Companies don’t like losses, and Google has been among the hardest hit by losses in recent years, to the point where it has started teasing its upcoming smartphones and other devices just to somehow stay ahead of the loss curve. And yet, he continues to lose the war steadily.
A couple of images showing a prototype Pixel 8 Pro leaked onto Reddit today. They’ve since been deleted, along with the account that posted them, and that’s generally a good indication that we’re not dealing with fakes here.
The Pixel 8 Pro certainly is a Pixel, judging by these images, and definitely of the Pro variety, with its three rear cameras. The design is still the iconic Pixel design with the camera “visor” or “huge camera island going from side to side”, whichever definition you like more.
This is clearly a prototype, as labeled, and is “for testing/evaluation only”. The “product review” field shows “husky”, a codename known to belong to the Pixel 8 Pro. This prototype has 12GB of LPDDR5 RAM made by Samsung and 128GB of UFS storage made by SK Hynix.
Since this is not intended for sale and since the Pixel 8 Pro is still in development, don’t take every detail of this device too seriously – the strange pattern on the rear glass could be some sort of leak prevention (more like … LOSE identificationactually) coding and color doesn’t look like something Google would do in 2023 with so little contrast between parts.
But that should be a good indication that the Pixel 8 Pro’s design will stay close to that of its predecessor. Remember, the Pixel 8 and Pixel 8 Pro are only expected to launch in October, so there’s still plenty of time to see them in more exciting leaks between now and then.
By the way, according to previously leaked information, that circular patch under the LED flash array is an infrared thermometer. The Pixel 8 Pro was said to feature a 6.7-inch 1344×2992 120Hz OLED display, an updated 50MP main rear camera with Samsung’s ISOCELL GN2 sensor, a 64MP Sony IMX787 sensor for l It’s ultrawide and has the same 11MP 5x zoom sensor and selfie snapper optics as its predecessor.
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