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How does everyone feel about Google Pixel phones?

Previously on Lemmy:

Past Discussions:

Sorry for the delay for the weekly. Server’s not that stable right now, maybe we should start the thread on Sundays instead.

I always like to switch things up once in a while because it’s fun. So, let’s get back to the brand discussion this week for the Google Pixel. We’ll do a discussion on repairability next week. Again, ideas are always welcome here.

I’ve never used a Pixel, but people around here should know that I’ve been very critical of Google’s product decisions over the years, and the Pixel is no exception. In my point of view, discontinuing the Nexus series, buying out the talents from the remains of HTC and starting an official “made by Google” phone is the equivalent of reddit buying out Alien Blue to make the official reddit app. I think it’s the event that scared big Android manufacturers like Samsung enough to start making their own ecosystem away from Google, as they are concerned that Google may start locking software features to their own phones instead of improving Android overall (rightfully so, I might add).

It really makes no business sense at all to turn your manufacturing partners into your competitors, but then again, it’s Google.

With that being said, the first years of the Pixels has been marred with growing pains. Whereas the Nexus line has always been barebones, no frills development devices, it seemed to me that the people who made Pixels don’t even use Android and are insistent on turning Pixel into iPhones, removing the headphone jack on the Pixel 2 despite the antagonistic ad from the original Pixel, Pixel exclusive software features like Google camera that necessitating the need of rom mods, as well as the quality issues that seems to be inherited from the Nexus days just really soured me from considering Pixels, as I think it’s against the spirit of openness that made Android great.

But it seems like in recent years, they finally figured out that a large percentage of people who bought Androids not because they can’t afford iPhones, but because they like Android, and I see the introduction of the “a” series as progress. The recent Pixel ad campaign also made me think that they finally figuring it out: people want different things, trying to turn Android into worse versions of iPhones was not going to work, so they should be trying to make the best Android for Android users instead.

(It’s also the reason I think all the previous reddit clones failed, but Lemmy will be the one that finally succeeds.)

techgearwhips ,

The fingerprint sensor on my P6 was trash. Then somehow when I upgraded to the P7 with that Best Buy deal… The fingerprint sensor was even worse. Deal breaker for me. The only reason I’m not using a Pixel device right now.

BubblyMango ,

Can confirm 6’s fingerprint sensors sucks. It gets worse when you put a screen shield on (it has an option to adjust the fingerprint sensor to having a screen shield. It still sucks even with it on).

specseaweed ,

I’ve been with Pixel since it started, Nexus before that, and a Palm Pre before that.

There is ALWAYS ALWAYS ALWAYS some random hardware bug with Pixels that most people seem to not have but if you have it, it absolutely sucks. The speaker buzz. The display gap. The fingerprint sensor. The camera glass shattering for no reason at all. I’ve had them all and I finally went to Sammy with an S22, which I hate.

I wish Google had never bought HTC and brought hardware in house. I think they would be much better able to strongarm hardware partners if they weren’t competing against them with their own hardware.

jmsy ,

I only had Nexus or Pixel (Nexus 2, Nexus 5x, Pixel 2, Pixel 4) phones for about 10 years. The clean interface, and supreme photo quality was great, but they always seemed to have some sort of hardware error and shitty battery life. I switched to a GalaxyS20FE and realized bloatware (at least in the samsung case) is minimal and easy to hide. My next phone will either be a samsung or pixel. It depends on price and reviews.

KingJalopy ,

always seemed to have some sort of hardware error

I got a pixel 6a recently and within 1 month my back camera quit working. Open camera app and it says something went wrong. Tried everything but it’s fried apparently. Selfie camera still works but I can’t take normal pictures. Otherwise I love the phone.

dinckelman ,

Not entirely positive. I own 3 separate Pixel 2XL units, and before that i’ve had two Nexus 6P. The experience is pretty much exactly what people will tell you. Everything seems perfect at first, but as time goes on, issues come up, and they don’t go away.

On the Pixel, the battery life and battery degradation were the worst offender. Fingerprint scanner would occasionally either refuse to work, or start working significantly worse over time, requiring a factory reset. Never had modem issues personally, but the network coverage always felt worse than with other devices. Not gonna go into the display tint drama, because that’s just a bad display, but that did suck. The burn-in, even at 75% brightness, was absolutely horrible though. One of the 3 devices had the power button stop working completely.

My 6P didn’t live for too long though. I, unfortunately broke my first unit, due to my own fault, however I still possess the second one, albeit it’s completely unusable, as it has the battery drain defect. The device doesn’t hold charge, and shuts down at anywhere between 25 and 50%, showing 0% on reboot.

Even with all of that in mind, I would still consider a Pixel in the future, but issues like this have appeared in basically every Pixel generation yet, and it’s not a good look, especially considering the price

Kangy ,

I swapped to a Pixel 7 Pro from a Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra after having serious stutter and performance issues with my S22.so far I’ve loved it and it’s performed so much better than the S22 I had.

I do miss the customisation Samsung had with Good Lock modules though. Maybe I’ll have to look into rooting my phone unless I can find a no root alternative.

Long story short it’s been around 6 months and I’m still very happy with it.

techgearwhips , (edited )

I haven’t had a Samsung device since the S7 TouchWiz days. You’re telling me there’s still lag in the spec’d out top end devices all these years later?

Kangy ,

There was on mine at least. It would overheat if on an extended video call and shut down all running apps until it was cool again. Sent it off to Samsung who replaced the main board (which I assume is the one that has the CPU ram and GPU attached) but the issues still persisted. My S22 ultra performed worse that my Note 10+ 5G.

To say I was disappointed in the performance is a drastic understatement considering the price of the phone

techgearwhips ,

Crazy

Pixel ,

They are known to die randomly, as mine has. So I’m cautious about jumping in again, sadly

JackOfAllTraits ,
@JackOfAllTraits@lemmy.world avatar

I love Pixel phones. I use a 5a 5G for myself and got a 7a for my fiance yestarday. I really love them for:

  • Unlockable bootloader - I can get Calyx on it and use a perfectly good phone with good specs wirhout any spysoftware, online accounts or closed source programs.
  • Good Battery
  • Awesome camera
CallateCoyote ,
@CallateCoyote@lemmy.world avatar

Just got the Pixel 6a when it was super cheap for Prime Day because my Note 9 was acting up even after a factory reset and wouldn’t hold a charge for the day. I love it. It does everything I need a phone to do and is zippy fast. I don’t see myself every spending a lot of money on a phone again unless it has some revolutionary new feature… but I think those days are over. If this line stays affordable and high quality, I’ll probably go for another with my next phone too

Michal ,

Initially i bought nexus/pixel phones for clean android experience and no bloat.

Staying with pixel mainly for camera quality and free storage on Google Photos.

Its not ideal, but I’m used to it. They never try to do something too gimmicky and it feels like phone made by Google will work best with the os made by google so my experience will be most consistent, but i haven’t tried other phones in a while.

TheHottub ,
@TheHottub@lemmy.world avatar

Using pixel 6 pro. It’s fine. I’m happy not to have all the bloated janky apps that come on other phones.

Quill0 ,
@Quill0@lemmy.digitalfall.net avatar

Same here.

Bonus is I can root it and replace the firmware if I want to without blowing an eFuse and it useless work work or pay if I flash it back

forgotaboutlaye ,

Also on a P6P. Only complaint is the sluggish fingerprint reader, but I’m used to it by now.

Really hope that Google will eventually start offering more than 2yrs of updates though. Otherwise, happy with the phone.

Treczoks ,

I’ve got a Pixel 4a, which is definitely older than two years, and I still get security- and feature-updates.

nodiratime ,

In the first winter, the shipped camera app crashed the phone. That was fun. Also, battery life is still… Only okayish. Would buy again though, awesome otherwise.

davidgro ,

When I finally had to leave my dying old phone (LG V20 from 2016) the Pixel 7 phones were about to be released, so I preordered a P7Pro. It’s been really good to me so far.
Reception is at least as good as my last phone, fingerprint reader works nearly every time on the first try, battery life is… Ok (but I work it really hard) root was easy (one of my primary criteria for phone shopping), etc.

There are certainly things I lost in the move, but most of them I’d lose with any modern flagship phone: Removable battery, headphone jack, IR port, 100% usable screen area. And one loss that is specific to the P7 phones for now, but will eventually be all of them: 32-bit apps.

Android 13 does have some annoying restrictions that Android 8 did not, but it also has a lot of improvements (including general stability) and of course 12 GB of RAM can do much more than 4 could, so that’s a nice upgrade.

droans ,

Really wish LG didn’t screw up their entire phone division. The V series was fantastic for audio.

davidgro ,

Yup. I also really liked the “second screen” method of handling the camera cutout

k0mprssd ,

ive owned a pixel 2 xl, 4, 5, and currently on a 6 xl, ive enjoyed my pixels but (mostly in the case with the 4 and 5) they have some sorta dealbreaker. my 2 xl was great but the regular sized 4 was notorious for horrible battery, which it definitely had, so i got a 5 when it came out which was a decent phone but i wanted more speed and 120hz so when the 6 series came out i thought it would be a good upgrade to stay on. at first the bugs were kinda bad but they’ve been ironed out. at this point im just sad my bootloader is locked so i cant install grapheneos 😔 as for whether i wanna stay with pixels, i dont enjoy googles spying so if another good pixel comes out thats worth upgrading to in a few years comes out i may get an unlocked one, or just jump ship entirely

richteratmosphere ,
@richteratmosphere@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

I currently use a Pixel 6. Before that, I had the 4XL, 3, and 1XL.

I like:

The camera and camera software, having the option of using Beta versions of Android before they are fully released, being able to unlock the bootloader, and relatively quick security and OS updates.

I don’t like:

How the camera section of the back of the phone protrudes. Makes holding the phone unpleasant ergonomically. I also don’t like how Google isn’t including Android version updates and only security patch updates near the end of life of the phone. They should do both.

CCatMan ,

I may get hate for this, but pixel phones work easiest for my parents. I make sure they are using similar generation pixels and they real never have any issues.

If they can use the pixel 6 and 6a without issues, I’m convinced Google is doing some good in this world.

I’ve got a 7 and my partner has a 6 Pro. No issues except the occasional phone not charging, but the issue seems to be less now a days.

Bianca_0089 ,

A family member has one, nobody else does. Something we all notice is that a lot of our text messages fail to deliver to that one specific family member. Are they unreliable for texting?

rigamarole ,

Pixel 7 Pro here. Nobody has mentioned to me about messages failing. That’s not to say it isn’t happening, just that no one has said anything. I absolutely love the phone, for what it’s worth.

Bianca_0089 , (edited )

I reaaly wonder what could be going wrong with their phone. Maybe it got dropped on the concrete a whole lot xD

Well in the meantime I just now found an option that ‘sends SMS if RCS fails to deliver’ so I’ll just enable that and see what happens. Yaaaay experimentssss

Nevermore9197 ,

My pixel 6a seems to be struggling with that, mostly due to that new style of messengering. I can’t remember now what it’s called. But disabling it and switching back to just SMS remedies it.

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