Advertisement

Google enters foldable market with $1,799 Pixel phone to rival Samsung

A person holds a foldable phone
With the Pixel Fold phone, unveiled Wedesday at Google I/O event in Mountain View, Calif., Google is aiming to stand out with a larger front screen and camera.
(Jeff Chiu / Associated Press)
Share via

Alphabet Inc.’s Google introduced a $1,799 foldable smartphone, a new entry-level Pixel phone and a tablet for the home, its latest attempt to drive hardware sales in an arena saturated by Apple Inc. and Samsung Electronics Co.

Launched at Wednesday’s Google I/O conference, the Pixel Fold is Google’s first entry into the growing foldables category and comes with a 7.6-inch main display and a 5.8-inch external panel. Google touts this as the thinnest foldable in the markets where it will be sold, which include the U.S., United Kingdom, Germany and Japan.

The company also rolled out its first Pixel-branded tablet and a $499 Pixel 7a, trickling down its 2022 flagship phone’s features to a more affordable price point. The three devices use an in-house chip known as the Tensor G2.

Advertisement

The move into the pricier foldables category marks a strategy shift for Google, which has focused on undercutting the cost of rival devices. The Pixel Fold is Google’s most expensive handset to date, matching the price of Samsung’s latest Galaxy Z Fold4 and including high-end specifications including 512 gigabytes of onboard storage. Samsung remains the sales leader in foldables — with 79% of the market last year, according to IDC — having kicked off the category four years ago with the Galaxy Fold.

Foldables make up only 1% of smartphone shipments. IDC estimates shipments will more than triple from 2022, to roughly 50 million units annually, by 2027. That would still be less than 4% of the market, but would account for a $42-billion slice because they fetch higher prices.

People who spent way too much time online are suddenly obsessed with Bluesky, a social media app that looks and feels like early Twitter.

“Foldables are a pricing dream,” said Neil Mawston, director of research at Strategy Analytics. “We predict foldables will account for an outsized 5% of all smartphone wholesale revenues worldwide this year.”

Advertisement

In a presentation, Google said that its foldable’s distinguishing features are its screen technology and cameras. The company has built a library of AI-powered camera features — such as its Magic Eraser, which can remove unwanted elements in photos for a neater composition — that it says make its hardware a leader. Still, Samsung’s comparable foldable device has slightly better image sensor specifications.

Foldable phones typically have an external display for quick tasks and can fold open to a tablet-sized interior screen. Google’s Pixel Fold is wider than Samsung’s latest model, users of which have complained that its narrowness makes it harder to use. The Pixel Fold also includes features such as face unlock, a fingerprint scanner and a promised 24 hours of battery life.

Google boasted that its device’s hinge is more durable than those on competing products and that more than 50 of its own apps are optimized for the foldable display.

Advertisement

Google is also banking on two more conventional devices as it attempts again to make headway in the hardware market. The Pixel 7a looks like last year’s Pixel 7 but uses more basic components and trims back the list of features. Its screen is 25% brighter than the preceding model and has a faster, 90-hertz refresh rate. There’s also face unlock, enhanced camera zoom and a 64-megapixel rear camera, making it one of the more compelling low-end smartphones.

Richard Montañez has for years told a story of how he dreamed up Flamin’ Hot Cheetos while working as a Frito-Lay janitor. The archival record, former employees and Frito-Lay itself say otherwise.

A year after announcing the product, Google shared more details about its tablet. The device’s specifications — including the company’s G2 processor, 128GB of storage, 8MP front and rear cameras and hardware design — are by this point dated compared with rival devices. Its price — $499 — also eclipses some iPad models, though the Google device includes a home dock to stand it upright. While docked, the device will be geared toward video watching, controlling appliances and viewing photo slideshows.

Advertisement