Leaked images recently showed what Google Assistant and Discover could look like on the tablet. Now, on its relatively low-profile Workspace Updates blog (opens in new tab), Google has just provided a GIF which may give us an early glimpse of what the upcoming Pixel Tablet’s UI will look like. The update shows the company’s latest efforts in ensuring a “top-class user experience on large screen devices” and shows the arrival of keyboard shortcuts for the Keep app. But as 9to5Google (opens in new tab) notes, the GIF above is 674 x 421, which scales up to 2,560 x 1,600. That’s the resolution that the Pixel Tablet will reportedly offer (opens in new tab) when it’s released next year. Notably, a post (opens in new tab) on the same blog from July showed another tablet UI update in Google Sheets for tablets. Its resolution? 512 x 320. If you multiply that by five you also reach 2,560 x 1,600. It’s worth noting that other Android tablets like the Samsung Galaxy Tab S8 also share the 2,560 x 1,600 resolution, but whether or not this was screen recorded directly from a Pixel Tablet prototype or something else, it still gives us an idea of how Google may want things to work. The first thing of note is that across both, the status bar and taskbar are a lot taller than you might expect. In the former, icons and the time are further away from the screen edges than you see on mobile, and there’s a prominent account-switching icon on the Keep GIF. That suggests that Google views tablets as less of a personal device and more one that can be shared between family members. The icons along the bottom of the screen differ between the two, but both have a shortcut for viewing your full app list. Notably, app windows appear to be embracing rounded edges too, even when you’re viewing two side by side, as in the second GIF. When two apps are positioned like that, it also looks like you’ll be able to resize them, as the second GIF appears to show an app slider nestled between the two. Add these GIFs to the tranch of screenshots found in the Google Search beta yesterday, and you’ve got a good taste of exactly how the Pixel Tablet will look and feel when it’s released. We already know that said release date won’t be this year, as Google clearly earmarked it as a 2023 product when it was first revealed at I/O in May. Still, with 2022 drawing to a close that means we’ll get to try this for ourselves at some point within the next 14 months. You never know, it might be as few as three months.
title: “Is This An Early Look At The Google Pixel Tablet S Ui " ShowToc: true date: “2022-12-17” author: “Frances Raggio”
Leaked images recently showed what Google Assistant and Discover could look like on the tablet. Now, on its relatively low-profile Workspace Updates blog (opens in new tab), Google has just provided a GIF which may give us an early glimpse of what the upcoming Pixel Tablet’s UI will look like. The update shows the company’s latest efforts in ensuring a “top-class user experience on large screen devices” and shows the arrival of keyboard shortcuts for the Keep app. But as 9to5Google (opens in new tab) notes, the GIF above is 674 x 421, which scales up to 2,560 x 1,600. That’s the resolution that the Pixel Tablet will reportedly offer (opens in new tab) when it’s released next year. Notably, a post (opens in new tab) on the same blog from July showed another tablet UI update in Google Sheets for tablets. Its resolution? 512 x 320. If you multiply that by five you also reach 2,560 x 1,600. It’s worth noting that other Android tablets like the Samsung Galaxy Tab S8 also share the 2,560 x 1,600 resolution, but whether or not this was screen recorded directly from a Pixel Tablet prototype or something else, it still gives us an idea of how Google may want things to work. The first thing of note is that across both, the status bar and taskbar are a lot taller than you might expect. In the former, icons and the time are further away from the screen edges than you see on mobile, and there’s a prominent account-switching icon on the Keep GIF. That suggests that Google views tablets as less of a personal device and more one that can be shared between family members. The icons along the bottom of the screen differ between the two, but both have a shortcut for viewing your full app list. Notably, app windows appear to be embracing rounded edges too, even when you’re viewing two side by side, as in the second GIF. When two apps are positioned like that, it also looks like you’ll be able to resize them, as the second GIF appears to show an app slider nestled between the two. Add these GIFs to the tranch of screenshots found in the Google Search beta yesterday, and you’ve got a good taste of exactly how the Pixel Tablet will look and feel when it’s released. We already know that said release date won’t be this year, as Google clearly earmarked it as a 2023 product when it was first revealed at I/O in May. Still, with 2022 drawing to a close that means we’ll get to try this for ourselves at some point within the next 14 months. You never know, it might be as few as three months.