Design and hardware The Pixel 4 and 4 XL are constructed using an aluminum frame and
Gorilla Glass 5. The devices are available in Just Black, Clearly White, and Oh So Orange colors, with the white and orange models having a matte, "soft touch" glass finish, and the black model having a glossy finish. The frame is painted black on all models, while the power button is accented and made from
plastic. The
USB-C connector at the bottom of the device is used for charging and audio output, though neither USB-C headphones nor a USB-C to 3.5mm jack adapter are included in the box. Battery sizes differ, with the Pixel 4 using a 2800mAh cell and the Pixel 4 XL using a 3700mAh cell. Both are capable of fast-charging at up to 18W, and support
Qi wireless charging. Like their predecessors, the phones have a water protection rating of
IPX8 under
IEC standard 60529. The Pixel Neural Core is the successor to the
Pixel Visual Core; it, too, uses the
Edge TPU architecture. The Pixel 4 features an
OLED display manufactured by Samsung with
HDR support, that operates at a
refresh rate of up to 90
Hz; it dynamically adjusts depending on content to preserve battery life. The Pixel 4 includes dual rear-facing cameras located within a raised square module. It houses a wide 28mm 77° 1.7 lens with the same Sony Exmor IMX363 12.2-megapixel sensor as on the Pixel 3 and 3a, and a second telephoto 48mm 2.4 lens with a 16-megapixel sensor. Google claims the Pixel 4 can capture 8× zoom at near-optical quality. Additionally, it uses
Google Camera 7.1 with software enhancements, including
Live HDR+ with dual exposure controls, improved
Night Sight with
Astrophotography mode and improved
Portrait Mode with more realistic
Bokeh. It includes a single ultra wide (90°) front-facing camera with an 8-megapixel sensor, unlike the Pixel 3 which included ultra wide (97°) and wide (75°) front-facing cameras, both of which also had 8-megapixel sensors. The Pixel 4's astrophotography mode can
stack together 16 exposures, each with an exposure time of 15 seconds.
Motion Sense The Pixel 4 marks the introduction of Motion Sense, a
radar-based
gesture recognition system. It is based on the
Project Soli technology developed by
Google ATAP as an alternative to light-based systems such as infrared. Motion Sense can be used for detecting a user's proximity to the device to activate the always-on display or power the screen on, and waving gestures that can be used in supported apps (such as skipping tracks in the music player, and an interactive
Pokémon demo app). Due to its use of 60GHz frequency bands, Google was required to obtain specific regulatory approval for the radar system in all countries that the Pixel 4 is being sold. As such, the feature is
geoblocked if the device is detected to be in an unsupported country. On launch, Google stated that support for the feature was currently limited to Australia, Canada, "most European countries", Singapore, Taiwan, and the United States, but that Japan was "coming soon". Google stated that it had no plans to sell the Pixel 4 in
India, with the company officially stating a preference to continue marketing the Pixel 3a in the region; media outlets noted that civilian use of the 60GHz frequency is prohibited in India, unlike in the U.S. and some other countries, where it is considered
unlicensed spectrum.
Software The Pixel 4 ships with
Android 10 and
Google Camera 7.1. The devices feature several features powered by their Pixel Neural Core (the successor to the
Pixel Visual Core) and Knowles 8508A audio processor. In addition to its existing use for
computational photography image processing, they are used by the new Recorder and Live Transcribe apps. Recorder is a voice recorder with live transcription, classification, and searchable sounds. Also the "new"
Google Assistant, which contains enhancements to allow for increased client-side recognition of commands that are local to the device (rather than querying Google servers). == Reception ==