Google also says that the phone’s Real Tone facial filters are more accurate, too. Like last year, this works rather well in a pinch, although if lighting conditions are a bit on the dark side, it can struggle a bit. The Pixel’s Photo Unblur feature has been expanded, too, allowing you to de-smudge faces in images you’ve taken on previous phones in the Google Photos app. This makes a massive difference, allowing you to capture an extremely dark night-time picture in the blink of an eye, as opposed to previously having to hold the phone still for a few seconds in order to get a decent image. The Pixel 7 Pro’s low-light shooting has also seen a major improvement, with reduced visual noise and motion blur courtesy of twice as fast image capture via Night Sight. An octa-core CPU, Google has boosted the clock speed to 2.85GHz (compared to last year’s 2.8GHz) and the on-chip AI and machine learning algorithms are said to be much faster, too. READ NEXT: Our pick of the best Android smartphones available Google Pixel 7 Pro review: Performance and battery lifeĪs I mentioned above, Google’s second-gen Tensor chipset, the G2, makes its first appearance inside the Pixel 7 Pro. The default Adaptive display mode dials overall colour saturation up a notch, but even with this setting engaged, things look pretty darn good.īrightness is massively improved over last year’s model, too, with a recorded peak luminance of 903cd/m² in auto brightness mode, and a huge 1,023cd/m² when displaying HDR content – that’s a 35% increase. When tested against the sRGB colour space in the phone’s Natural display profile, the Pixel 7 Pro recorded an average Delta E of 0.89, with an sRGB gamut coverage of 93% and a total volume of 93.2%. What’s even more predictable is that yet again this is an outstanding screen in terms of colour performance. What about Samsung, then? The Galaxy S22 Plus is still kicking about after launching at the beginning of the year, and this can now be picked up for around £800 or so. The regular iPhone 14 is the same price at £849, but that handset is an entirely different kettle of fish with a smaller 60Hz screen, smaller battery, only two cameras and the same chipset as last year’s iPhone 13. How does this price stack up against the competition? Quite favourably, as it turns out: the iPhone 14 Pro is the closest fit, and it starts at £1,099 – £250 more than the Pixel. With manufacturing costs and RRPs spiralling out of control at the moment, this is a welcome change of pace – and a huge sigh of relief for diminishing wallets. That’s £849 for those keeping count, but Google has to be commended for sticking to the same price as 2021’s Pixel 6 Pro ( now £627). These extra features and upgrades will cost you, however, with the Pixel 7 Pro costing £150 more than the regular model. £627.00 Check price Google Pixel 7 Pro review: Price and competition
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