logo
Google is likely to limit storage options with Pixel 10 series: Know what's the catch

Google is likely to limit storage options with Pixel 10 series: Know what's the catch

Mint08-07-2025
The Google Pixel 10 series is expected to launch in August, which is now just a few weeks away. Previously, we came across a leak, revealing the expected colour variants of all Pixel 10 models. Now, a tipster has revealed the storage variants of all Pixel 10 models, which come with an unusual limitation on the storage options. Reportedly, Google will be offering 1TB storage variants for the Pixel 10 Pro, Pixel 10 Pro XL, and Pixel 10 Pro Fold. However, the 1TB storage option may not be available for all colour variants. This year, Google will likely limit smartphone storage options based on colours. Know what's expected at Google's August launch.
Also read: 5 Google Pixel AI features that will make you rethink your smartphone experience right now
As last year, Google will launch four flagship smartphones that will include Pixel 10, Pixel 10 Pro, Pixel 10 Pro XL, and Pixel 10 Pro Fold. Reportedly, all four models are slated to launch in four colourways, whereas the foldable will come in two colour options. However, some of the colour options are expected to come with storage limitations. As per the DroidLife report, the Pixel 10 is expected to come in 128GB and 256GB storage options. On the other hand, the Pixel 10 Pro, Pixel 10 Pro XL, and Pixel 10 Pro Fold could offer up to 1TB of storage. However, the 1TB storage option will depend on the colour variant this year. Here's a breakdown of Pixel 10 models with colour variants and storage options.
Pixel 10
Obsidian: 128G / 256GB
Obsidian: 128GB / 256GB / 512GB / 1TB
Porcelain: 128GB / 256GB / 512GB
Moonstone: 128GB / 256GB / 512GB
Obsidian: 128GB / 256GB / 512GB / 1TB
Moonstone: 256GB / 512GB / 1TB
Therefore, people opting for the Pixel 10 Pro and 10 Pro XL models with the 1TB storage variant will have to go for the Obsidian colour option. Additionally, if buying the Pixel 10 Pro Fold, buyers may have to opt for the Moonstone colour variant. While this makes things confusing for buyers, we are still a month away from the official launch. Therefore, it is better to wait for the official announcement to confirm if the rumours are true.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Google seeks licensing talks with news organisations, following AI rivals
Google seeks licensing talks with news organisations, following AI rivals

Business Standard

time2 hours ago

  • Business Standard

Google seeks licensing talks with news organisations, following AI rivals

The company plans to launch a pilot project initially with about 20 national news outlets, according to one of the people Bloomberg By Julia Love and Hannah Miller Google is seeking to recruit news organizations for a new licensing project related to artificial intelligence, according to people familiar with the matter, a sign the company wants to strengthen strained ties with the industry. The company plans to launch a pilot project initially with about 20 national news outlets, according to one of the people, who works at a media outlet that was contacted and asked not to be identified discussing private talks. 'We've said that we're exploring and experimenting with new types of partnerships and product experiences, but we aren't sharing details about specific plans or conversations at this time,' a Google spokesperson said in a statement. Getting Alphabet Inc.'s Google to pay for content for AI projects could be a big win for struggling media companies, which have lost readers and advertisers to digital outlets for years and view artificial intelligence as a new, potentially existential threat. With the exception of a partnership with the Associated Press earlier this year and a 2024 pact with Reddit, Google has mostly sat on the sidelines while AI rivals strike deals with publishers. Startups Perplexity AI Inc. and OpenAI have both started paying publishers to use their content in their chatbots, giving the media companies a much-needed infusion of revenue. Google's licensing project is tailored to specific products, according to another person familiar with the plan. They didn't share additional details of the program, such as possible terms. Google cites articles and online outlets in its AI Overviews, which are short, AI-generated responses that top many search results. While publishers believe those summaries have cut traffic to their websites, they have been hesitant to shield their content from Google's AI tools for fear of hurting their visibility in the company's search results. Silicon Valley and the media industry have been at odds over tech companies' use of news content to build AI programs, with publishers worried it will further erode their relationship with readers. In late 2023, the New York Times sued OpenAI, alleging that the startup and its largest investor, Microsoft Corp., relied on copyrighted articles to train the popular ChatGPT chatbot and other artificial intelligence features. Yet as the media industry increasingly speaks out about the need for compensation, technology companies seem to be recognizing they must come to terms with news outlets, said David Gehring, chief executive officer of Distributed Media Lab, a company that works with publishers and advertisers. Gehring said he had no knowledge of Google's latest talks with publishers. 'Google and the other platforms realize that — if not by virtue of public policy then by virtue of technology — the platforms' access to unlimited web data is about to end,' said Gehring, who previously worked on news partnerships at Google and the UK newspaper the Guardian. 'And so they need to have licensing relationships in place, or there won't be any blood to put in the veins of the AI monster.' In July, Cloudflare Inc., a web infrastructure and security company, announced a 'pay per crawl' program that lets creators bill AI services for access to their content. 'Google still thinks they're special and that they don't have to play by the same rules that the rest of the industry does,' Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince said in an interview. 'Eventually, Google will get in line with what the large AI companies have been saying for a long time, which is that ultimately content providers need to be paid for their content.' Google has long engaged in a delicate dance with news outlets. Many publishers depend on the search engine for traffic when news breaks. Yet industry leaders have cried foul about the tech giant's use of their content in products such as Google News, which displays headlines and short snippets of articles. In the past, Google has offered programs such as Google News Showcase to compensate publishers without undermining its core argument that the copyright doctrine of fair use permits use of their material. The company has also been more open to striking deals with wire services such as the AP, which are in the business of licensing content. Earlier this year, Google announced a partnership with the AP to provide news for its Gemini chatbot, its first deal of that nature. The tech giant has also explored an audio AI news product under its Gemini brand that leverages the content it's licensing from the AP, according to a person familiar with the matter. For the long-term health of the news business, Danielle Coffey, president of the News/Media Alliance trade group, said she is focused on ensuring the industry has 'a legally sustainable right to compensation and protections that will provide a fair market exchange for our valuable content across the board.'

Does AI Speed Up Coding? New Study Finds Surprising Results
Does AI Speed Up Coding? New Study Finds Surprising Results

NDTV

time4 hours ago

  • NDTV

Does AI Speed Up Coding? New Study Finds Surprising Results

A new research has found that using artificial intelligence (AI) tools to write code actually takes more time for experienced software developers. The study, conducted by the nonprofit research group METR, found that the software engineers took 19 per cent longer to complete tasks when using Cursor, a widely used AI-powered coding assistant. For the study, METR measured the speed of 16 developers, having an average experience of five years, working on complex software projects, both with and without AI assistance. When the use of AI tools was allowed, the developers primarily used Cursor Pro, a popular code editor, and Claude 3.5/3.7 Sonnet. "Before starting tasks, developers forecast that allowing AI will reduce completion time by 24 per cent. After completing the study, developers estimate that allowing AI reduced completion time by 20 per cent," the study highlighted. However, the results were surprisingly opposite. The researchers found that when developers use AI tools, they take 19 per cent longer than without -- suggesting AI was making them slower. The study's authors urged readers not to generalise too broadly from the results. For one, the study only measured the impact of Large Language Models (LLMs) on experienced coders, not new ones, who might benefit more from their help. "Although the influence of experimental artifacts cannot be entirely ruled out, the robustness of the slowdown effect across our analyses suggests it is unlikely to primarily be a function of our experimental design." The rapid advancement of artificial intelligence (AI) in recent years has led experts to claim that software engineering jobs could soon be fully outsourced to AI agents. Despite the study suggesting that coding with AI was taking more time, companies are unlikely to stop spending resources on perfecting AI coding. Last year, during Google's Q3 2024 earnings call, CEO Sundar Pichai revealed that AI systems now generate more than a quarter of new code for its products, with human programmers overseeing the computer-generated contributions. "Today, more than a quarter of all new code at Google is generated by AI, then reviewed and accepted by engineers. This helps our engineers do more and move faster," said Mr Pichai at the time.

Alphabet will seek to reassure investors as AI rivals step up competition
Alphabet will seek to reassure investors as AI rivals step up competition

Time of India

time4 hours ago

  • Time of India

Alphabet will seek to reassure investors as AI rivals step up competition

Alphabet , faced with unprecedented threats from AI rivals, will be keen to assure investors this week that the company's own spending on the technology is helping it dig a deeper moat around its search and advertising businesses. Rivals of the Google parent, including AI startups such as OpenAI and Perplexity , have attracted tens of millions of users to their platforms. They are looking to break Google Chrome's dominance with their own browsers, even as a U.S. court weighs breaking up the tech company with remedies that may include a forced Chrome sale. To maintain its grip, Alphabet has rolled out tools such as AI Overviews , which show AI-generated summaries on top of traditional links that have drawn 1.5 billion users per month, and made more Gemini models available to enterprise users. The integration of AI into Google search is key to its advertising appeal, as it offers advertisers the ability to run more effective campaigns and get bigger returns on their dollars. In March, Google added a new AI-only mode to its search. Alphabet, scheduled to report second-quarter results on Wednesday, has also staged a coup, securing rival OpenAI as a customer for its cloud business. "AI targeting advantages and increasing ad loads in AI Overviews could drive ad performance above traditional search," BofA Global Research analysts said. The context Wall Street has been looking for returns from Big Tech's AI spending spree that is expected to total $320 billion this year. Google reassured investors in late April with better-than-expected first-quarter earnings that were powered by AI demand. But OpenAI and Perplexity's launch of their own browsers has intensified pressure on Google's search business, which was already under strain from AI chatbots pulling away queries. "As those (AI) companies deploy their browsers, that'll take more searches away from Google. But the bigger threat will be when those companies have enough of a user base that they start selling advertising," said D.A. Davidson analyst Gil Luria. "It's only when Google loses advertisers that the revenue is going to be impacted." Also, Alphabet's Waymo , the early U.S. leader in autonomous cabs and often overlooked during earnings, is likely to draw more attention as Elon Musk's Tesla rolls out a test fleet in Austin, Texas. The fundamentals Alphabet is expected to report a near 11% jump in total revenue for the second quarter, per LSEG expect a 7.5% rise in advertising revenue and a 26.2% jump in its cloud computing earnings are expected to be around $2.18, excluding one-off items. Wall Street sentiment Alphabet shares are largely flat so far this is among the laggards in the "Magnificent Seven" group of megacap stocks, with Nvidia leading the range with a 28% jump and Tesla at the bottom with a 19% is rated "buy" on average among 55 brokerages, with a median price target of $203.84.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store