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Google Pixel 9 review – the dawn of a new Pixel era
8:00 pm | August 13, 2024

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

Google Pixel 9: One-minute review

Google Pixel 9 from the back in every color

(Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)

The Google Pixel 9 makes sense – it’s a very easy phone to explain. When you buy the Pixel 9, you get the best of the Pixel 9 Pro, for less money. You get the exact same processors, two of the exact same cameras (the Pro gets an extra one), and the same new AI features, with none of the good stuff left out just because you didn’t go Pro. No other phone company draws such a straight line from the bottom to the top of its range.

The Pixel 9 even looks more like its Pro brethren than previous 'standard' models. The Pixel 9 and Pixel 9 Pro are nearly identical in shape, size and weight. Both have a 6.3-inch display that is searingly bright. The batteries are the same size. Both the Pixel 9 and Pixel 9 Pro use Gorilla Glass Victus 2 for improved durability up front, and Google says the Pixel 9 is twice as durable as last year’s Pixel 8. 

Along with that improved durability comes an entirely new look for the Pixel family. The old camera bar is gone, replaced with a ‘camera pill’ (my term, not Google’s) that doesn’t quite extend across the full width of the rear of the phones. It looks much better in person than it did in early leaked photos. The Pixel 9 still looks unique compared to the asymmetrical corner-placed cameras on your typical iPhone or Galaxy phone, but this is the biggest style departure in years, since the Pixel 6 ushered in today’s Pixel design language.

Google Pixel 9 front and back

(Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)

The Pixel 9 looks remarkably like the Pixel 9 Pro. One phone has a polished glass back with a satin finish to the metal frame and camera bump. The other has a matte glass back with a polished finish to the frame. If I didn’t tell you which was which, you probably couldn’t guess, though the Pixel 9 Pro gives itself away with the extra camera lens.

What are you sacrificing if you choose the Pixel 9 instead of the Pixel 9 Pro? The Pixel 9 comes with ‘only’ 12GB of RAM, which is the same as a Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra, but the Pixel 9 Pro offers 16GB. I think more RAM will be important with new AI features becoming the headline features for new phones. Those AI tricks need a lot of RAM, probably more than they need a super-powerful processor.

The Pixel 9 doesn’t offer a zoom lens in its camera setup, but it does give you the same 50MP wide camera and 48MP ultra-wide found on the Pixel 9 Pro. And you don't just get the same number of pixels, you get the exact same sensors. Neither Apple nor Samsung give you the same cameras on the base model and the most expensive version.

Of course, the Pixel 9 isn’t just about cameras, even though the cameras look like a big improvement over the Pixel 8. It’s also a showcase for Google’s latest AI ambitions, and Google Gemini is looking very ambitious. Is it time to worry about AI on your phone? Not yet, but we’re getting closer.

Google Gemini on the Pixel 9 will be Google’s first multimodal AI attempt. That means it won’t just listen to your voice or read what you type; it will also be able to look at an image or listen to audio and answer questions based on what it sees and hears. Google says you can take a photo of the contents of your fridge, and Gemini will suggest recipes based on the ingredients you have.

Like previous Pixel phones, the Pixel 9 will be able to change your photos. Some new photo features seem invaluable, like the Add Me feature built into the Pixel camera. As a parent, I was often left out of photos because, well, I was holding the camera. With Add Me, the photographer can take a photo, then pass the camera to someone else and step into the shot; that person takes another shot, and then the Pixel adds you seamlessly to the first image, like you were all together.

Other features border on questionable AI. There's a new ‘reimagine’ tool in the Magic Editor, as well as a Pixel Studio image generator. It’s easy to change your images or create new, fake photos, but at best the usefulness of these tools seems questionable, and at worst they have the potential to be used in nefarious ways.

The Pixel 9 can also listen to your phone calls and take notes using Gemini AI. Google says this AI feature will announce itself to you and your caller when you activate it, but I’m not yet comfortable with everyday, normal phone calls being recorded for no reason. I’m worried that this will soon become the norm with mobile AI, and I haven’t seen proof that our privacy is being properly safeguarded.

Is the Pixel 9 going to be worth buying? A lot depends on the camera image quality, and also on how much you care about new AI features; because AI is already a big part of this phone and it’s only going to get bigger. The new Pixel-exclusive Screenshots app doesn’t appeal to me at the start, but if it proves useful then I might start taking a lot more screenshots, and relying more on the AI for answers.

But why stop at screenshots? Why stop at phone calls? Eventually, the Gemini AI could expand to understand a lot more of the world around you, especially now that it has become a multimodal tool. Over the next seven years, Google says the Pixel 9 will get major Android OS updates, Pixel feature drops, and security patches. I expect the stickiest and most useful AI tools today will become a much more important part of the entire Android system tomorrow.

Google Pixel 9 hands-on review: Price and availability

Google Pixel 9 front and back

(Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)
  • Available August 22 starting at $799 / £799 
  • Maybe wait for a price drop closer to the year’s end

The Pixel 9 is available for pre-order now, and you'll be able to find it in stores from August 22. The phone comes in two storage options – 128GB or 256GB – and you may want to opt for the larger capacity if you plan on keeping your phone for longer. Who knows how much storage future large language models (LLM) will take up. 

The colors this year are inspired by nature, and they look great in the myriad materials and finishes Google uses for the frame, the glass, and the camera hump. The new Peony pink is bright and saturated, and it stands out more than the pink Rose Quartz color on the Pixel 9 Pro. 

The Wintergreen is my favorite, but I’ve been carrying a porcelain Pixel 8 Pro for a while and I’m happy to see that off-white make a comeback this year on the Pixel 9 and Pixel 9 Pro. If you’re boring you can always get the black Obsidian color. 

I must warn you that Pixel phones go on sale frequently, and pricing can be erratic throughout the year. While the Pixel 9 starts at $799 / £799, I would expect that price to drop, though not as quickly as before. The Pixel 8 went on sale in mid-October last year, and by mid-November you could buy one on Amazon for $150 off the launch price in the US.

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Google Pixel 9 hands-on review: Specs

Google Pixel 9 front and back

Motorola Razr Plus 2024 (left) and Razr 2024 (right) (Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)

How does the Pixel 9 stack up against competitors? The best comparison is the Samsung Galaxy S24, launched at the beginning of this year. Samsung is using the fastest processor on any Android phone, so there’s no contest with raw processing power. On other specs, however, the Pixel 9 is very impressive. 

The Pixel 9 has a better display than the Galaxy S24, according to DXO Labs and Google. It’s brighter, with a higher resolution. The Pixel 9 may also have better cameras. The ultra-wide camera specs are the same on both phones, but the Pixel 9 has a larger sensor for its main camera, with a wider-aperture lens that should allow more light to hit the sensor. We’ll have to test the phone thoroughly to be sure. 

The Pixel 9 has faster charging than the Galaxy S24, according to Google, but we’ll have to test those claims in Future Labs. The battery size is the same, but the Pixel 9 charges at 45W, while the Galaxy S24 charges at 25W. To Samsung’s credit, the Galaxy S24 is a thinner and lighter phone than the Pixel 9. Both phones use Gorilla Glass Victus 2 for the front glass, and both phones are rated to IP68 for water and dust resistance. 

Google Pixel 9 hands-on review: Design and display

Google Pixel 9 front and back

(Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)
  • Best display in its price range, according to DXO Labs
  • New design is a departure, but very modern

Google made the Pixel display a priority with the Pixel 8, and the Pixel 9 doesn’t just continue its quiet dominance, it comes with bona fides of its own. Google says DXO Labs will call the Pixel 9's display the best phone display in its price range, which includes premium phones under US $1,000. 

In my hands-on time, it was a very bright and impressive display to behold. Google has done a nice job matching the wallpapers to the various Pixel 9 color options with striking results. It was a sunny day when I got to play with the phones, and I had no trouble seeing the display while taking selfies. 

The phone’s design is different this year, and it’s a radical evolution, though you can see the Pixel lineage in the huge camera bar and overall finish. Google’s Pixel phones try to buck Android’s reputation for cheap devices, and the materials look and feel premium. The bright color options work with the Pixel 9’s glossy finish, while the muted Pixel 9 Pro colors look better with its matte shell. 

The camera bump admittedly sticks out much more than it did before, but it still looks symmetrical, and it won’t make the phone rock or tip to one side if you lay the device on its back. I like the sharp edge on the new pill-shaped protrusion. It looks laser-cut with precision.

Google says the Pixel 9 is twice as durable as the Pixel 8, without citing any one improvement. It uses 100% recycled aluminum in the frame, as well as the aforementioned Victus 2 glass, but Google seems extra confident this year. Maybe I’ll have to drop my review unit accidentally… out of a window.

Google Pixel 9 hands-on review: Software

Google Pixel 9 front and back

(Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)
  • AI software leads the way, of course
  • Screenshots app reads screenshots, could portend the future

I wish there was more to say about the Android software, but all of the software features I tried in my hands-on time were related to Google’s AI, not the basic interface design elements. Some of Google’s new AI features were clever and useful, like the Add Me feature in the Camera app. Some seemed questionable, like the calling features that will listen to your conversation and take notes. 

The new Gemini Live conversation feature isn’t coming to the Pixel 9, sadly. It will only be available on the Pixel 9 Pro or higher. All of the other Gemini AI features should be available on every Pixel 9 phone.

Google is making an interesting improvement to Circle to Search that I’m curious to try. If you circle an image, Google will tell you where that image came from. If the image was altered by AI, Google says its new search will know. Frankly, if this works as advertised, it could be invaluable for the upcoming US election season. 

It will take some time before we know whether some of Google’s most interesting AI features are invaluable or not. Google’s new Pixel Screenshots app looks very interesting, and could have a grand future ahead. 

I take a lot of screenshots, but I never thought much about them. If I need to remember a specific detail, I might take a screenshot and refer to it soon after, but screenshots don’t seem like a good long-term storage solution for information. 

Somebody at Google, however, has been thinking about screenshots a lot. The Screenshots app, which is exclusive to the Pixel 9 family (for now, at least), will apply its AI understandings to your vast collection of screenshots. If you don’t have a screenshot gallery, maybe this app will inspire you to take more. 

Google says you’ll be able to ask questions in Screenshots in a natural, conversational way, using its Gemini AI. You can ask Screenshots to pluck details from your various, er, screenshots and it will be able to use its new multimodal talents to interpret the image and answer your questions. 

The thing is, I don’t think this feature will end with screenshots. I can easily imagine a future where Google’s AI treats every moment on your phone the way its new Screenshots app treats screenshots. Using the same tools, your phone could constantly monitor what it sees on your screen and organize this data to answer questions later. I think Screenshots is a preview of the deeper understanding that AI will have of your phone, and of your digital life.

Google Pixel 9 hands-on review: Cameras

Google Pixel 9 front and back

(Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)
  • Exact same main camera and ultra-wide as Pixel 9 Pro
  • New Add Me camera feature is useful, but is it real?

Every year Google says the Pixel has the best cameras ever, but this year I am especially enthusiastic about the choices Google has made. The Pixel 9 has the same main camera and ultra-wide camera as the Pixel 9 Pro and Pixel 9 Pro XL. The only difference is the additional 5x zoom camera on the Pro models. 

That’s unheard of in the smartphone world. Other phone makers use camera specs to sell the bigger phone. The cameras on Apple’s iPhone 15 Pro are better than those on the iPhone 15, and the cameras on the iPhone 15 Pro Max are better again. Samsung’s Galaxy S24 Ultra is so different from the Galaxy S24 and Galaxy S24 Plus, cameras-wise, that it might as well have a different name. 

Of course, great specs still need to be tested in the real world, so I’ll have to put these cameras to use, but I’m optimistic. 

Google has applied its AI features heavily to the camera and Photos app. There’s a new Add Me feature in the camera that seems very useful. Basically, it lets you shoot a group photo, then have somebody else hold the camera while Google’s AI helps add you to the image. It gives the second cameraperson guides to follow to line up the shot, then it blends you into the group. 

In practice, I can imagine using this all the time. I have very few photos of myself with my son when he was a toddler because I was always holding my big, fancy camera. I love the idea that parents can be together in family shots.

There's also a new ‘reimagine’ tool in the Magic Editor, part of Google’s AI image editing in Google Photos on the Pixel phone. Reimagine lets you select a large portion of your photo and replace it with an AI generated image, and it seemed to be quite effective in my brief tests. 

Image 1 of 3

Google Pixel 9 Pro

People on a boring wall (Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)
Image 2 of 3

Google Pixel 9 Pro

The wall 'reimagined' with a waterfall (Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)
Image 3 of 3

Google Pixel 9 Pro

A wall reimagined with "a Basquiat mural" (Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)

I took a photo of some folks sitting high up on the edge of a wall, and added a waterfall underneath their legs. It looked perfect. Then I asked the AI to replace the wall with a “Basquiat mural” and the Pixel offered me a few options, presumably in its interpretation of the late artist’s style. The murals looked photorealistic when the ‘reimagine’ tool inserted them. 

Here’s my big problem, though. None of that is real. I wish I were in those photos with my kiddo back in the day, but I wasn’t. If I add myself later, I still wasn’t in the photos. It’s no more real than if I’d just asked my child to draw me a picture of the family. 

I wonder even more about when I’d want to lie about sitting on a wall. If I take a photo of friends sitting side-by-side at the top of a wall, is the photo better because I can make the wall more interesting? Maybe, but then it’s fake. There was no waterfall on that wall. Basquiat never painted there. 

In other words, Google’s new photo-editing tools looked cool and effective in my brief hands-on time with them, but they already feel like they lack authenticity, and that’s what gives a photo value as a memory. I’m not sure these tools will be valuable to me. 

Google Pixel 9 hands-on review: Performance and battery

Google Pixel 9 front and back

(Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)
  • Tensor G4 may not win benchmarks, but it’s got a lot of RAM
  • Fastest charging on a Pixel phone, if you buy a fast charger

It was hard to get a feel for the performance of the Pixel 9 in my brief hands-on time, mostly because I was testing AI features, and every AI feature is a little bit slower than other features. Many AI features call upon Google’s cloud for help, though Google says the Gemini multimodal AI does run locally on the Pixel 9’s Tensor G4 chipset. 

Performance isn’t the real point of the Google Pixel 9, though. I have no hope that this phone will top the Galaxy S24 or iPhone 15 in benchmark tests. Google doesn’t aim for the fastest processor. It aims for synergy between the chipset and the Pixel’s features. 

When I test the Pixel 9’s performance, I’ll be looking to see if the delay for AI results is getting shorter or longer, compared to the Pixel 8 and other AI phones. I’ll be judging whether the delay is worth the features offered. If I have to wait a long time for the Magic Editor to reimagine bits of every photo, I won’t bother using AI in Google Photos. 

Google says its battery charges faster than ever before, and the Pixel 9 uses 45W charging, but there's no charger in the box. It’s worth splurging on a nice charger, as the faster charging speed makes a difference when you’re in a rush and need a few more hours of screen or camera time.

Google Pixel 9 hands-on review: The bottom line

Google Pixel 9 front and back

(Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)

My final verdict on the Google Pixel 9 will depend on the cameras and the new AI features. I’m hoping the cameras will deliver, especially because the Pixel 9 Pro will take the same photos, since it has mostly identical specs. On the AI features, I’m skeptical but willing to put in the work. 

I’m willing to let Gemini listen to some of my phone calls. I’m willing to take a bunch of screenshots for the Screenshots app to feed upon. I’m willing to try some creative reimagining of my boring photos. From what I’ve seen in my hands-on time, I expect the results will be pretty good. 

But even if we allow that it’s good, is it useful? I wonder if we’re at the point where AI tools have become powerful and effective, but we just don’t want them. I’m curious to spend time with the Pixel 9 and its new AI features to see if Google is creating our AI future, or if we’re actually just sitting on an AI bubble. 

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First hands-on August 2024

Google Pixel 9 Pro review – the smaller Pro phone you’ve been hoping for
8:00 pm |

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

Google Pixel 9 Pro: One-minute review

Pixel 9 Pro, clockwise arrangement showing back of Porcelain; Hazel; Obsidian; Rose Quartz

Pixel 9 Pro, clockwise from top-left: Porcelain; Hazel; Obsidian; Rose Quartz (Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)

The Google Pixel 9 Pro is the phone I’ve been asking for… I just forgot to ask Google. With the new Pixel 9 Pro, Google is the only company offering all of its best features on a smaller phone. You can buy an iPhone 15 Pro or Galaxy S24, but if you want the best you need to pay more and accept the biggest phones Apple and Samsung make. Not so with Google’s latest Pro Pixel. 

I’m a big fan of great camera phones, but all the great camera phones are really big. If you want the best iPhone or Galaxy camera, you have to buy an iPhone 15 Pro Max or a Galaxy S24 Ultra. Anything less would be a compromise. You get a less powerful zoom lens if you choose the iPhone 15 Pro. You get less powerful everything if you choose a cheaper Galaxy. 

The Pixel 9 Pro has the exact same camera specs as the Pixel 9 Pro XL. There are no changes and no compromises. It’s silly that this is a big deal, but as phones grew larger over the years, phone makers gave up on making the smaller phones just as capable as the larger phones. With the Pixel 9 Pro you get the exact same sensors with the same megapixels, and the same lenses with the same aperture, including the 5x telephoto camera. 

What do you forego if you pick the smaller Pixel 9 Pro over the larger Pixel 9 Pro XL? There’s the screen size, obviously. The Pixel 9 Pro has a 6.3-inch display, versus the 6.8-inch display on the Pixel 9 Pro XL. Google didn’t just expand the same resolution on the larger phone, either – the Pro XL phone has a higher resolution, although it’s a tiny bit less sharp in terms of pixel density. Like the Pro XL, the Pixel 9 Pro is incredibly bright, with average brightness around 2,000 nits and peak possibility of up to 3,000 nits. That’s enough to take photos in bright sunlight, and maybe even hurt your eyes if you stare closely for too long. 

I’ll need to spend time with the cameras to see if they truly offer an improvement over last year's Pro, but the Pixel 9 Pro will likely attract attention more for its AI capabilities than for its photo prowess. Even the cameras and photo-editing tools have been boosted by the latest Google Gemini AI, and the most exciting new Gemini AI feature is a Pixel 9 Pro exclusive – it won’t be available on the Pixel 9. 

That feature is Gemini Live, the new conversational tool that Google is offering with Google Gemini. You’ll be able to talk to Google Gemini in a more natural way, and Google is staring down ChatGPT by making a chat-friendly AI tool that runs natively on a mobile phone. 

Google Gemini is going to understand and interact with us in many new ways once the Pixel 9 Pro arrives. It will be a multimodal AI, which means it'll be able to look at photos or listen to audio and answer questions about what it sees and hears. Google says you’ll be able to take a photo of the plant that’s dying on your window sill and ask for advice on how to save it. 

Gemini will also be able to listen to your phone calls. It won’t just listen, it will take notes and send you a summary of the call after you hang up. Google says this feature will alert both parties that the call is being summarized by AI. I’ve seen that similar features are coming soon from Apple and Motorola, so it seems that an AI will soon be monitoring phone calls no matter what phone brand you choose. That’s kind of alarming. 

Google Pixel 9 Pro

(Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)

The Pixel 9 Pro will get seven years of Android OS updates, including Pixel feature drops and security patches. If you plan on holding onto your phone for that long, I’d suggest looking at the Pixel 9 Pro over the Pixel 9, which gets the same seven-year promise – the slight hardware upgrade may be important over the long term.

The Pixel 9 Pro comes with 16GB of RAM inside, compared to 12GB in the Pixel 9. Those are massive amounts of memory for a mobile device, no matter which Pixel you choose. Samsung’s most powerful phone, the Galaxy S24 Ultra, only has 12GB of RAM, and you’d need to buy a gaming phone like an Asus ROG Phone 8 Pro to get 16GB or more (up to 24GB in the Asus phone) before the Pixel 9 Pro comes along.

My guess is that all that RAM isn’t for today – it’s for what’s to come. I’ve been very skeptical that today’s Pixel phones, like the Pixel 8, will really last through the seven years of updates that Google is promising. Google can’t make a processor that is future-proof, but adding more RAM that is needed at launch is a way to make sure that the phone will have spare headroom for whatever AI vehicles get parked in the Pixel garage.

With all that in mind, the Pixel 9 Pro is the most exciting Pixel phone I’ve seen in years, and I haven’t even mentioned the new design (and check out my Pixel 9 Pro XL hands-on for more on the new look). It’s a pleasantly smaller phone that doesn’t skimp on features like every other smaller phone. It’s got exciting camera features and AI tools today, with more on the way, and the right hardware to stay up to date when the future arrives.

Google Pixel 9 Pro hands-on: Price and availability

The Pixel 9 Pro XL in Rose Quartz and Pixel 9 in Peony

The Pixel 9 Pro XL (left) and Pixel 9 (right) will launch a couple weeks earlier (Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)
  • Costs $999 / £999 with 128GB of storage
  • Preorders are open now
  • Available on September 4, after the Pixel 9 and Pixel 9 Pro XL

You can pre-order the Pixel 9 Pro today, but the phone won’t be available until after the Pixel 9 and Pixel 9 Pro XL have hit store shelves. The latter two phones will be available on August 22, but the Pixel 9 Pro and the Pixel 9 Pro Fold can’t be yours until September 4. 

The Pixel 9 Pro costs $999 / £999, and comes with only 128GB of storage for that price, which is shameful. You can upgrade the storage up to 1TB, and surely Google and others will have periodic deals that give you more storage for the same price. Every model comes with 16GB of RAM. 

You can buy the Pixel 9 Pro in black Obsidian, off-white Porcelain, gray Hazel and pink Rose Quartz. The Pixel 9 Pro XL comes in the exact same color options.

If you’re considering a pre-order, you should know that Google Pixel phones tend to go on sale early and often. For instance, the Pixel 8 Pro was launched in mid-October, 2024, for $999 and by the middle of November it was already on sale with a $200 discount on Amazon in the US. It’s probably been discounted more than half of the year it has been on sale, and the lowest price has been almost 30% off the launch price. 

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Google Pixel 9 Pro hands-on: Specs

Google Pixel 9 Pro in Hazel, the best color

(Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)

How does the Pixel 9 stack up against competitors? The best comparison is the Samsung Galaxy S24, launched at the beginning of this year. Samsung is using the fastest processor on any Android phone, so there’s no contest with raw processing power. On other specs, however, the Pixel 9 is very impressive. 

The Pixel 9 has a better display than Samsung’s Galaxy S24, according to DXO Labs and Google. It’s brighter, with a higher resolution. The Pixel 9 may also have better cameras. The Ultrawide camera specs are the same on both phones, but the Pixel 9 has a larger sensor for its main camera, with a wider aperture lens that should bring more light to the sensor. We’ll have to test the phone thoroughly to be sure. 

The Pixel 9 has faster charging than the Galaxy S24, according to Google, but we’ll have to test those claims in Future Labs. The battery size is the same, but the Pixel 9 charges at 45W, while the Galaxy S24 charges at 25W. To Samsung’s credit, the Galaxy S24 is a thinner and lighter phone than the Pixel 9. Both phones use Gorilla Glass Victus 2 for the front glass, and both phones are rated to IP68 water and dust resistance. 

Google Pixel 9 Pro hands-on: Design and display

Google Pixel 9 Pro showing home screen elements

(Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)
  • Super-bright display is also razor sharp
  • Cool new design evolves the camera bar

Google is not messing around when it comes to the Pixel 9 Pro display. If you’re wondering how the Pixel is better than other Pro phones from Apple and Samsung, this is it. Google is winning on smartphone screens. The so-called Super Actua display on the Pixel 9 Pro is brighter than competing phones from Apple and Samsung, and it has a higher resolution as well. It looks fantastic, and it’s easy to read under any lighting conditions. 

If you’re deciding between the Pixel 9 Pro and Pixel 9 Pro XL, the 9 Pro doesn’t have as many pixels overall, but it packs those pixels tighter for a higher pixel density, making it slightly more sharp. Both Pro Pixel models have a display that's more pixel dense than any iPhone available now. 

I wasn’t sure about the Pixel 9 Pro design after seeing the leaks, then the early preview images from Google. I’ve been a fan of the Pixel camera bar since the Pixel 6 launched. I especially liked the multicolor design of the Pixel 6a, but Google has been mostly monochromatic recently. That’s fine, because the Pixel 9 Pro looks fantastic, and it comes in some very snazzy colors that are unique but not too loud. 

The Hazel grey has been growing on me ever since I laid eyes on it. It’s a very pleasant shade, more like wet granite than dark clouds. The porcelain is a nice alternative to a stark white model, and the Rose Quartz is a pleasant shade of blossom pink, more mature than the Peony pink available on the Pixel 9. If you’re boring you can also get the Pixel 9 Pro in black Obsidian.

Google chooses excellent materials and finish options to complement the colors. The matte glass back has depth to it, especially on the porcelain and hazel devices. The polished metal frame is more refined than the satin finish on the Pixel 9; it catches the light and sparkles. 

I even like the camera bar, possibly because of how dated it’s going to look in a few years. It’s unique and very à la mode, with bold, almost cartoonish lines and curves. I like the look, and I’m curious to see how it evolves over the next few generations. 

I hope it doesn’t become a boring old bump like every other phone. Like the camera bar of old, the new camera pill shape remains symmetrical and clean, and the phone didn’t rock when I placed it face up, like some Samsung phones do with their corner-situated camera bumps. 

Google Pixel 9 Pro hands-on: Software

Google Pixel 9 Pro showing emoji wallpaper creation tool

(Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)
  • Lot of AI features will get to know you
  • Screenshots sounds useful, but will take some adjustment

Do you like AI? I hope you do, because the Pixel 9 Pro is going to push AI to a level we haven’t seen before in a smartphone. You’re going to talk to the Gemini AI on the Pixel 9 Pro like it’s a person. You’ll be able to show it things with the camera and ask questions about what you see. It’s going to organize and keep track of the things on your phone, and it will be able to answer questions in a normal, conversational style. 

At least, that’s what Google promises. Some of it is very cool and immediately useful, like the Add Me feature in the camera. I’ll get to that next, but it works well and I can imagine using it; I just wish it had been around 10 years ago when I was chasing my toddler with a camera.

Some of the new AI features are a bit worrisome, though. You can ask the AI to listen to your phone calls and take notes. It will summarize calls and answer questions about what was said. Google says that your callers will get a warning when you use this feature, but it still feels strange to have the phone listening to calls and keeping track. I’ll need to test this feature thoroughly. 

There's also a new Screenshots app that's exclusive to the Pixel 9 range, at least for now. If you take a lot of screenshots to help you remember, well, everything, the Pixel 9 Pro will be able to use its AI powers to read and understand your screenshots. It will be able to answer questions about the things you've saved, in a natural, conversational way, according to Google. 

It’s hard for me to imagine how useful this might be, but I have to admit that after I spent time with the Pixel 9 Pro, I took a look at my other phones and realized I have far more screenshots than I ever imagined – and not all of them were taken just because I accidentally pressed the power and volume buttons at the same time. 

If you buy the Pixel 9 Pro, Google will give you a year of its Google One AI Premium plan, which comes with 2TB of cloud storage. With the Premium plan, you can use Google Gemini Advanced, which is the, um, advanced model of Gemini. I’ve been a subscriber since it launched, so I can’t compare Gemini Advanced to the regular old Gemini, but I’m happy with the results I’ve been getting so far. 

Google Pixel 9 Pro hands-on: Cameras

The older Pixel 8 Pro next to the Pixel 9 Pro

The older Pixel 8 Pro next to the Pixel 9 Pro (Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)
  • Same 5x zoom lens as the Pixel 9 Pro XL
  • AI offers Improvements to video zoom and night video

Apple take note: you don’t need to make the 5x zoom lens exclusive to the big phone. Some people want a smaller phone, and those people shouldn’t have to sacrifice camera quality or capabilities. It’s strange that both Samsung and Apple, to varying degrees, make you settle for second-best cameras if you want their smaller phone, but the Pixel 9 Pro does not have the same constraint. Whether you buy the Pro of the Pixel 9 Pro XL, you get the exact same cameras, including the 5x zoom lens. 

When I say the exact same cameras, I mean it. The sensors and lenses are the same. There isn’t some special image stabilization that you only get on the Pixel 9 Pro XL, as there is with the iPhone 15 Pro Max. It’s all the same. In fact, the main camera and ultra-wide cameras are the same kit found on the Pixel 9, but that cheaper phone doesn’t have a zoom lens. If you’re serious about taking photos, you need the zoom. 

The new Add Me feature on the camera seems genuinely useful, though I am a bit hesitant. The TechRadar team gave it a try in our hands-on time with the Pixel phones, and it did a great job adding our Editor-at-Large Lance Ulanoff to a photo after I’d left him out. It was easy to line up the shot and tell Lance where to stand, and the end results were flawless. 

Is that a good thing, that the Pixel 9 Pro can create a flawless image of a group photo that never happened? I haven’t decided, but I can easily imagine this feature catching on, especially with new parents. 

The Pixel 9 Pro also gets new video capabilities, thanks to Google’s AI enhancements. The camera can already use AI for what Google calls a 'Super Res Zoom' photo that can zoom in up to 30x. Now the video camera can also use 'Super Res Zoom' for up to 20x zoom on video recordings. 

If you’re recording at night, Google’s Video Boost feature has been improved to process dark videos twice as fast, once the video has been uploaded. Also, Google has improved low-light handling for panorama shots, and it says the Pixel 9 Pro can create the best panoramas in low light of any camera.

Google Pixel 9 Pro hands-on: Performance and battery

Google Pixel 9 Pro

(Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)
  • Tons of RAM should help with AI features today and to come
  • Fastest battery charging on a Pixel, but no charger in the box

Pixel fans don’t fret about performance and benchmarks, because Pixel phones aren’t built for power, they're built for Google. You won’t win benchmark weightlifting competitions with the Pixel 9 Pro, but Google has given the phone some interesting hardware to keep it current with the latest Android software and Pixel feature drops for the next seven years. 

The Pixel 9 Pro has 16GB of RAM, which is truly mind-blowing in a mobile device. My first laptop had only… never mind, it doesn’t matter. Let’s just say that 16GB is more than any other phone most people have heard of. You’d need to buy an Asus ROG Phone 8 Pro gaming phone and spend extra on RAM to top the Pixel 9 Pro. 

Why so much RAM? Probably AI. Across the board, on laptops and mobile phones, our testing has shown that RAM makes a big difference with AI features. Is it more important than having the fastest Snapdragon processor? Time will tell, but if I buy a Pixel hoping to make it to the end of the seven-year promise, I want that Pixel to be stuffed with RAM. 

The Pixel 9 Pro should charge faster than any previous Pixel, according to Google, but that claim isn’t very impressive. You’ll need to buy a 45W charger to get the full charging speed, and it’s worth the investment. Google should have included one with this Pro phone, since presumably most buyers won’t already have a charger this fast. 

Oddly, the Pixel 9 Pro XL has a larger battery, but it also charges faster, according to Google’s charging-time estimates. It has the same 45W charging capability, but Google says it charges faster. When you ask Google about the spec differences between the Pixel 9 Pro and Pixel 9 Pro XL, it tells you the only differences are the screen and the ‘power,’ which seems to mean more than just battery size. We’ll have to test these claims to see what’s really happening.

Google Pixel 9 Pro hands-on: The bottom line

Google Pixel 9 Pro

A Pixel 9 Pro (right) next to a Pixel 8 Pro (left) (Image credit: Philip Berne / Future)

The Pixel 9 Pro is an exciting phone, and I hope Apple and Samsung pay attention. It’s a smaller phone that doesn’t skimp on performance or memory, and especially not on cameras. If you’ve been pining for a smaller phone that doesn’t make you feel left out, the Pixel 9 Pro is worth a look. 

Is it better than other phones at this price? I’ll need to test the phone thoroughly, but it seems promising. The display alone is a winning feature, and it’s a wonder that Google hasn’t earned a stronger reputation for its spectacular Super Actua screens. 

With cameras, however, everybody knows Google Pixel phones are among the best, and the Pixel 9 Pro is the most promising camera system yet on a Pixel phone. I like the new AI features, even if I’m nervous about relying on AI to change images. I’m very interested to see how the AI improves photography as I’m shooting, especially the low-light improvements to video shooting and panoramas. 

The Pixel 9 Pro is going to require a lot of trust. I’m going to turn over my screenshots, all of those dozens of random, unsorted images, and let the AI read everything. I’m going to let it listen to my phone calls, and I’m going to rely on its interpretation of what was said. I’m going to have conversations with this phone like a normal person. I just hope it acts normal. I’m not sure I’m ready for my phone to be this much of a person.

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