In addition to a whole bunch of Pixel 9 phones, Google launched the Pixel Watch 3 and Pixel Buds Pro 2 at its Made by Google event today. Here’s the lowdown on what’s new, what’s interesting, and what Google has to say about the products beyond their AI connection.
Pixel Watch 3
There are many fitness, smart home, and AI features on the new Pixel Watch 3, but let’s get to the important new stuff: Pixel Recorder. That means, in situations where you aren’t being creepy, using your watch to record a note to self, a conversation, a bit of a song, or whatever else on your watch. You can then play the recording back and get the transcription on your Pixel phone.
The other feature that isn’t about running a marathon or asking a language model for help is UWB (ultra wideband) phone unlocking with the Pixel Watch 3. That should mean relatively responsive unlocks on your phone, but not if you’re a measurably far distance from it.
As for the actual watch, it now comes in 41 mm and 45 mm sizes, with 16 percent smaller bezels and 40 percent more actively usable space on the 45mm watch. It will pick up Nest Cam and Doorbell notifications and let you talk through them (pending various lag/connection realities). The Watch 3 can access Google Maps while offline. It promises 24 hours of always-on battery life, or 36 in Battery Saver mode.
If you’re actively using the Pixel Watch 3 for fitness and run tracking, there are more features than fit here. For starters, you get six months of Fitbit Premium. Run tracking now also watches your cadence and stride length and does other motion sensing. The Watch 3 does “cardio load tracking” and balances it against recovery needs, sleep, and heart rate metrics.
Pixel Buds Pro 2
As with every other device Google is launching, the marquee pitch for the Pixel Buds Pro 2 is that they’re Gemini-ready and Gemini-friendly. There’s a good deal more about them that’s notable, however.
That same “Tensor AI” chip that makes them ready to convey your desires to your phone (or Google’s servers) supposedly let Google shrink these Buds 27 percent, making them lighter and improving their battery life to a purported 8 hours of active noise canceling (ANC). That noise canceling should also be better than on previous models, with a “Silent Seal 2.0” fit that cancels “twice as much noise as before” and “a wider range of noises,” including higher frequencies.
How do they actually sound? Better than Pixel Buds Pro, Google says. They have 11 mm drivers, and the Tensor chip “adds an additional path for music,” which “allows it to bypass the Silent Seal processing chain,” the company says. Sure! Phone calls should definitely get better, as the Clear Calling feature now sorts noise on both sides of a call. And Conversation Detection will automatically pause your audio when you start talking to somebody and will resume automatically after you stop talking (something AirPods Pro notably do not do).
When and how much
Google’s smaller Pixel fall products are available next month at these prices and on these dates:
- Pixel Watch 3 ($349 at 41 mm, $399 for 45 mm, $100 extra for LTE): September 10
- Pixel Buds Pro 2 ($299): September 26
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