See, now that's a great price.
Our discount in the UK will be £70 according to Google's site today - not great at all
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See, now that's a great price.
Wow, I'd have thought the savings should have been maybe double that amount.Our discount in the UK will be £70 according to Google's site today - not great at all
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Wow, I'd have thought the savings should have been maybe double that amount.
i don't know why everyone wants to dump on the P4 so much. It has become the trendy thing to do...When it comes to the Pixel, I’ll always make my own mind up. Listening to reviewers is (almost) as bad as listening to Pikachu.
My I'm the strange one, but I really like my Pixel 4 XL, right now at 6:43pm I have 76% battery left. Was a light use day at work. Its fast and smooth. And I like stock Android over other Android UI's
Sure are there bones to pick with Google on creating this phone, absolutely yes. It should have had a 4,300mAh battery. 8GB RAM, and a display like the 11 Pro Max's. But it doesn't and it's still a great phone.
I think the general consensus is that the phone is great in a vacuum, but when compared to the other phones in its price range it doesn’t match up. Google cut corners on hardware like always. But for $200 off MSRP it starts to make a more sense.
Remember that Google has gone through changes in its leadership, and it’s now a more cunning for profit company than before. Remember the old Google, where they have many small but useful projects that they keep, and now they cut every single thing, even their own url shortener. The Nexus program is the old Google, their attempt to provide an inexpensive reference phone for developers. The new google saw it as an opportunity to profit, so they rebranded it into the Pixel lineup.I still think Google should bring back the Nexus program 3a, 4a for example, ditch the flagships or reach out to say Samsung and do Google play editions. Seriously, an S10 or note 10 with the backing xda devs? I think that would be awesome!
I can see that...but the Pixel line has never really been about being a real flagship. But mainly to show phone makers how stock android could function on phones. It has always been about the user experience.Everyone (well most) are dumping on the Pixel 4 because everyone loves the Pixel lines but Google keep failing to deliver a real flagship device comparative to the price. For most, like me, its not dumping on it to be dumping on it. It's genuine disappointment at a phone that couldve been great if Google didnt cut corners.
That said, I still plan on getting one on Black Friday to test out myself.
And that’s fine, but then the Pixel should have been a continuation of the Nexus line and priced as a mid tier phone like the Nexus line. They shouldn’t up charge just for their software experience. It’s like they want to continue the Nexus tradition but start competing with Apple. I’ve said it here before but they need to either price like a Nexus, or keep it at flagship prices and add the hardware specs to justify it. I’d be fine either way but they can’t do both.I can see that...but the Pixel line has never really been about being a real flagship. But mainly to show phone makers how stock android could function on phones. It has always been about the user experience.
But I do agree with the Pixel being slightly overpriced.
Remember that Google has gone through changes in its leadership, and it’s now a more cunning for profit company than before. Remember the old Google, where they have many small but useful projects that they keep, and now they cut every single thing, even their own url shortener. The Nexus program is the old Google, their attempt to provide an inexpensive reference phone for developers. The new google saw it as an opportunity to profit, so they rebranded it into the Pixel lineup.
as for Google Play editions, those things weren’t popular to begin with. And Samsung probably doesn’t want their signature UI and hardware to be confused with stock Android. It was an experiment that didn’t go anywhere other than the tinkering geeks.
You are describing the Nexus program. The Pixel brand is no longer about developers, but more of a premium consumer brand, at least that is what Google wanted it to be. But clearly the team doesn’t have as sharp vision as a typical consumer companies like Apple our Samsung. So now they just rely on the youtubers (by sending them fancy packaging and demo units) and the premium pricing (without any real meaning of premium other than price).I can see that...but the Pixel line has never really been about being a real flagship. But mainly to show phone makers how stock android could function on phones. It has always been about the user experience.
But I do agree with the Pixel being slightly overpriced.
I would love to see them bring back the Google edition phones. But some phones would lose features not supported by stock Android.And that’s fine, but then the Pixel should have been a continuation of the Nexus line and priced as a mid tier phone like the Nexus line. They shouldn’t up charge just for their software experience. It’s like they want to continue the Nexus tradition but start competing with Apple. I’ve said it here before but they need to either price like a Nexus, or keep it at flagship prices and add the hardware specs to justify it. I’d be fine either way but they can’t do both.
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Google play editions weren’t unsuccessful because they were only for “tinkering geeks”. They were unsuccessful because they came out during a time when nobody bought phones outright. Everyone was buying subsidized phones on two year plans through a carrier. So seeing a $500 + phone with no way to finance was never going to sell well. Plus almost everyone bought (and still does) their phones through the carrier and the google play editions were only available through Google.
Google play editions were so google can show off stock android to the masses to see what Google had in mind. But they didn’t have the hardware division to put out their own devices yet.
That’s not surprising. The specs and pricing and bend resistance and quality control and batteries are crap, yet Pixels seem to be partly made of Pixie dust.Pixel 4 XL second opinion review: The Android phone I can't stop using
Google's Pixel 4 XL is an expensive phone with bad battery life. It's not for everyone and I fully understand the criticisms it's received, but in spite of all that, it's the Android ...www.androidcentral.com
Mentioned this in the OnePlus thread but my Black Friday purchase is between this and the OnePlus 7 pro. Which should I get? Hopefully someone here has owned both and can give me a breakdown.
Oneplus is currently $150 off and the Pixel will be $200 off plus I have a $100 Google store credit.
That and the $100 google store credit is why I’ll probably lean that direction. I played with both in stores and really it just made me lean more towards the Note 10 plus. The display on that thing is ridiculous. The Pixel wasn’t underwhelming but it wasn’t anything special. Still, with another little one on the way soon having a good camera is a must. I wouldn’t even have second thoughts if the video recording wasn’t so awful.