Tuesday, 18 October 2016

Pixel and Pixel XL review: What happens when Google designs phones?

Google's fascination with hardware stretches back years. Remember the early days of Android and the G1? The rise of the Nexus line? Those ill-fated Android@Home light bulbs and those beautiful Chromebooks? It took Google a while, but that fascination turned into a sort of experimental hobby, and now into something far more serious. Software is Google's art, and the company has been working for a long time to craft the right canvases.

That's where the new Pixel and Pixel XL come in.

Google has more control over the development -- and destiny -- of these two smartphones than it ever had with any Nexus phone. It's not surprising, then, that the company has turned to close friends to help chart this new course. Former Motorola Mobility CEO Rick Osterloh is back at Google heading up hardware after the search giant sold his company to Lenovo. HTC, which most recently worked with Google on the Nexus 9 tablet, is handling the Pixel phones' production and assembly. There's a palpable sense that Google wanted to round up its A-Team for this project.

It shows. These Pixel phones are a culmination on Google's part of years worth of experimenting with hardware, and they're unsurprisingly great.


Pixel and Pixel XL review: What happens when Google designs phones? posted first on http://ift.tt/1tUdcCk

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