![]() The GPU is getting updated from the Pixel 6's ARM Mali MP20 to an ARM Mali G710 MP07. There's maybe 150 MHz difference in there somewhere compared to last year, and new medium cores (they were A76), but that's the same dual-X1 CPU setup as the Pixel 6. The Pixel 6 introduced the Google Tensor SoC, and now the Pixel 7 has a "Google Tensor G2." Unlike every other chip manufacturer/designer, Google isn't changing up the CPU cores year to year, so the second-gen Tensor still has two "big" 2.85 GHz X1 cores, two "medium" Cortex A78 cores at 2.35 GHz, and four small Cortex A55 cores at 1.8 GHz. Google says the 7 Pro camera bar is polished aluminum, while the base model Pixel 7 has a sandblasted matte finish. The Pixel 6's one big sheet of glass over the camera lenses could lead to some light glare across your photos, so these smaller, more isolated lenses seem designed to prevent that. So what changes are there over the Pixel 6? The headline feature is the new aluminum camera bar, which replaces the old glass and plastic camera bar from the Pixel 6. Now, though, Google Hardware has matured to the point where operations are stable enough to make an iterative flagship, and that's probably going to be the story of the Pixel 7. The company's hardware division has dramatically changed phone hardware year to year, which often wasn't by choice since it would bounce from one manufacturer to another. ![]() The Pixel 7 is an evolution of the Pixel 6, with the same sizes, prices, and basic design. ![]() The devices ship on October 13, and Google is also doing a little better with the device's country distribution.įirst, though, the phones. The big news is that the prices aren't changing: It's $599 for the Pixel 7 and $899 for the Pixel 7 Pro, which still makes both phones a very good deal. ![]() While these phones were technically officially announced forever ago, Google came clean about all the details today. The Google Pixel 7 and 7 Pro have been officially unveiled. ![]()
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