Google Pixel 10 announced with triple rear cameras, Tensor G5
Briefly

The Pixel 10 introduces a third rear sensor, adding a 10.8 MP telephoto camera with 5x optical zoom alongside a 48 MP primary and a 13 MP ultrawide that is a downgrade from the Pixel 9. The front-facing camera is a 10.5 MP unit with autofocus. The phone runs on a TSMC-made 3nm Tensor G5 SoC paired with the Titan M2 security chip, 12 GB of RAM, and 128/256 GB UFS 4.0 storage. The 6.3-inch Actua LTPS display supports 60–120Hz adaptive refresh, Full HD+, and up to 2,000 nits peak brightness. The device includes an improved ultrasonic under-display fingerprint scanner, IP68 rating, Android 16 out of the box, seven years of OS and security updates, a 4,970 mAh battery with 29W wired and 15W Qi2 wireless charging, PixelSnap accessory compatibility, and pricing starting at $799 for 128GB.
The Google Pixel 10 looks identical to its predecessor in terms of design. However, the rear pill-shaped camera module now houses three sensors instead of two. The phone features a 48 MP primary sensor, a 13 MP ultrawide shooter, and a 10.8 MP telephoto camera with 5x optical zoom. On the front, the device gets a 10.5 MP camera with autofocus. While the base Pixel now gets a telephoto camera, the ultrawide camera is a downgrade from the Pixel 9.
Google's new base Pixel is equipped with the new TSMC-made 3nm Tensor G5 SoC and the Titan M2 chip. The processor is paired with 128/256 GB UFS 4.0 storage, and 12 GB of RAM. On the front, the Pixel 10 sports a 6.3-inch Actua display that offers 120Hz refresh rate and Full HD+ resolution. It is of the LTPS type, which means it can only adapt between 60 to 120Hz. The display is also brighter and claimed to achieve 2,000 nits in high brightness mode. It continues to be protected by the Gorilla Glass Victus 2.
Read at GSMArena.com
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