Is the future of phones subscription-based? Google seems to think so

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Is the future of phones subscription-based? Google seems to think so

Yesterday, I watched Google go big and reveal its latest Pixel phones at the summer Made by Google event. There’s a quartet of new handsets that’ll be vying for positions in the best Android phones for 2024: the Pixel 9 is joined by the 9 Pro and larger-scale 9 Pro XL; there’s also the company’s second-gen foldable in the Pixel 9 Pro Fold. 

I’m hyped for every one of those handsets – well, except for the smaller 9 Pro, to be honest, as I’m the opposite of the target audience for that 6.3-inch model – and the addition of Google’s latest Tensor G4 chipset in each one and upgrading of RAM in many also sees Google go big on artificial intelligence. Which is no surprise, right? After all, AI is the flavour of 2024. 

In the shadow of Samsung revealing its Galaxy AI suite of features for the Galaxy S24 range – and, in my view, the Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra is the best phone of 2024 (it won the T3 Award to that effect) – there’s a little niggle about Google’s Gemini AI being integrated on all Pixel devices that I can’t quite shake. 

(Image credit: Google)

Google Gemini Advanced is provided for a year for those who purchase a new Pixel 9 handset and claim that benefit before 15 November 2024. But after that? Well, you’re going to have to subscribe. And Gemini Advanced is priced at £18.99/$19.99 per month. That’s £227.88/$239.88 per year.