The Phnom Penh Post

Google in smartphone push with motion-sensing Pixel 4

- Glenn Chapman and Daniel Hoffman

GOOGLE stepped up its smartphone ambitions on Tuesday with updated Pixel handsets, touting a move toward computing with a simple hand wave or spoken command.

Pixel 4 models boasting features including gesture and face recognitio­n debuted at a “Made by Google” event showcasing new hardware infused with artificial intelligen­ce to respond to motion and voice.

The Pixel 4 handset with a 5.7-inch display has a starting price of $799 in the US and will be available globally starting October 24. A larger 6.3-inch Pixel XL will start at $899.

The new devices aim to ramp up Google’s challenge in the premium smartphone segment dominated by Samsung and Apple, which recently unveiled an iPhone 11 starting at $699.

Google also updated its Nest smart home cameras and speakers and announced its streaming game service Stadia would launch November 19.

While Pixel smartphone­s have struggled for traction in the smartphone market, they provide an opportunit­y to showcase the Android operating system’s capabiliti­es and the Google Assistant digital aide.

Pixel 4 features improved camera capabiliti­es, using artificial intelligen­ce to boost optical zoom and take better photos taken after dark, with a feature devoted to capturing images of the heavens at night.

Motion-sensing technolog y that Google has been working on for some time is built into Pi xel 4 and will a llow for some basic controls, such as silencing a larms or sk ipping to the next song, by holding up or waving hands. The handsets a lso include a “face unlock” feature similar to those on iPhones and ot her dev ices.

Amid antitrust reviews on both sides of the Atlantic over its online dominance, Google is seeking to diversify its business by adding more devices and services.

The California-based internet titan will launch Stadia streaming game service on November 19, hoping to send console-quality play soaring into the cloud.

Stadia allows video game play on any internet-connected device, eliminatin­g the need for game consoles.

Google updated products across its hardware line, from Nest smart home devices to Chromebook laptops and wireless ear buds.

A common theme was making it more natural to use Google to tap into the internet and digital assistant capabiliti­es naturally with voice or gestures at any time.

The notion of online services and machine smarts being all around and always ready to serve people instead of needing them to tap at smartphone­s or keyboards is referred to as “ambient computing.”

“Our vision for ambient computing is to create a single, consistent experience anywhere you go,” said Rick Osterloh, head of Google’s hardware division.

Google also built digital assistant capabiliti­es into smart home products from its Nest unit in a move that shrewdly extends its reach, according to Creative Strategies analyst Carolina Milanesi.

“I really felt the bigger message today was about ambient computing and how the different products work together to highlight Google’s AI,” Milanesi said.

Google spotlighte­d product design and user privacy at the event, hitting on themes stressed by Apple as well as Microsoft, the analyst added.

Building in privacy

Google emphasised privacy enhancemen­ts in its line of products, which kept more personal data and computing functions on devices instead of sending it to datacenter­s in the cloud.

“Privacy is built in,” Google director of product management Sabrina Ellis said while introducin­g Pixel 4.

“New Google Assistant can respond to day-to-day requests on-device.”

Data processed on Pixel 4 handsets is “never saved or shared with other Google services,” she added.

The smartphone­s still need to reach into t he cloud for requests such as checking whether flights are delayed or commute traffic troubled.

Pi xel 4 users will be able to tell t heir dev ices to delete any t hing said to it t hat day or week, according to Ellis. A chip in t he handset is a lso designed as a secure digita l vault for personal data.

“More and more of Google’s stor y today is about on-dev ice AI capabiliti­es . . . it opens lots of possibilit ies for faster performanc­e and better privacy,” Technalysi­s Research chief analyst Bob O’Donnell said in a t weet.

Google also said it is ramping up investment­s in renewable energy, aiming to offset all the power required to make its hardware with green power.

 ?? AFP ?? A woman holds the Google Pixel 4 phone during Google product launch event ‘Made by Google 19’ in New York City on Tuesday.
AFP A woman holds the Google Pixel 4 phone during Google product launch event ‘Made by Google 19’ in New York City on Tuesday.

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