It's Monday, March 09, 2020. Hey, good morning! As the world’s biggest phone show that never happened wraps up, and companies finish showing their new devices at dedicated events from New York to London and Hong Kong, we’re already scanning the horizon for what’s next. Namely, budget spin-offs of existing phones, like a cheaper Pixel 4, and a new flagship phone from Motorola -- a company that’s avoided high-spec battles in recent years. If you’re reading this, you’re more interested in the high-spec, high-cost phone, but for a lot of people, cheaper phones usually suffice. The Pixel 3a amazed me last year -- and I wasn’t alone. Can Google repeat the magic? And will more people pick up a Pixel based on past success? Maybe. I’m less interested in Motorola’s flagship phone hopes. Again, times are tough if you're not making iPhones or Galaxy phones. -- Mat Google might stick to the basics for its next Android handset. Waiting on a cheaper Pixel phone? Multiple leaks appearing on Twitter and Reddit appear to show Google's upcoming low-cost Pixel 4a phone in the wild -- to be honest, looking a bit worse for wear. Judging by the pictures, the prototype ditches the face recognition and dual cameras of the regular Pixel 4 in favor of a more conventional fingerprint reader and single rear cam, though it still has that huge squarish camera module. It seems Google will keep the headphone jack around for those who can't justify Bluetooth earbuds -- a stealthy way of keeping shoppers’ additional costs down, perhaps? | | The Edge+ might also be headed to the US. Motorola hasn’t attempted a flagship phone for a while -- perhaps because Apple and Samsung seem to have that market sewn up. Flip-phone experiments aside, Motorola’s Edge+ is another attempt at phone glory. Leaks suggest a 6.7-inch phone with a "bezel-free" (on the sides, at least) curved screen and, according to renders, a relatively tiny hole-punch camera. | | Your real-life soccer skills could improve a virtual team. The latest Google wearable appears to be an embeddable sensor for your soccer / football boots. Not only will it do the obligatory movement tracking you’d expect but also translate that presumably middling performance to FIFA Mobile. Your skills, including in real-life challenges, promise to improve the Ultimate Team in your game. Adidas and Google have teased an announcement on March 10th. | | Sponsored Content by Stack Commerce | |
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