.

Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera samples

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample flowers 0.5x

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

0.5x zoom

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample flowers 1x

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

1x zoom

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample flowers 2x

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

2x zoom

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample flowers 5x

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

5x zoom

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample flowers 30x

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

30x zoom

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample garden 0.5x

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

0.5x zoom

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample garden 1x

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

1x zoom

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample garden 2x

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

2x zoom

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample garden 5x

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

5x zoom

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample garden 30x

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

30x zoom

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample succulent macro main

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

Main sensor w/o macro

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample seagull 5x

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

5x zoom

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample moon manual

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

Low light manual control

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample beach far

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

Main sensor

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample beach macro

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

Main sensor w/o macro

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample selfie

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

Selfie

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample selfie portrait mode

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

Selfie w/ portrait mode

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample Add Me success

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

Add Me final result

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample flower macro ultrawide

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

Ultra-wide macro mode

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample flower macro main

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

Main sensor w/o macro

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample selfie low light

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

Low light selfie

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample selfie Night Sight

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

Night Sight selfie

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample sky high contrast

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

High contrast comparison shot on Pixel 9 Pro XL

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample Pixel 7 Pro comparison sky high contrast

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

High contrast comparison shot on Pixel 7 Pro

There's a little inconsistency when shooting between the updated ultra-wide's macro mode and macro shots taken on the main 50MP wide sensor, for example, but results remain consistent in how appealing and usable they are. I'd have also liked a lighter hand with the default simulated bokeh when shooting portrait mode shots (something the likes of the Xiaomi 14 Ultra nails), but these are minor grievances and fixable on-device.

Night Sight continues to impress in low light, while support has now been expanded to include the oft-overlooked panorama mode. Led by a new UI that ensures you hold the phone still enough for each shot it stitches together, the results generated are far more impressive than anything capable by previous entries; delivering much better detail and color capture than ever before.

Video Boost is another Pro Pixel-exclusive feature worth shouting about, thanks to the addition of 8K upscaling on 4K footage, the results of which can be quite staggering; especially when zooming in on the phone's 20x magnification. Even if you don't see the need for 4K or 8K footage natively, the extra wiggle room those added pixels afford you makes the experience of creating and editing content far more flexible.

Add Me is a great new addition this generation that solves the problem of getting a group shot, when there's no wall to rest your camera on or passer-by to accost and entrust with taking a photo with you and your friends in. If, like me, you're serially the photographer of your friendship group, this could prove to be a game-changer.

There was certainly trial and error involved, but once we and the phone both understood the goal, results improved until we had a usable shot seemingly taken by a fourth unseen photographer who was never there.

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample Add Me success

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

A successful Add Me shot

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample Add Me failure

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

A failed Add Me attempt

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample Add Me success part 1

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

Part 1 of the successful Add Me shot

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Google Pixel 9 Pro XL camera sample Add Me success part 2

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)

Part 2 of the successful Add Me shot

Even more so than the Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra's/ Galaxy Z Fold 6's Sketch to Image feature, the generative image tools on the Pixel 9 series unashamedly barge passed the line of authentic photography. At least personally, I'm fine with automated HDR bracketing and tone mapping, in order to produce a photo that's better than I could muster, even if I had full manual control. However, I start to feel uncomfortable with the idea of sharing images shot on the Pixel that have used the full might of the newly-enhanced Magic Editor.

The ability to change a blue sky to that of golden hour and remove unwanted people from the background were novelties that challenged my comfort level, but the new Reimagine feature within Magic Editor doesn't hold back in letting you endlessly rework a shot until it's something entirely different.

In one shot (above), I surrounded my friends and I with sunflowers and then added a scarecrow for good measure. The results don't hold up to close scrutiny, but like most AI-manipulated images, if you don't have prior context, you're less likely to question its authenticity. 

A more subtle edit that really impressed/unnerved me was Reimagine's ability to change the ground on a pebbled beach into more ocean (below); creating a rippled mirror surface with an accurate reflection of the clouds in the sky above.

Your mileage with Magic Editor will vary, depending on how scrupulous you feel about using its image-doctoring abilities and whether or not you feel the need to contextualize the results when you share them.

  • Camera score: 4.5 / 5

Google Pixel 9 Pro XL review: Performance

  • Debut of Google Tensor G4 SoC
  • New 16GB RAM ceiling
  • 128GB to 1TB storage (non-expandable)

While the Pixel 9 Pro XL feels more than equipped for everything you throw at in right now, including high-fidelity mobile games, there's no getting around the fact that Tensor chips continue to lag behind Apple's iPhone chips and Qualcomm's top-tier Snapdragons in terms of raw processing and graphical grunt.

Whether it's a matter of the shorter turnaround between generations of Pixel, or the fact that it's not Google's focus, the new Tensor G4 chipset powering all of the Pixel 9 series doesn't pack that much more horsepower, even compared to the Tensor G3.

It's built on a similar 4nm process as the Tensor G3, but with new core architecture and one fewer high efficiency cores than its predecessor. The switch from an Immortalis to a Mali GPU means no more ray tracing, a small but notable loss for mobile gamers.

In testing, the Tensor G4 processor produced a 10% bump to CPU performance, a 15% graphical performance improvement and a 16% uptick in NPU performance over the last generation, however, the biggest gains look to be in power efficiency (more on that later). 

As with its predecessor, the Pixel 9 Pro XL can be had in four storage variants, however, the 1TB ceiling appears to be a US exclusive, while other markets, including the UK and Australia, top out at 512GB. Its 16GB of RAM is a range-wide upgrade, likely driven by the phone's newfound AI capabilities, but spec-heads will note that Google isn't using the latest available standards of either LPDDR memory or UFS storage, compared to Samsung's Galaxy S24.

  • Performance score: 3.5 / 5

Google Pixel 9 Pro XL review: Battery

Google Pixel 9 Pro XL review USB

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)
  • 5,060mAh battery
  • Improved 37W wired charging
  • Impressive 9.5 hours of screen-on time per charge

Google has propelled the Pixel 9 Pro XL from a one to a two-day phone. While Pixel batteries have gotten larger over the years, battery life has never really been a positive talking point for the line. Through presumed optimization led by the new Tensor G4, however, the Pixel 9 Pro XL serves up superb longevity by comparison; significantly longer than any previous Pixel we've tested.

The Pixel 9 Pro XL got 9.5 hours of screen-on time, which clocks in at around 65% longer than the 5.75 hours the Pixel 8 Pro was able to muster, despite packing a battery that's around 10mAh smaller (5,050mAh). 

Google hasn't stopped there, with faster 37W charging, promising up to 70% charge in just 30 minutes. The company has introduced a new 45W Pixel charger to facilitate the 9 Pro XL's new top charging speed (which is faster than the smaller 9 Pro's 27W charging), however, this was unavailable during review. Instead, I tried Google's previous 30W wired charger – which pushed the Pixel 9 Pro XL to 55% charge in 30 minutes, while a 65W PD PPS charger got closer to Google's quoted speeds, with 65% charge in 30 minutes, and a full charge in 1 hour 20 minutes.

  •  Battery score: 4 / 5

Should you buy the Google Pixel 9 Pro XL?

Buy it if...

You want the richest mobile AI experience
Samsung's Galaxy AI is great, but Google's execution with Gemini Advanced is easier, richer, and more fun to use.

You want an excellent camera phone
The Pixel 9 Pro XL's camera system is a small but appreciated upgrade on its predecessors, highlighted by a new bag of AI-supported tricks you can't get outside of the Pixel family.

You plan on using this phone for a long time
Still among the best there is, Google's commitment to seven years OS and security updates is, once again, hard to argue with.

Don't buy it if...

You want fast charging
Battery life is greatly improved but despite a bump in speed, the Pixel 9 Pro XL's 37W wired charging is still well behind what rivals like OnePlus and Xiaomi offer.

You want the best RAM and memory
While Samsung forges ahead, Google seems reluctant to move to the latest, fastest and most power efficient RAM and storage in its phones, which stings when they cost about the same.

You want to play a lot of games
Google's mobile silicon isn't built for gaming, and while the Tensor G4 handles intense games well, you'll get a much better experience with a recent iPhone or any flagship rival running the latest Snapdragon chipset.

Google Pixel 9 Pro XL review: Also consider

The Pixel 9 Pro XL is a superb large-screened Android phone with a great camera and decent battery life (finally), but its AI-heavy blend won't suit everyone.

Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra
A sharper screen, faster charger, faster storage and memory, more horsepower and stylus input for good measure; not to mention the same impressive software commitment as the Pixel 9 Pro XL.

Apple iPhone 15 Pro Max
If you want much of what the Pixel 9 Pro XL has to offer but prefer a phone with more performance and gaming prowess, and less of a focus on AI, the latest and greatest iPhone is your best choice.

How I tested the Google Pixel 9 Pro XL

Google Pixel 9 Pro XL review back angled

(Image credit: Future | Alex Walker-Todd)
  • Review test period: one week
  • Testing included: everyday use including web browsing, social media, photography, video calling, gaming, streaming video, music playback
  • Tools used: Geekbench 6, Geekbench ML, Geekbench AI, GFXBench, 3D Mark, native Android stats, Google Pixel 30W USB-C charger, Samsung 65W trio charger

I received the Pixel 9 Pro XL sample directly from Google, the day after the August Pixel hardware event concluded and was testing it as my daily driver everyday since.

I kept track of battery usage each day and run several benchmarking apps for comparison to other devices, but otherwise used the phone as I would my own, in addition to taking time to test all of the key new features of the device.

As a reviewer with 13 years experience, and having reviewed numerous Pixels, not to mention mainlining a Pixel 7 Pro since its launch in late 2022, I felt confident assessing and scoring the Google Pixel 9 Pro XL, both relative to other Pixels, and in the context of the wider smartphone market in which it competes.

Read more about how we test

First reviewed August 2024

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Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

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Mohu Vibe review: a compact, powerful, and attractive indoor TV antenna
7:59 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Computers Gadgets Televisions | Tags: | Comments: Off

Mohu Vibe: Two-minute review

Mohu Vibe on table

The Mohu Vibe has a gray fabric front panel. (Image credit: Future)

The Mohu Vibe indoor TV antenna is unlike most other TV antennas in that it actually looks good. Only three things about the best indoor TV antennas really matter: Does it pull the stations you want at your location? Is its size and style compatible with your room? Is its price/performance in your range?

Mohu’s new Vibe claims a 50-mile range; it sports a decor-friendly form factor (about the size and shape of a supermarket sushi tray) and a discreet gray tweed-like finish, and at a $50 list-price – typically sold for half that amount – it’s going to fit a lot of budgets.

Setup couldn’t be easier: you can hang the Vibe on a picture hook or a screw (Mohu provides the latter, plus a sheetrock anchor), or do as I did and use double-sided tape (not supplied) against a window pane or smooth wall. A captive 12-foot cable leads from the antenna to the “Jolt” amplifier module – about the size of a box of TicTacs – but the coax whip from the amp is only six inches, so unless you supply your own, longer coaxial extension cable you’ll have to site the antenna within two arm-spans of your TV. A second cable attaches the amplifier to a USB port for power. This one is much longer, in case the TV has no free USB jack (you have to supply your own USB charger).

Mohu Vibe on table backside shown

A screw and sheet-rock anchor are included for wall-mounting the Vibe antenna. (Image credit: Future)

Visually, the Vibe is about as unobtrusive as an antenna can get: it could be a motion sensor, or at a stretch, an arts & crafts decoration. As to performance, first our usual disclaimer, and it’s a very important one to understand and accept: Any TV antenna’s real-world reception depends enormously on two factors: its elevation, and what obstructions, natural or man-made, intervene between it and the desired signal(s) transmission towers. So our results, as always, represent one location only, and a pretty idealized one at that: a semi-rural spot at about 700 ft. above sea level, in a second-story window with a clear line-of-sight southeast, from whence a variety of signals emanate from the east, south, and southwest, at distances ranging from 17 miles to more than 75.

In this arrangement, the Mohu Vibe pulled in 27 stations (9 primary channels, such as 5.1, and 18 sub-channels like 27.2, 56.4, and so on). This is about 25% fewer than we obtained from Mohu’s slightly larger and bulkier Arc model – but note that atmospheric conditions will vary results from day to day and time to time. (In truth, antenna technology really hasn’t changed much since the Eisenhower years.) Only the one weakest station (a lower-power one a bit north of east, and thus well off the Vibe’s aimed axis) suffered the occasional picture blocking of a marginal signal strength; the others were all rock solid.

The Vibe should perform well in typical suburban and urban locations, and, given some elevation and lack of obstructions, even in more rural/distant locations, like our test site.

Mohu Vibe on table with USB in-line amplifier

The included “Jolt” amplifier module attaches to the antenna and to your TV's USB port for power. (Image credit: Future)

Mohu Vibe: Price and release date

  • First available: September 2023
  • Price: $49.99

The Mohu Vibe’s $50 list price is reasonable, given its somewhat more attractive form and finish. (A seemingly perpetual 20% off deal cuts the price to around $40, and we’ve seen it for $25.) That said, there are myriad competing antenna designs, in a dizzying range of shapes, sizes, and forms, that will probably perform similarly, for prices from a bit less to a whole lot more. 

Mohu Vibe USB in-line amplifier on table

The antenna's “Jolt” amplifier module. (Image credit: Future)

Should you buy the Mohu Vibe?

Buy it if...

You live in an urban/suburban area: The Vibe is a good option for receiving stations from stations located mostly within 25-40 miles or less.

You want a maximally unobtrusive antenna: The Vibe’s very compact form factor and gray fabric front panel allow it to virtually disappear in almost any environment.

Don't buy it if...

You live in rural/edge location: If you need to “pull” signals much beyond 40 or 50 miles, or are surrounded by hills or tall buildings, a raised (roof or mast/tower), outdoor (or high-attic-mounted) unit is still the best, and sometimes the only answer.

You want a setup app to optimize reception: Some pricier indoor antennas come with a custom setup app to help point the antenna for best possible reception, but no such app is provided with the Mohu Vibe.

Mohu Vibe review: Also consider

Mohu Vibe on table

(Image credit: Future)

How I tested the Mohu Vibe

  • Tested at semi-rural location
  • Compared with powerful "reference" antenna

I test indoor TV antennas at a semi-rural, hilltop location with good elevation and a clear line-of-sight over nearly 360 degrees to TV transmitters ranging from about 15 to about 70 miles. This testing environment gives me the ability to evaluate models catering to a full spectrum of indoor antenna needs.

For the testing process, I first place the antenna high up in a south-facing window and run the tuning process on a TV with an ATSC 3.0 “next-gen TV” tuner. I then record the number of carriers tuned, along with the total number of sub-channels. A powerful inside-the-attic rooftop-type antenna at the same location is also used as a reference for comparison.

Read more about how we test

First reviewed August 2024

Qualcomm makes the Snapdragon 7s Gen 3 official
7:42 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

The Snapdragon 7s Gen 3 SoC just leaked earlier this morning, and now Qualcomm has made it official. This 4nm chip should slot right underneath the Snapdragon 7 Gen 3 in Qualcomm's portfolio (and the Snapdragon 7+ Gen 3 is the highest-specced of the family, for what it's worth). Qualcomm promises that the new chip will deliver "remarkable AI experiences to more affordable smartphones", and it's already lined up orders for it from Samsung, Realme, and Sharp. These brands will announce the first devices powered by it "in the coming months". They will all be one-upped by Xiaomi, however,...

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