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Pixel 7 Settings: A Deep Dive Into Customizing Your New Phone

Get the most out of your Google Pixel with a few tweaks to its out-of-the-box settings.

This story is part of 12 Days of Tips, helping you make the most of your tech, home and health during the holiday season.

Google’s Pixel devices are already straightforward and easy to use, but digging into the settings can help you tailor certain aspects of your phone to your taste. For example, you can optimize your phone’s storage, increase the screen’s refresh rate (or decrease it to save battery life) and use the volume key as a shortcut for the camera.

Google launched the Pixel 7 and 7 Pro in October, and both phones include a refreshed design, face unlock, the new Tensor G2 processor and improved cameras. But many of these settings options below should also be available on older devices too, including the Pixel 6 lineup.

Follow the steps below to learn more about how to get the most out of your new Pixel.

Turn on themed icons to make your icons match your wallpaper

One of the biggest features that debuted in 2021’s Android 12 update is Material You, which customizes the software’s color palette to match your wallpaper. To give your app icons a colorful refresh, long-press any empty space on your Pixel 7’s home screen. Then tap Wallpaper & style and make sure the switch next to Themed icons is toggled on. Now app icons on the home screen should match your wallpaper. You’ll notice that some elements within certain apps — like the keyboard in Messages and Gmail’s Compose button — will have colored accents that match your wallpaper, too.

Unlock your Pixel 7 just by looking at it

Google’s Pixel 7 and 7 Pro both support face unlock, unlike last year’s Pixel 6 and Pixel 6 Pro. If you own a Pixel 7 and haven’t set it up yet, you can do so by launching the Settings menu and tapping Security. Tap Face and fingerprint unlock and enter your PIN. From there, choose the Face Unlock option to register your face to your phone.

Google cautions, however, that your phone can be unlocked by someone who looks like you, such as a sibling, when using this feature. As such, the Pixel 7’s face unlock functionality is meant just for quickly unlocking your phone rather than authenticating payments and other transactions. That makes it significantly different than Apple’s Face ID, which creates a depth map of your face by «projecting and analyzing thousands of invisible dots,» according to Apple’s support page.

Use Quick Phrases to dismiss an alarm or phone call without saying, ‘Hey, Google’

We’ve all been there. It’s 6 a.m., your alarm starts blaring and you barely have the energy to reach for your phone. Google makes this a little easier on the Pixel lineup by enabling you to pause or dismiss an alarm by simply saying, «Snooze» or «Stop» without requiring the «Hey, Google» trigger phrase. You can do the same for phone calls by saying «Answer» or «Decline» without having to grab your device.

To turn this on, open the Settings menu and choose Apps. Then, select Assistant and tap Quick phrases. You should see options for alarms and timers and incoming calls. Tap the switch next to each one to enable this feature.

Read more: Best Android Phones in 2022

Have Google Assistant wait on hold for you and transcribe automated phone menus

Tired of waiting on hold? Try using Google’s Hold For Me feature, which has Google Assistant wait on hold and then notify you when a customer representative becomes available. If you don’t want to remember which number to punch the next time you’re sitting through automated voice prompts, you can also turn on Direct My Call. This transcribes automated menus so that you don’t have to remember which number to press to get directed to the correct extension. Direct My Call should work even faster on the Pixel 7 and 7 Pro, since Google says these phones may show some transcriptions before they’re even spoken.

Both of these features are accessible from the Pixel’s phone app. Hold For Me works on the Pixel 3 and later, while Direct My Call is available on the Pixel 3A and later. Open the Phone app and tap the three dots in the top right corner to get started. Choose Settings and you should see Hold for Me and Direct My Call under the Assistive section.

The Direct My Call feature seems promising, but it only works for toll-free numbers in English right now. That can make its transcriptions a bit confusing since many automated phone menus typically read options in Spanish, too.

Read more: Best Wireless Earbuds

Choose whether you want to extend battery life or boost performance

Google’s Pixel phones can optimize battery life depending on how you use your phone. While that’s a useful perk, there may be times when you’d prefer to turn this feature off so that you can get better performance out of your device. You can turn this setting on or off anytime by opening the Settings menu, choosing Battery and tapping Adaptive preferences.

Turn on Smart Storage to avoid running out of space

If you take a lot of photos and videos, you know how precious your device’s storage space can be. As one way to deal with that problem, you can choose to have your Pixel phone automatically delete old photos to free up space. If you enable this feature, your Pixel device will erase photos backed up to your Google Photos account that have been on your device for 60 days if your phone’s storage is less than 25%.

To turn this on, open Settings, choose Storage and tap Free up space. Then tap the menu icon in the top left corner and select Settings. Toggle the switch next to Smart Storage.

More from 12 Days of Tips:

Use Storage Saver to optimize your Pixel’s photo and video storage

If you want to save space, there’s another option: Enable Storage Saver on your Pixel device. This changes settings that use large amounts of storage, such as saving RAW images as JPEG and recording videos in 1080p instead of 4K. If you care more about saving space than having the best resolution possible, you might want to try this.

Launch the Camera app and tap the settings icon in the top left corner. Then, tap More settings and select Device storage. Toggle the switch next to Storage Saver.

Customize what happens when you press the volume key while taking photos

You can use the volume button to snap a photo, adjust the zoom or control the audio volume on your Pixel device. Open the Camera app, press the Settings icon and choose More settings. Then, choose Gestures and select Volume key action to choose your preferred option.

Make sure your Pixel’s screen automatically switches orientation when needed

Few things can be more annoying than having your phone stuck in portrait mode when you’re holding it in landscape mode to watch a video. Avoid this on your Pixel phone by opening the Settings menu, choosing Display and tapping Auto-rotate screen. You can also choose to turn on face detection to make autorotate more accurate. Google says images used in face detection are never stored or sent to the company.

Identify songs playing nearby on the lock screen

Ever heard a song playing at a restaurant and wondered what it’s called? Google Pixel devices can recognize songs and display the name of the song and artist on your phone’s lock screen. Open the Settings menu, choose Display and tap Lock screen. Press Now Playing and toggle on the switch next to Identify songs playing nearby.

Choose whether you want smoother scrolling or longer battery life

Certain Pixel devices can boost their refresh rates to enable faster scrolling and smoother animations, which makes the software generally feel more responsive. The Pixel 7 can bump its refresh rate up to 90Hz like the Pixel 6, while the Pixel 7 Pro can go up to 120Hz just like the Pixel 6 Pro. But since this feature increases battery usage, there are times when you might want to turn it off.

To access this option, open the Settings menu and choose Display. Scroll down to Smooth Display and toggle the switch to turn it on or off. This feature isn’t available on the Pixel 6A.

Add captions to videos, podcasts and phone calls

Google’s Live Caption feature generates captions for media playing on your device, and it works on older Pixels dating back to the second-generation model. It’s an accessibility feature, and it can also be useful for times when you’re stuck without headphones and need to hear the content of a video or podcast in a public setting. To turn this on, press the volume button and tap the Live Caption icon, which looks like a speech bubble. Just remember that using Live Caption can use additional battery resources.

Edit your quick settings to easily access shortcuts

Pulling down from the top of the screen will launch the quick settings menu. Tap the pencil icon to edit this menu and add the settings you use most often. Google offers a wide variety of options ranging from battery saver to enabling and disabling the microphone and accessing alarms. Here you’ll find staples including airplane mode, Bluetooth and Wi-Fi.

Looking for more advice for your other Google devices? Check out our tips for boosting your productivity on Chromebooks and getting the most out of your Google Nest.

Technologies

Silksong, Long-Awaited Hollow Knight Spinoff, Gets Release Date: Sept. 4

Announced in 2019, Team Cherry’s follow-up is coming sooner than expected, and it’s on Game Pass on Day 1.

Hollow Knight: Silksong is the follow-up, announced back in 2019, to one of the most beloved indie games of the last decade. In a special announcement video on Thursday, Australian developer Team Cherry revealed that the wait is almost over. 

Silksong will be released on Sept. 4, according to the new trailer. The almost two-minute video reveals some of the new enemies and bosses in the upcoming spinoff and ends with the surprise release date. 

Originally, Silksong was going to be a DLC for Hollow Knight. However, numerous delays resulted in it being pushed back again and again. Glimpses of the game would show up here and there over the years, but it was this year that it received the most attention from Nintendo as part of its Switch 2 lineup, and from Microsoft, which confirmed it would be available on Xbox Game Pass. 

Hollow Knight: Silksong will be available on PC, Switch, Switch 2, Xbox One, Xbox Series X and Series S, PS4 and PS5. It will be available on Day 1 for Xbox Game Pass subscribers. 

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Technologies

PS5 Prices Go Up Today. Here’s How Much and Why

You can expect to pay more for a new PlayStation, thanks to «a challenging economic environment.»

Sony will increase the prices of its PlayStation 5 consoles in the US, starting today. This follows the trend of console manufacturers such as Microsoft and Nintendo raising prices for their hardware in response to tariffs. 

The PlayStation-maker posted about the price change Wednesday. The jump in price is $50 more than the current price for each model.

The new prices are:

«Similar to many global businesses, we continue to navigate a challenging economic environment,» Sony said in a post about the price increase. 

As of Thursday morning, retailers and Sony’s online store have yet to update the console prices. This jump in price also will likely affect recently released PS5 bundles such as the Astro Bot bundle and Fortnite Cobal bundle

Sony says accessories have not been affected by the change and this cost hike only affects the US. 

In May, Microsoft increased the price of the Xbox Series consoles and Nintendo hiked the original Switch console price and Switch 2 accessories this month.

While the companies didn’t point to the tariffs instituted by President Donald Trump as the reason for the hardware price jump, it would explain the trend in recent months. 

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Technologies

Google Thinks AI Can Make You a Better Photographer: I Dive Into the Pixel 10 Cameras

The camera specs for the Pixel 10 series reveal only a small part of what’s new for mobile photographers. I spoke with the head of the Pixel camera team to learn more.

If a company releases new phone models but doesn’t change the cameras, would anyone pay attention? Fortunately that’s not the case with Google’s new Pixel 10, Pixel 10 Pro and Pixel 10 Pro Fold phones, which make a few advancements in the hardware — hello, telephoto camera on the base-level Pixel for the first time — and also in the software that runs it all, with generative AI playing an even bigger role than it has before.

«This is the first year where not only are we able to achieve some image quality superlatives,» Isaac Reynolds, group product manager for the Pixel cameras, told CNET, «but we’re actually able to make you a better photographer, because generative AI and large models can do things and understand levels of context that no technology before could achieve.»

Modern smartphone cameras must be more than glass and sensors, because they have to compensate for the physical limitations of those same glass and sensors. You can’t expect a tiny phone camera to perform as well as a large glass lens on a traditional camera, and yet the photos coming out of the Pixel 10 models surpass their optical abilities. In a call that covered a lot of photographic ground, Reynolds shared with me details about new features as well as issues of how we can trust images when AI — in Google’s own tools, even — is so prevalent.

Pro Res Zoom adds generative AI to reach 100x

The new Pro Res Zoom feature is likely to get the most attention because it strives for something exceptionally difficult in smartphones: long-range zoom that isn’t a fuzzy mess of pixels.

You see this all the time: Someone on their phone spreads two fingers against the screen to make a distant object larger in the frame. Photographers die a little each time that happens because, by not sticking to the main zoom levels — 1x, 2x, 5x and so on — the person is relying on digital zoom; the camera app is making pixels larger and then using software to try to clean up the result. Digital zoom is certainly better than it once was, but each time it’s used, the person sacrifices image quality for more zoom in the moment.

Google’s Super Res Zoom feature, introduced with the Pixel 3, interpolates and sharpens the image up to 30x zoom level on the Pixel 10 Pros (and up to 20x zoom on the Pixel 10 and Pixel 10 Pro Fold). The new Pro Res Zoom on the Pixel 10 Pro pushes way beyond that to 100x zoom — with a significant lift from AI.

Past 30x, Pro Res Zoom uses generative AI to refine and rebuild areas of the image based on the underlying pixels captured by the camera sensor. It’s similar to the technology that Magic Editor uses when you move an object to another area in the image, or type a prompt to add things that weren’t there in the first place. Only in this case, the Pixel Camera app creates a generative AI version of what you captured to give the image crisp lines and features. All the processing is performed on-device.

Reynolds explained that one of the factors driving the creation of Pro Res Zoom was the environments where people are taking photos. «They’re taking pictures in the same levels of low light — dinners did not get darker since we launched Night Sight,» he said. «But what is changing is how much people zoom, [and] because the tech is getting so much better, we took this opportunity to reset and refocus the program on incredible zoom quality.»

Pro Res Zoom works best on static scenes such as buildings, skylines, foliage and the like — things that don’t move. It won’t try to reconstruct faces or people, since generative AI can often make them stand out more as being artificially manipulated. The generated image is saved alongside the image captured by the camera sensor so you can choose which one looks best.

What about consistency and accuracy of the AI processing? Generative AI images are built out of pixel noise that is quickly refined based on the input driving them. Visual artifacts have often gone hand-in-six-fingered-hand with generated imagery.

But that’s a different kind of generative AI, says Reynolds. «When I think of Gen AI in this application, I think of something where the team has spent a couple of years getting it really tuned for exactly our use case, which is image enhancement, image to image.»

Initially, people inside Google were worried about artifacts, but the result is that «every image you see should be truly authentic to the real photo,» he said.

Auto Best Take

This new feature seems like a natural evolution — and by «natural,» I mean «processor speeds have improved enough to make it happen.» The Best Take feature was introduced with the Pixel 8, letting you capture several shots of a person or group of people, and have the phone merge them into one photo where everyone’s expressions look good. CNET’s Patrick Holland wrote in his review of the Pixel 8, «It’s the start of a path where our photography can be even more curated and polished, even if the photos we take don’t start out that way.»

That path has led to Auto Best Take, which does it automatically — and not just grabbing a handful of images to work with. Says Reynolds, «[It] can analyze… I think we’re up to 150 individual frames within just a few seconds, and pick the right five or six that are most likely to yield you the perfect photo. And then it runs Best Take.»

From the photographer’s point of view, the phone is doing all the work, though, as with Pro Res Zoom, you can also view the handful of shots that went into the final merged image if you’re not happy with the result. The shots are full-resolution and fully processed as if you’d snapped them individually.

«What’s interesting about this is you might actually find in your testing that Auto Best Take doesn’t trigger very often, and there’s a very particular reason for that,» said Reynolds. «Once the camera gets to look at 150 items, it’s probably going to find one where everybody was looking at the camera, because if there’s even one, it’ll pick it up.»

Improved Portrait mode and Real Tone

Another improvement enabled by the Pixel 10 Pro’s Tensor G5 processor is a new high-resolution Portrait mode. To take advantage of the wide camera’s 50-megapixel resolution, Reynolds said the Pixel team rebuilt the Portrait mode model so it creates a higher quality soft-background depth effect, particularly around a subject’s hair.

Real Tone, the technology for more accurately representing skin tones, is also incrementally better. As Reynolds explained, Real Tone has progressed from establishing color balances for people versus the other areas of a frame to individual color balances for each person in the image.

«That’s not just going to mean better consistency shot to shot, it means better consistency scene to scene,» he said, «because your color, your [skin] tone, won’t depend so strongly on the other things that happened in the image.»

He also mentioned that a core component of Real Tone has been the ability to scale up image quality testing methods and data collection in the process of bringing the feature’s algorithms to market.

«What standards are we setting for diversity and equity, inclusion across the entire feature set?» he said. «Real Tone is primarily a mission and a process.»

Instant View feature in the Pixel 10 Fold

One other significant photo hardware improvement has nothing to do with the cameras. On the Pixel 10 Pro Fold, the Pixel Camera app takes advantage of the large internal screen by showing the previous photo you captured on the left side of the display. Instead of straining to see details in a tiny thumbnail in the corner of the app, Instant View gives a full-size shot, which is especially helpful when you’re taking multiple photos of a person or subject.

Camera Coach

So far, these new Pixel 10 camera features are incorporated into the moment you capture a photo, but Reynolds also wants to use the phones’ cameras to encourage people to become better photographers. Camera Coach is an assistant that you can invoke when you’re stuck or looking for new ideas while photographing a scene.

It can look at the picture you’re trying to take and help you improve it using suggestions such as getting closer to a subject for better framing or moving the camera lower for a more dramatic angle. When you tap a Get Inspired button, the Pixel Camera app looks at the scene and makes suggestions.

«Whether you’re a beginner and you just need step-by-step instructions to learn how to do it,» said Reynolds, «or you’re someone like me who needs a little more push on the creativity when sometimes I’m busy or stressed, it helps me think creatively.»

CP2A content credentials

All of this AI being worked into the photographic process, from Pro Res Zoom to Auto Best Take, invariably brings up the unresolved question of whether the images we’re creating are genuine. And in a world that is now awash in AI-generated images that look real enough, people are naturally guarded about the provenance of digital images.

For Google, one answer is to label everything. Each image captured by the Pixel 10 cameras or touches Google Photos is tagged with C2PA Content Credentials (Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity), even if it’s untouched by AI. It’s the first smartphone with C2PA built in.

«We really wanted to make a big difference in transparency and credibility and teaching people what to expect from AI,» said Reynolds. «The reason we are so committed to saving this metadata in every Pixel camera picture is so people can start to be suspicious of pictures without any information.»

Marking images that have no AI editing is meant to instill trust in them. «The image with an AI label is less malicious than an image without one,» said Reynolds. «When you send a picture of someone, they can look at the C2PA in that picture. So we’re trying to build this whole network that customers can start to expect to have this information about where a photo came from.»

What’s new in the Pixel 10 camera hardware

Scanning the specs of the Pixel 10 cameras, listed below, you’d rightly notice that they match those found on last year’s Pixel 9 models, but a couple of details stand out.

For one, having a dedicated telephoto camera is no longer one of the features that separates the entry-level Pixel from the pro models. The Pixel 10 now has its own 10.8 megapixel, f/3.1 telephoto camera with optical image stabilization that offers a 5x optical zoom and up to 20x Super Res Zoom.

It’s not as good as the 48-megapixel f/2.8 telephoto camera used in the Pixel 10 Pro and Pixel 10 Pro XL (the same one used in the Pixel 9 Pros), but that’s not the point. You don’t need to give up extra zoom just to buy a more affordable phone.

Another difference you’ll encounter, particularly when recording video, is improved image stabilization. The optical image stabilization is upgraded in all three phones, but the stabilization in the Pixel 10 Pros is significantly improved. Although the sensor and lens share the same specs as the Pixel 9 Pro, the wide-angle camera in the Pixel 10 Pro models necessitated a new design to accommodate new OIS components inside the module enclosure. Google says it doubled the range of motion so the lens physically moves through a wider arc to compensate for motion. Alongside that, the stabilization software has been tuned to make it smoother.

Camera Specs for the Pixel 10 Lineup

Pixel 10 Pixel 10 Pro Pixel 10 Pro XL Pixel 10 Pro Fold
Wide Camera 48MP Quad PD, f/1.7, 1/2″ image sensor 50MP Octa PD, f/1.68, 1/1.3″ image sensor 50MP Octa PD, f/1.68, 1/1.3″ image sensor 48MP Quad PD, f/1.7, 1/2″ image sensor
Ultra-wide Camera 13MP Quad PD, f/2.2, 1/3.1″ image sensor 48MP Quad PD with autofocus, f/1.7, 1/2.55″ image sensor 48MP Quad PD with autofocus, f/1.7, 1/2.55″ image sensor 10.5MP Dual PD with autofocus, f/2.2, 1/3.4″ image sensor
Telephoto Camera 10.8MP Dual PD with optical image stabilization, f/3.1, 1/3.2″ sensor size, 5x optical zoom 48MP Quad PD with optical image stabilization, f/2.8, 1/2.55″ image sensor, 5x optical zoom 48MP Quad PD with optical image stabilization, f/2.8, 1/2.55″ image sensor, 5x optical zoom 10.8MP Dual PD with optical image stabilization, f/3.1, 1/3.2″ sensor size, 5x optical zoom
Front camera 10.5MP Dual PD with autofocus, f/2.2 42MP Dual PD with autofocus, f/2.2 42MP Dual PD with autofocus, f/2.2 10MP Dual PD, f/2.2
Inner camera n/a n/a n/a 10MP Dual PD, f/2.2

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