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The Google Pixel 9, the Pixel 9 Pro Fold and everything else announced at the Made by Google Pixel launch event

August used to be a relatively sleepy month for tech news — no longer! Now that Google scooted up its annual October Pixel event by two months, the tech world is abubble, going over everything execs announced from Mountain View, California at the Made By Google keynote on Tuesday.

The Pixel 9 launch event came with enthusiastic introductions for all the hardware we expected, including the new Pixel 9 and its sizable camera bump. The Pixel 9 Pro and the larger Pixel 9 Pro XL made their official debut, too, and the new foldable, the Pixel 9 Pro Fold, does indeed measure just 0.4 inches thick. The new Pixel Watch 3 and Pixel Buds Pro 2 have now been revealed, as were plenty of software features, mostly in the form of Gemini integrations. One surprise was the not-loudly-stated fact that Pixel 9 Phones won’t launch with the Android 15 operating system — they’ll have Android 14 to start. For the play-by-play, you can check out our liveblog or check out Google’s stream. If you just want the highlights, here’s everything announced at the 2024’s Made by Google Pixel event.

Various Google Pixel 9 phone handsets are arrayed on a white table.

Photo by Sam Rutherford / Engadget

What you first notice about Google’s latest Pixel 9 is the redesigned look. The camera band has been replaced with oblong oval that stands proud from a slab that’s about a tenth of an inch thinner than the Pixel 8. The screen size has bumped back up to 6.3 inches, after dipping to 6.2 inches on the Pixel 8, and is covered in Corning Gorilla Glass Victus 2. It’s got a polished glass back with satin metal finishes on the frame and cameras.

Speaking of cameras, there’s the same number as last year (two in the back, one in the front) but the previous generation’s 12 MP ultrawide lens has been replaced with a 48 MP ultrawide lens. The other two cameras have the same specs, except the front cam now has autofocus for better selfies. To take advantage of those fancy sensors, new AI photography enhancements like Add Me and Reimagine join the existing Magic Editor, Night Sight and Best Take features.

The Pixel 9 houses the same Tensor G4 chip, designed to be better at everyday tasks, while using up less battery. That’s the same chip as its more expensive siblings and now the base model Pixel comes with 12GB of memory, eliminating the option of an 8GB model. That extra RAM will help handle the many Gemini integrations coming standard in Android 15. Pressing and holding the power button will overlay the assistant on whatever you’re doing on-screen and can answer questions, pull details from other apps, and produce contextualized recommendations based on images you take.

Engadget’s Sam Rutherford spent some time hands-on with the Pixel 9 family of phones and so far, likes what he sees, noting that the new designs “look great” and the AI tools and features are shaping up to be useful iterations on what can otherwise seem like a buzzy bandwagon add-on.

The Pixel 9 comes with 7 years of OS and security updates and is available in Obsidian, Porcelain, Wintergreen and Peony. Its starts at $799 for 128GB of storage and is now open for pre-orders and all Pixel 9 phones will hit the shelves August 22.

The Pixel 9 Pro and the Pixel 9 Pro XL are propped up on a glass table with a pink pear candle in the background. The Pixel 9 Pro and the Pixel 9 Pro XL are propped up on a glass table with a pink pear candle in the background.

Photo by Sam Rutherford / Engadget

Those not content with a standard-issue phone can opt for the Pixel 9 Pro or the Pixel 9 Pro XL instead. Notably this year, the Pro moniker doesn’t necessarily mean bigger; the Pixel 9 Pro is the same size as the regular Pixel 9, both with 6.3-inch screens. Google created a new category in its lineup with the Pixel 9 Pro XL — a phone with the the same general specs as the Pro model but with a larger, 6.8-inch display and a 5,060 mAh battery (versus the 4,700 mAh battery on the smaller version).

All three Pixel 9 models use the same Google Tensor G4 processor, but the two Pro phones have 16GB of RAM on hand to execute AI tricks and any other task you might demand from them. You can get either phone with 128GB of storage or a full terabyte. The Pro models also pack an additional 48 MP telephoto lens in the back and a heftier 42 MP selfie camera up front.

Both come with a year’s subscription to the Google One AI Premium Plan which lets you access all of the tricks Gemini can do — after the free trial, you’ll need to pay $20 monthly (the plan also comes with 2TB of storage).

The Pixel 9 Pro starts at $999 and the Pixel 9 Pro XL starts at $1,099. Both come in the same four colors: Obsidian, Porcelain, Hazel and Rose Quartz, and include a promised seven years of security and features updates. Like everything announced at the event, the phones are now open to pre-orders and will be on store shelves August 22.

The Pixel 9 Pro Fold is open to display its interior screen. The Pixel 9 Pro Fold is open to display its interior screen.

Photo by Sam Rutherford / Engadget

We now officially know that Google’s second foldable phone is not called the Pixel Fold 2, but rather the Pixel 9 Pro Fold. To go along with the enlarged name, there’s a bigger, eight-inch inner screen, making it the largest on any phone out there. The outer screen is larger too, measuring 6.3 inches, up from 5.8 inches last year. Google claims the interior screen is 80 percent brighter than its predecessor and now maxes out at 2,700 nits.

A persistent complaint with foldables is how heavy and bulky they can feel. Google hopes a few design tweaks will help with that. The Pixel 9 Pro Fold now measures just 0.4 inches when closed, making it the thinnest foldable on the market (as long as you don’t count the sizable camera bump) and at 257g it’s about 25 grams lighter than the Pixel Fold.

The new foldable houses Google’s Tensor G4 chip, comes standard with 16GB of RAM and offers your choice of 256GB or 512GB of storage. Like every piece of 2024 Pixel hardware, the 9 Pro Fold is tailored around Google’s Gemini AI contrivances. Pressing the power button brings up the assistant, which you can use in split screen on the foldable. The phone also comes with a year of the One AI Premium plan, which jumps to $20 per month afterwards.

The three exterior cameras include a wide, ultrawide and telephoto lens with 5x optical zoom and up to 20x Super Res Zoom. There’s a 10 MP camera on both the interior and on the front of the exterior screen. And, thanks to the foldable nature of the phone you can take selfies using the more powerful rear cameras by checking out the preview of the shot on the exterior screen.

We’ve already spent a little time with the new foldable and so far, like what we see. It’s thinner than Z Fold 6 but packs a larger interior screen. And the AI tools the foldable enables actually seem useful.

The Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold costs the same $1,799 as the 2023 model and comes in either Obsidian or Porcelain. It too is now available for pre-order and will hit stores September 4.

Both the 41mm and 45mm sizes of the Pixel Watch 3 are displayed on a person's wrist. Both the 41mm and 45mm sizes of the Pixel Watch 3 are displayed on a person's wrist.

Photo by Sam Rutherford / Engadget

Last year we said the Pixel Watch 2 was “catching up to its rivals,” but still took issue with the disjointed Fitbit integration and the lack of wireless charging. Fitbit is still very much a part of the Pixel Watch 3 experience and charging still requires a cable — our full review will tell us whether those are dealbreakers or not.

The watch now comes in two sizes, with a larger 45mm case size joining the 41mm model. Thanks to thinner bezels, the 41mm display is 10 percent larger than on the Pixel Watch 2 and the 45mm screen is 40 percent larger. Both screens peak at 2,000 nits, which is twice as bright as 2023’s watch, and both get as dim as 1 nit.

There’s a new readiness score and cardio load tracking, which sounds a bit like the Training Load feature in Apple’s watchOS 11 — all of which give you feedback on how hard you’re pushing yourself. New integrations include displaying a live feed of your Nest cams from your watch and using the wearable as a Google TV remote. The battery offers the same 24 hours of use on a charge, but Google claims recharging will be 20 percent quicker with a 30-watt wall adapter (sold separately). Call Assist will add the “hold a minute” ability, which can answer your call and ask the caller to wait until you’re in a better spot or have set down whatever you’re working on.

The heart rate tracking has been updated to work more accurately while running, an activity that’s particularly hard to track. Readiness score and Cardio Load combine to give you a Daily Readiness score, which tells you how intense you should work out in a given day.

The “first of its kind” Loss of Pulse Detection feature will automatically call emergency services and direct them to your location if the algorithm detects a dangerous situation judging by your pulse, movement and other metrics. It will start out in select EU countries and parts of the UK, with more regions to come.

The 41mm Pixel Watch 3 retails for $349 for WiFi only and $449 with LTE. The 45mm model goes for $399 or $499 if you get cellular connectivity. Both come in your choice of black or silver, with an added hazel hue for the larger case size. You can pre-order them now and the watches will be on the shelves on September 10.

A closeup of the Pixel Buds Pro 2 in Wintergreen sit on a green rock. A closeup of the Pixel Buds Pro 2 in Wintergreen sit on a green rock.

Photo by Sam Rutherford / Engadget

Despite being smaller and lighter, the Pixel Buds Pro 2 somehow manage to pack an extra hour of battery life compared to the Pixel Buds Pro, now getting up to 12 hours of play with noise cancellation off. The Silent Seal feature is back and now should reduce twice as much noise as before. Plus they’ll support Spatial audio with head tracking — but only when paired with a Pixel 6 or newer phone or a Pixel Tablet.

The Tensor chip inside, the first in a pair of Google earbuds, enables the new features and the company claims it can process audio significantly faster in order to adapt to your environment. And thanks to multi-path processing, noise-cancellation computations don’t happen on the same channel as the audio, so the music you hear is unaltered.

New “twist-to-adjust” stabilizers should keep the buds in place when you’re working out, but can be rotated in the other direction for a more comfortable feel. Conversation Detection is back, meaning you won’t have to pull out a bud when you need to talk to someone — instead the music pauses when you start speaking and resumes when you’re done. The Buds claim to be the lightest noise cancelling earbuds in their class.

And of course, Gemini is built-in. You can do things like ask for walking directions or access your email. It also supports Gemini Live, which Google’s Sandeep Waraich demonstrated on stage by using the prompt “Let’s talk live.” Gemini suggested things like breathing techniques to stay calm in a crowd and tips on how to approach a person they admire.

The Pixel Buds 2 Pro are available to pre-order now and will be on shelves on September 26. They come in Porcelain, Hazel, Wintergreen and Peony, and are selling for $229, which is $29 more than the Pixel Buds Pro were at launch.

The new Pixel Screenshot app is only available on Pixel 9 phones at launch (no word yet on wider availability) and uses Gemini Nano (the on-board AI model) to save, extract and organize info you might otherwise forget the origin of. For example, you can take a screenshot of an Instagram post about a music festival and the AI will give you a summary as well as buttons to do things like add dates to your calendar the next time you access that screenshot from the app. A screenshot of a restaurant should produce options to call the business or navigate there via Google Maps.

Google says you should also be able to ask natural questions using the microphone, and Pixel Screenshots will either answer it outright and bring up relevant annotated images. The app launches today, along with everything else and while it’s reminiscent of Apple’s redesigned Photos app, we’ll have to try it for ourselves to really suss out all the differences.

The one thing we expected that didn’t come into play was the launch of Android 15 — we heard a little about the new operating system during May’s Google I/O event. But now we know it’s not coming right away. New Pixel Phones will launch with Android 14. The Google execs didn’t hit that fact very hard, but a look at the Pixel 9 spec sheet confirms it. It’s possible the new OS simply wasn’t ready for a bumped up release date, as the hardware was, and Android 15 may very well be sticking with its October launch date. We won’t be surprised to see the OS drop later this fall.

When it comes, Android 15 will, unsurprisingly, revolve around giving Gemini the reigns and letting Google’s AI do your bidding. But all of those AI features will still be available when the phones launch, even if they’re running Android 14.

Google has revamped its Assistant around Gemini. Google hardware Chief Rick Osterloh said, “It’s the biggest leap forward since we launched Google Assistant.” And Google promises that the assistant won’t just be for fancy new flagship devices, but existing mid-range ones as well — and not just Google phones, but all Android phones. Some of the event’s live demos were performed on Samsung and Motorola handsets (although there were a few hiccups). President of Android, Sameer Samat, called Gemini the “most widely available AI Assistant.”

Gemini can be pulled up over whatever app you’re using and answer your questions about what’s on screen. Circle to Share lets you quickly send whatever you happen to be looking at to your contacts with just a couple taps.

You can now also ask Gemini to access files in your Drive or messages in your Gmail account to generate text-based content like bios, workout plans or itineraries. To keep your personal details private, requests involving the most sensitive info are handled by Gemini Nano, an AI model that lives on your phone.

Other examples included asking Gemini to create a list of the foods a YouTuber ate in a video and then adding those to a list. Or asking it to create a playlist described by vibes. With Gemini Live, you get a few new voices, including Dipper, Ursa and Vega. Gemini Live hits hard on the conversational aspect, and the responses did indeed sound natural — especially when you don’t have to keep saying “hey Google.”

Pixel Weather, a redesigned weather app for the Pixel 9 family, comes with a handy AI summary and is completely customizable. Call Notes can give you an AI-powered summary of a call after you hang up. You can even review the full transcript. For privacy, the transcriptions and summaries are taken care of on-device instead of sending it to the cloud. Of course it’s completely optional.

Other features revealed in Mountain View include the Add Me feature in photos — which NBA All Star Jimmy Butler came on stage to demonstrate. The AI trick allows the photographer to be in the shot by taking one photo without them, and then another with them in place, then AI merges the photos, ensuring reality’s increasing subjectivity.

Pixel Studio can create images using text prompts and suggestions for different styles fonts. Google’s Alexander Schiffhauer noted that thanks to RCS coming to iPhone, these and other images will appear the same for everyone in text message conversations.

On the Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold, the Made You Look feature will get your toddler to look at the camera and smile by displaying fun cartoon characters on the exterior screen while you take the image with the rear camera. Magic Editor combines classic photo editing with AI interpretations and generative AI capabilities so you can, for instance, add wildflowers and a hot air balloon to an image you took where the grass was boring and the sky was clear.

We also got a quick look at where Google’s research in AI is leading. Google hardware Chief Rick Osterloh told us that Gemini will continue to evolve, particularly through integration with Project Astra, Google’s deep mind research prototype, which was demonstrated back at I/O earlier this year. The goal is an even more natural and context-aware assistant, allowing Gemini Live to understand your questions and pics to help you get things done, such as homework, brainstorming and more complex tasks like how to open a business.

Catch up on all the news from Google’s Pixel 9 launch event right here!

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