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Hands on: Google Pixel 8 Pro review – fresh looks and an industry first may set it apart

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Google Pixel 8 Pro preview: Two-minute review

Over the years there’s been conjecture that Google isn’t that committed to the smartphone space, and that maybe it just builds handsets to encourage innovation in Android partners. But since the launch of the Pixel 6, and even more so now with the new Pixel 8 Pro, it’s clear that Google is serious, and eager to compete.

The new Pixel 8 Pro, like the new Pixel 8, hews closely to its predecessor’s design aesthetic. But, as others phone makers have done this year, Google has smoothed things out a bit, evolving the design so that it’s both recognizable yet clearly different in look and feel.

Pixel phones remain an acquired taste when it comes to looks. The bold metal camera housing band is nothing if not distinct from all other smartphone brands; it cries out: “This is a Pixel! Get used to it.” Still, the newly curved corners soften the appearance and, as on Apple and Samsung devices, make even the largest handset a pleasure to hold.

(Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)

However, it’s not the look of this new phone that will help the Pixel 8 Pro make its mark, it’s what’s inside: a combination of a brand-new Tensor G3 processor, AI magic, and a trio of new, more powerful cameras could set the Pixel 8 Pro apart from this year’s iPhones and Galaxys.

Added to these design and component changes is something new, if not unique among consumer phones: an onboard temperature sensor, which shares space with the trio of lenses on the camera array’s metal band.

I didn’t get a lot of time with the new phone, but it was enough to see where Google is going here, and understand the essence of its modern Pixel approach.

Want more thoughts on the latest Pixel products? Check out our hands-on Google Pixel 8 review and hands-on Google Pixel Watch 2 review too.

Google Pixel 8 Pro preview: Price and availability

  • Priced from $999 / £999 / AU$1,699
  • Pre-orders live now
  • On sale from October 12

Google unveiled the Pixel 8 Pro and Pixel 8 at its October 4 Pixel 8 launch event, at which it also launched the Pixel Watch 2

The Pixel 8 Pro starts at $999 / £999 / AU$1,699, while the Pixel 8 starts at $699 / £699 / $1,199. Preorders started October 4, and the phones ship from October 12. 

Swipe to scroll horizontally
Google Pixel 8 Pro prices
Storage US price UK price AU price
128GB $999 £999 AU$1,699
256GB $1,059 £1,059 AU$1,799
512GB $1,179 £1,179 (only available in Obsidian) AU$1,999
1TB (US only) $1,399 (only available in Obsidian) N/A N/A

Note that the 1TB storage option of the Pixel 8 Pro is a US exclusive at launch and is only available in the Obsidian colorway, while the other storage variants can be had in all three colorways.

Of course, if you’ve heard enough and are ready to adopt Google Pixel 8 Pro as your own personal flagship, you’ll want to check out our Google Pixel 8 preorders roundup – we’re constantly updating it with the best offers available.

Google Pixel 8 Pro preview: Specs

Swipe to scroll horizontally
Row 0 – Cell 1
Dimensions: 162.6 x 76.5 x 8.8mm
Weight: 213g
Display: 6.7-inch 1344 x 2992 adaptive 1Hz to 120Hz ‘Super Actua’ LTPO OLED
Chipset: Google Tensor G3
RAM: 12GB (LPDDR5X)
Storage: 128GB, 256GB, 512GB, 1TB (UFS 3.1)
OS (at launch): Android 14
Primary camera: ‘New’ 50MP, f/1.68, 82° FoV w/ OIS
Ultra-wide camera: 48MP, f/1.95, 125.5º FoV
Telephoto camera: 48MP, f/2.8, 21.8º FoV w/ 5x optical zoom
Front Camera: 10.5MP, f/2.2, 95º FoV
Battery: 5,050mAh
Charging: 30W wired, 23W wireless (2nd-gen Pixel Stand), 12W wireless (Qi)
Colors: Obsidian, Porcelain, Bay

Google Pixel 8 Pro preview: Design

  • Softer but familiar look and feel
  • Relatively lightweight

(Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)

I didn’t like the Pixel 6 design – the two-toned back and glass camera band looked awkward. The Pixel 7 Pro remedied those issues, adopting a single color for the rear and a metal camera band, and now the Pixel 8 Pro has achieved a new level of refinement. There are more pleasing colors this year, including my favorite, Bay, which is sort of sky blue – the other options are Obsidian (black) and Porcelain (off-white). Considering the phone’s dust and water-defeating IP68 rating, ‘Bay’ may be an appropriate color name.

Covering the screen and back is Corning Gorilla Glass Victus. The polished aluminum frame is all curved around the edges, making the phone feel pleasant in the palm. Even though the sides curve, the screen is completely flat, a choice I applaud.

Button placement looks unchanged and, as usual, there’s the USB-C charge port on the bottom. While the camera supports eSIM technology, the 5G phone still has a SIM slot for traditional nano SIM cards.

The metal band houses the three cameras, a flash, and the new temperature sensor.

(Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)

I’ve never seen a phone with a thermometer before, but here we are. It looks like another camera, but rather than taking pictures, you point it at something and get the surface temperature. Using it was easy enough – I pointed the sensor at something, opened the new Temp app, hit a button, and the app displayed the temperature. I could quickly take another reading by hitting the refresh button.

It seems to work best when within a few inches of your measurement subject. We held it over a glass of cold water and got a reading of around 39 degrees Fahrenheit, and then over a cup of tea that measured almost 130F.

Google is working on getting FDA approval to use this new sensor to measure human skin temperature. It looks like it can take the ambient temperature, too. 

(Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)

When we initially tried to take the temperature of the tea, the Google rep inadvertently held the phone so the sensor wasn’t positioned right over the cup, and it ended up measuring the temperature around the cup. I can’t decide if this sensor is an unnecessary gimmick or potentially useful. (Pixel is the same phone brand that once had a built-in radar for detecting in-the-air gestures.)

Google Pixel 8 Pro preview: Display

  • 6.7-inch 1344 x 2992 flat OLED display
  • Adaptive refresh rate going from 1Hz to 120Hz
  • 42% brighter than 7 Pro, with a peak brightness of 2,000 nits

(Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)

Google has given the Pixel 8 Pro display, which is still a 6.7-inch LPTO OLED panel, a nice brightness upgrade – it claims the screen is 42% brighter that the Pixel 7 Pro’s, and it’s rated for up to 2,000 nits at peak brightness. I only saw the phone indoors, so it’s hard to judge. The bezels are narrow, but no more so than on the 7 Pro. There’s still the display cut-out for the front-facing camera.

That camera, by the way, gets an update with autofocus. And Google said the face unlock system meets a high enough biometric standard that it can now be used to authenticate payments made through the phone.

The variable refresh rate now ranges from 1Hz to 120Hz. That’s an improvement over the Pixel 7 Pro, which could only stop down to 10Hz. So you’ll see better always-on performance and, perhaps, a small uptick in battery life.

Under the display is a fingerprint reader that I did not get to try out.

Generally, I liked the look of the display. It’s bright, colorful, and responsive.

Google Pixel 8 Pro preview: Cameras

(Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)

Let’s just say that Google has gone a bit wild on the camera side. In addition to the 50MP main camera, both the ultrawide and 5x telephoto are 48MP. I would expect that all will shoot at a binned 12MP by default, but with that many megapixels to work with across the board we should see even better Google Pixel photography.

Here are the cameras:

  • Main: 50MP f/1.68
  • Ultrawide: 48MP f/1.95
  • Telephoto: 48MP f/2.8
  • Front-facing: 10MP f/2.2

I didn’t get to shoot any photos but did see the new macro capabilities at work and they look impressive – you can get within two centimeters of your subject and achieve startling detail and quality. Elsewhere, the front-facing camera gets an update with the addition of autofocus.

Google has redesigned the Camera app with a new layout and access to more pro-level tools. As you would expect from Google, AI is employed throughout the phone, and it’s used to impressive effect in photos.

Magic Editor lets you tap and drag on a subject in a photo to move it, and the AI will then process and intelligently fill in the space left behind. I watched as a Google exec opened a photo of his son shooting a basketball, tapped on his son, and moved him to within inches of the basket so it looked like he was performing a dunk. The exec told me that while the boy’s shadow was now out of place, he could use Magic Editor to move it, too.

In a similar fashion, Best Take can analyze a series of photos taken in succession and, with your guidance, find the best expression for each person across all the images and create one photo in which everyone is looking at the camera and smiling – it’s impressive, if perhaps a little disconcerting.

Video, which you can shoot at up to 4K at 60fps, gets an upgrade as well, with Google processing every frame of video through its HDR pipeline for better low-light performance. There’s even a new Audio Eraser to help you remove distracting noises from your videos.

It looks like Google has done a lot of work on its cameras, although at this stage it’s too early to say whether the Google Pixel 8 Pro will take a spot as one of our best camera phones.

(Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)

Google Pixel 8 Pro preview: Performance and specs

  • New Tensor G3
  • Dedicated Titan M2 security coprocessor

Google’s home-grown processors have not exactly set the world on fire, lagging well behind the best from Qualcomm and Apple. Things may be different, though, with the new Tensor G3. The ARM V9 SoC has a new CPU and GPU, plus local Tensor processing units (TPUs), while the phone can tap into cloud-based TPUs on demand.

We don’t have any performance numbers for the chip yet, but do expect it to power much of the Pixel 8 Pro’s AI capabilities.

Those capabilities, some which are coming with the phone and some post launch, include onboard large language model (LLM) capabilities in Google Assistant. It’ll be able to summarize web pages (like a recipe), or read aloud from a variety of text sources, even converting to another language on the fly.

Google’s Call Screening also gets an update, with a much more natural-sounding voice. In a demonstration, a Google rep, acting as a delivery person, called a Pixel 8 Pro that was set to screen calls. The Pixel 8 Pro answered, and we explained that we had a package to deliver. On the Pixel 8 Pro, we were able to type a note telling the delivery person they could leave the package by the door, and the Pixel 8 Pro relayed that message in its normal-sounding voice. If the voice hadn’t identified itself as a personal assistant, I would never have known it was an AI.

Google Pixel 8 Pro preview: Software

  • Android 14
  • On-board AI
  • 7 years of OS and security updates

If the formidable specs and the novel temperature sensor don’t attract you, perhaps Google can turn your head with its startling support promises, which now include seven years of security and OS updates.

Not only will the Pixel 8 Pro come running Android 14 out of the box, it will have a lengthy lifespan thanks to more than half a decade of operating system updates. Seven years of updates beats the likes of Apple, Samsung, and OnePlus.

Google Pixel 8 Pro preview: Battery

  • Big 5,050mAh battery
  • Fast wireless charging

It’s nice to see Google pushing the limits when it comes to battery capacity – at 5,050mAh the Pixel 8 Pro has one of the largest batteries among flagship phones.

While I haven’t tested the battery life, I would expect the Pixel Pro 8 to last 24-to-27 (think just looping video) hours on a charge, and probably close to 20 hours with mixed use.

The Pixel Pro 8 (and Pixel 8) supports Qi-based fast wireless charging and Battery Share. Wired charging for the Pixel 8 Pro has been bumped up to 30W fast charging. 

Google Pixel 8 Pro preview: Early verdict

Overall, the Google Pixel 8 Pro looks like a strong update. It faces formidable competition in form of the Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra and the new Apple iPhone 15 Pro Max. I doubt it will match those handsets for sheer performance, but the cameras, and the AI tools behind them, could set it apart.

We’ll know more when we’ve put the phone through our exhaustive full review process, so stay tuned.

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Journalist for 25 years with leading publications in India and UAE such as The National, Mumbai Mirror, DNA, Indian Express and former Sports Editor of eIndia.com. Now managing editor of Headline.ae, part of MEMc (https://www.memc.co)

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What’s this WhatsApp feature everyone is talking about? Find out now

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WhatsApp has introduced an innovative new feature: voice message transcripts. This addition allows users to convert voice messages into text, making it easier to keep up with conversations no matter where you are or what you’re doing.

The feature is rolling out globally over the next few weeks, initially supporting a few select languages, with plans to expand language options in the coming months. In a blog post, WhatsApp highlighted the personal touch of voice messages, stating, “There’s something special about hearing your loved one’s voice even when you’re far away.” However, the company acknowledged that there are times when listening isn’t feasible, such as being in a noisy environment or receiving a lengthy message that’s difficult to hear.For those moments, WhatsApp now offers voice message transcripts.

These transcripts are generated directly on your device, ensuring that no one else — not even WhatsApp — can access your messages.To activate this feature, go to Settings > Chats > Voice Message Transcripts, where you can toggle transcriptions on or off and select your preferred language. Transcribing a message is simple: long-press the voice message and tap “Transcribe.”WhatsApp expressed enthusiasm about enhancing this experience further, promising to make it even more intuitive and user-friendly.

This update follows the introduction of the Message Drafts feature, which addresses a common issue: forgetting to send unfinished messages. WhatsApp now marks incomplete messages with a clear “Draft” label and moves the chat to the top of your list, ensuring you can quickly find and complete them without searching through multiple conversations.With these updates, WhatsApp continues to innovate and make communication more seamless and efficient for its users worldwide.

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DVCOM and ViewSonic forge strategic partnership to drive digital transformation across GCC

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World leading visual solutions provider ViewSonic is eyeing a renewed foray into the UAE market and the wider region following a strategic partnership announcement with region’s top value-added ICT distributors DVCOM.

This collaboration during GITEX 2024 designates the Dubai tech firm as ViewSonic’s main value-added distribution partner across the GCC region, focusing on channel management, alliances, and acquisition.

A Partnership Rooted in Shared Vision

“This association is set to accelerate digital transformation across the region, leveraging DVCOM’s vast regional presence and expertise in channel management alongside ViewSonic’s innovative and industry-leading visual technologies,” said Renjan George, Managing Director of DVCOM. “Our combined strengths will provide businesses with the tools they need to thrive in an increasingly digital world. By offering advanced display solutions, we are not just enhancing visual experiences but also driving productivity and collaboration. In today’s fast-paced and ever-evolving work environment, it’s essential that companies are equipped with the latest technology to stay competitive. This partnership is a step towards ensuring that organisations in the GCC region have access to cutting-edge visual solutions that enable smarter, more efficient ways of working.”

Thought Leadership at the Forefront

In addition to product distribution, DVCOM and ViewSonic will jointly emphasise thought leadership and market education. By sharing industry insights, best practices, and the latest trends, the partnership will enable businesses to better navigate the complexities of digital transformation, driving informed decisions and strategic growth in a competitive market.

“Beyond product distribution, this partnership is about empowering businesses through knowledge and innovation,” said George Mathew, B2B Solutions Sales Manager from ViewSonic, known for their world-leading visual display hardware—including liquid-crystal displays, and projectors —as well as digital whiteboarding software. “By collaborating with DVCOM, we are not only delivering industry-leading visual solutions but also championing thought leadership and market education. Together, we will share valuable insights, best practices, and emerging trends, helping businesses make informed decisions as they navigate the complexities of digital transformation. This approach will equip organisations with the tools they need to drive strategic growth and thrive in today’s competitive market.”

A Strategic Alliance for Growth

As the strategic value-added distributor, DVCOM will also nurture existing relationships, establishing new channel alliances, and ensuring deeper market penetration for ViewSonic’s cutting-edge solutions.

This partnership was officially unveiled at GITEX, the region’s premier technology event, further demonstrating DVCOM and ViewSonic’s commitment to empowering businesses with innovative visual solutions that align with their digital transformation goals.

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Dubai Helishow 2024 opens its doors this October

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With just a month remaining, the eagerly awaited Dubai Helishow 2024 is set to take place from October 22-24, 2024, at the stunning Skydive Dubai venue. Bringing together global leaders in VTOL (Vertical Take-Off and Landing), UAV (Unmanned Aerial Vehicle), and helicopter industries, the event promises to be a pivotal moment in vertical aviation.

Held under the patronage of His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President, Prime Minister of the UAE, and Ruler of Dubai, this prestigious exhibition will provide a platform for industry professionals, military experts, innovators, and business leaders to explore the latest technological developments and key trends shaping the region’s rapidly expanding vertical aviation market.

Running alongside the exhibition, the Dubai Heliconference 2024 will host a series of talks, panel discussions, and keynote addresses focused on major innovations in hybrid and electric helicopters, AI integration, UAV combat operations, civil aviation, and more. The event offers a unique opportunity to explore future trends and build valuable connections.

Maysoon Abulhoul, COO of Domus Group, the organisers of Dubai Helishow 2024, highlighted the event’s strategic importance:

“Dubai Helishow 2024 is shaping up to be our most impactful edition yet. It will not only spotlight cutting-edge innovations in vertical flight but also serve as a vital hub for strategic networking and business opportunities. For anyone serious about the helicopter and UAV sectors, this event is an invaluable opportunity to connect, collaborate, and stay competitive.”

Sharief Fahmy, Executive Director of Kaman Middle East, underscored the show’s relevance:

“Dubai Helishow is the ideal platform to engage directly with our target audience—military officials, civil aviation professionals, police, firefighting, and search-and-rescue operators. It allows us to showcase the latest technologies and stay connected with key players shaping the future of the UAV, VTOL, and helicopter industries.”

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