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2022-09-10 01:11:59 By : Ms. Andy Gu

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Here's what we know about the upcoming flagship phone from Google and its new Tensor chipset

The Google Pixel 7 Pro figures to be the more impressive of the two handsets Google releases this fall, and it's going to need to be. Given the size and likely specs of Google's upcoming phone, we expect it to take on the likes of the iPhone 14 Pro and the Galaxy S22 Plus, not to mention even higher-end devices like the Galaxy S22 Ultra. To go up against those phones, the Pixel 7 Pro is going to have to deliver something special.

And the fact of the matter is, we don't know what that will be just yet. While Google has set a date for its fall product event and even given us a preview of the Pixel 7 lineup earlier this year, a more detailed account of the Pixel 7 Pro's specs and features has yet to materialize. We know the phone is getting a new Tensor processor and a slightly tweaked look, but that's about all that Google has disclosed thus far.

Leaks about the Pixel 7 Pro are filling in some of the gaps in our knowledge — something we expect to continue now that we're a month away from the phone's likely launch. Here's what we know so far about the Google Pixel 7 Pro, along with what we're hoping to see from this fall's top-of-the-line Google phone.

We have a pretty good idea of when we're going to see the Pixel 7 Pro. Google has sent out invites for an October 6 event in Brooklyn where it's promising to "introduce the latest additions to our family of devices." That likely means all the devices the company previewed at Google I/O this spring, including the Pixel 7 family and the Pixel Watch. (The Pixel tablet, also previewed at Google I/O, isn't supposed to arrive until 2023.)

Google's October 6 date is in line with an earlier release date tip by leaker Jon Prosser. About a month before Google set the date for its product launch, Prosser forecast that the Pixel 7 and Pixel 7 Pro would land in stores on October 13, with pre-orders starting a week earlier. An October 6 launch event would fit in with that time frame, so expect to get your hands on a Pixel 7 Pro by mid-October.

The Pixel 7 Pro's potential price isn't as solid as its release date. We would assume Google will try to hit last year's $899 starting price for the Pixel 6 Pro, especially now that Apple has confirmed it's sticking with a $999 starting price on its iPhone 14 Pro instead of hiking prices by $100 as had been rumored. Google can still beat the iPhone 14 Pro and the Galaxy S22 Plus on price if it offers the Pixel 7 Pro for $899.

That said, costs are rising all around us, and it's possible that could impact Google's phones, too. We expect to have a clearer picture of what Google plans to charge for the Pixel 7 Pro as we get closer to the October 6 reveal.

Google overhauled the look of its phones with last year's Pixel 6 release, and that distinctive appearance — a horizontal camera bar stretching across the back of the phone — will continue with this year's models, based on the Pixel 7 images Google has shared.

Still, you can expect a few tweaks. Specifically, the camera bar on the new Pixels will be aluminum and the lens are arranged in a slightly more prominent way, with what we presume is the telephoto lens on the Pixel 7 Pro set apart from the main and ultrawide cameras.

A Pixel 7 Pro unboxing video confirms this slightly altered new look, and an early hands-on with some Pixel 7 prototypes suggests the Pro is pretty much the same size and weight as its predecessor. The Pixel 7 Pro is a little bit wider — 76.68 mm vs. 75.89 mm — though that's not the sort of change you're likely to notice with the naked eye. The new phone also measures 0.2 mm thinner than before.

That said, you'd expect the screen size to remain unchanged at 6.7 inches. The OLED panel on the Pixel 6 Pro could adapt its refresh rate between 10Hz and 120Hz depending on what was happening on the display, and we'd also plan on that feature returning for the Pixel 7 Pro. Some new phones are able to scale down to 1Hz in a move to preserve battery life, and we wouldn't mind if Google adapted that capability for its upcoming phone.

Cameras aren't expected to change that much on the Pixel 7 Pro, but that's not necessarily a bad thing. The Pixel 6 Pro is one of the best camera phones, so the same camera hardware on this year's model should produce some outstanding shots. Given the changes Apple's making to the iPhone 14 Pro cameras, though, we're especially interested in seeing how an iPhone 14 Pro vs. Pixel 7 Pro face-off will shake out.

Until that happens, we can only look at the expected specs — the same 50MP main camera as the Pixel 6 Pro augmented by 12MP ultrawide and 48MP telephoto lenses. The telephoto camera should be capable of a 4x optical zoom.

Camera hardware is only part of the story with Google's phones. The company also thrives at computational photography turning to software and machine learning to produce great-looking images. We're unlikely to hear about those kinds of features until the October 6 reveal of the Pixel 7 lineup, though we'd note that what could be revealed should be pretty impressive. 

Think of last year's Magic Eraser feature, in which you can eliminate unwanted people and objects with a tap. Google augmented that capability with the Pixel 6a, adding the ability to obscure distracting objects in photos by muting their color. Those are the kind of software-powered capabilities we're hoping to see with the Pixel 7 Pro.

The main change to the Pixel 7 Pro that we already know about is the Tensor 2 silicon that will power the new versions of Google's phone. Google introduced the Tensor chip last year as a way to bring more machine learning-powered experiences to its devices and based on features like on-device translation and phone tree navigation, you'd say that the move had paid off. We're eager to see what new capabilities an improved Tensor chip would bring.

While performance isn't the driving motivation behind Google's switch to Tensor, we are interested in seeing how the new Google chipset measures up to the Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen 1 that's powered phones like the Galaxy Z Fold 4, improving upon the performance of Snapdragon 8 Gen 1-based Android devices. Since the original Tensor didn't put up much of a fight against the A15 Bionic inside Apple's iPhone 13 devices, we don't the Tensor 2 giving the A16 Bionic inside the iPhone 14 Pro much too sweat about.

A bootloader screen on a Pixel 7 Pro prototype suggests Google could equip its phone with 12GB of faster LPDDR5 RAM while also featureing 256GB of storage. It's unclear if those would be the base model's specs, though, as opposed to one of several options.

As for battery life, rumors haven't given us any clue as to whether Google will match the Pixel 6 Pro's 5,000 mAh cell. Google better do something on the battery front, as the Pixel 6 Pro was a disappointment in our battery test. Tasked with surfing the web continuously over cellular until it ran out of power, our Pixel 6 Pro test unit died after 7 hours and 49 minutes — two hours shy of the average result.

Just as there's no secret as to what chipset will power the Pixel 7 Pro, we've got a very good idea as to what software will debut on the device. Android 13 is already available for existing Pixel phones, so we'd expect the Pixel 7 Pro to ship with the new operating system installed.

Android 13 isn't a big change from what's come before, but you can expect new customization options to Material You design, a Now Playing widget for the lock screen, editable copy/paste text and more granular permissions for apps.

The biggest question is whether Google will feel the pressure to expand support beyond three Android OS updates for its phones. Samsung now supports four such updates for key devices like the Galaxy S series, making it the better option for people who like to hold on to phones for as long as possible. 

It's hard to have too big a wish list for the Google Pixel 7 Pro when there are more features likely to leak between now and October 6. But we can find a few ways we hope the Pixel 7 Pro improves upon its predecessor.

Battery life: Google's phones have all been coming up short on our battery test lately, not just the Pixel 6 Pro. We hope that the new Tensor chip inside the Pixel 7 series breaks that cycle and helps the Pixel 7 Pro match some of its flagship rivals with a place on our best phone battery life list.

Fingerprint reader: The in-display fingerprint reader Google used in the Pixel 6 flagships turned out to be a pretty finicky sensor, sometimes requiring multiple tries to unlock the phone. Things seem to have improved with the Pixel 6a, and we hope the momentum continues once the Pixel 7 Pro debuts.

New camera features: Google's Pixel phones have been all about the cameras, as past Pixels have given the iPhone and its cameras all they could handle. With camera hardware not likely to change much on the Pixel 7 Pro, we do hope Google has a special feature or two up its sleeve that delivers a Magic Eraser amount of "wow."

Tensor experiences: As much as the camera, the Tensor chip inside recent Pixel phones is helping Google's handsets stand out from the crowd. We're excited to see what new capabilities a second-generation Tensor chipset can offer Pixel 7 Pro owners.

Philip Michaels is a Managing Editor at Tom's Guide. He's been covering personal technology since 1999 and was in the building when Steve Jobs showed off the iPhone for the first time. He's been evaluating smartphones since that first iPhone debuted in 2007, and he's been following phone carriers and smartphone plans since 2015. He has strong opinions about Apple, the Oakland Athletics, old movies and proper butchery techniques. Follow him at @PhilipMichaels.

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