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  • Everything I Learned Testing Photoshop’s New Generative AI Tool

    Everything I Learned Testing Photoshop’s New Generative AI Tool

    Adobe is building generative AI abilities into its flagship image-editing software with a new Photoshop beta release Tuesday. The move promises to release a new torrent of creativity even as it gives us all a new reason to pause and wonder if that sensational, scary or inspirational photo you see on the internet is actually real.

    In my tests, detailed below, I found the tool impressive but imperfect. Adding it directly to Photoshop is a big deal, letting creators experiment within the software tool they’re likely already using without excursions to Midjourney, Stability AI’s Stable Diffusion or other outside generative AI tools.

    With Adobe’s Firefly family of generative AI technologies arriving in Photoshop, you’ll be able to let the AI fill a selected part of the image with whatever it thinks most fitting – for example, replacing road cracks with smooth pavement. You can also specify the imagery you’d like with a text prompt, such as adding a double yellow line to the road.

    Firefly in Photoshop also can also expand an image, adding new scenery beyond the frame based on what’s already in the frame or what you suggest with text. Want more sky and mountains in your landscape photo? A bigger crowd at the rock concert? Photoshop will oblige, without today’s difficulties of finding source material and splicing it in.

    Photoshop’s Firefly, which is scheduled to emerge from beta testing in the second half of 2023, can be powerful. In Adobe’s live demo, the tool was often able to match a photo’s tones, blend in AI-generated imagery seamlessly, infer the geometric details of perspective even in reflections and extrapolate the position of the sun from shadows and sky haze.

    Such technologies have been emerging over the last year as Stable Diffusion, Midjourney and OpenAI’s Dall-Ecaptured the imaginations of artists and creative pros. Now it’s built directly into the software they’re most likely to already be using, streamlining what can be a cumbersome editing process.

    “It really puts the power and control of generative AI into the hands of the creator,” said Maria Yap, Adobe’s vice president of digital imaging. “You can just really have some fun. You can explore some ideas. You can ideate. You can create without ever necessarily getting into the deep tools of the product, very quickly.”

    Now you’d better brace yourself for that future.

    Photoshop’s Firefly AI imperfect but useful

    In my testing, I frequently ran into problems, many of them likely stemming from the limited range of the training imagery. When I tried to insert a fish on a bicycle to an image, Firefly only added the bicycle. I couldn’t get Firefly to add a kraken to emerge from San Francisco Bay. A musk ox looked like a panda-moose hybrid.

    Less fanciful material also presents problems. Text looks like an alien race’s script. Shadows, lighting, perspective and geometry weren’t always right.

    People are hard, too. On close inspection, their faces were distorted in weird ways. Humans added into shots could be positioned too high in the frame or in otherwise unconvincingly blended in.

    Still, Firefly is remarkable for what it can accomplish, particularly with landscape shots. I could add mountains, oceans, skies and hills to landscapes. A white delivery van in a night scene was appropriately yellowish to match the sodium vapor streetlights in the scene. If you don’t like the trio of results Firefly presents, you can click the “generate” button to get another batch.

    Given the pace of AI developments, I expect Firefly in Photoshop will improve.

    It’s hard and expensive to retrain big AI models, requiring a data center packed with expensive hardware to churn through data, sometimes taking weeks for the largest models. But Adobe plans relatively frequent updates to Firefly. “Expect [about] monthly updates for general improvements and retraining every few months in all likelihood,” Adobe product chief Scott Belsky tweeted Tuesday.

    Automating image manipulation

    For years, “Photoshop” hasn’t just referred to Adobe’s software. It’s also used as a verb signifying photo manipulations like slimming supermodels’ waists or hiding missile launch failures. AI tools automate not just fun and flights of fancy, but also fake images like an alleged explosion at the Pentagon or a convincingly real photo of the pope in a puffy jacket, to pick two recent examples.

    With AI, expect editing techniques far more subtle than the extra smoke easily recognized as digitally added to photos of an Israeli attack on Lebanon in 2006.

    It’s a reflection of the double-edged sword that is generative AI. The technology is undeniably useful in many situations but also blurs the line between what is true and what is merely plausible.

    For its part, Adobe tries to curtail problems. It doesn’t permit prompts to create images of many political figures and blocks you for “safety issues” if you try to create an image of black smoke in front of the White House. And its AI usage guidelines prohibit imagery involving violence, pornography and “misleading, fraudulent, or deceptive content that could lead to real-world harm,” among other categories. “We disable accounts that engage in behavior that is deceptive or harmful.”

    Firefly also is designed to skip over styling prompts like that have provoked serious complaints from artists displeased to see their type of art reproduced by a data center. And it supports the Content Authenticity Initiative‘s content credentials technology that can be used to label an image as having been generated by AI.

    Generative AI for photos

    Adobe’s Firefly family of generative AI tools began with a website that turns a text prompt like “modern chair made up of old tires” into an image. It’s added a couple other options since, and Creative Cloud subscribers will also be able to try a lightweight version of the Photoshop interface on the Firefly site.

    When OpenAI’s Dall-E brought that technology to anyone who signed up for it in 2022, it helped push generative artificial intelligence from a technological curiosity toward mainstream awareness. Now there’s plenty of worry along with the excitement as even AI creators fret about what the technology will bring now and in the more distant future.

    Generative AI is a relatively new form of artificial intelligence technology. AI models can be trained to recognize patterns in vast amounts of data – in this case labeled images from Adobe’s stock art business and other licensed sources – and then to create new imagery based on that source data.

    Generative AI has surged to mainstream awareness with language models used in tools like OpenAI’s ChatGPT chatbot, Google’s Gmail and Google Docs, and Microsoft’s Bing search engine. When it comes to generating images, Adobe employs an AI image generation technique called diffusion that’s also behind Dall-E, Stable Diffusion, Midjourney and Google’s Imagen.

    Adobe calls Firefly for Photoshop a “co-pilot” technology, positioning it as a creative aid, not a replacement for humans. Yap acknowledges that some creators are nervous about being replaced by AI. Adobe prefers to see it as a technology that can amplify and speed up the creative process, spreading creative tools to a broader population.

    “I think the democratization we’ve been going through, and having more creativity, is a positive thing for all of us,” Yap said. “This is the future of Photoshop.”

    Editors’ note: CNET is using an AI engine to create some personal finance explainers that are edited and fact-checked by our editors. For more, see this post.

  • Windows Copilot Puts AI in the Middle of Microsoft’s Most Important Software

    Windows Copilot Puts AI in the Middle of Microsoft’s Most Important Software

    Microsoft has begun building an AI chat interface straight into its single most important software product, the company said Tuesday. The tool will perform tasks like summarizing documents, suggesting music, offering tech support for your PC and answering questions you might ask a search engine or AI chatbot.

    Windows Copilot is scheduled to arrive in a preview version of Windows via an icon in the task bar that looks like a loop of blue ribbon. Clicking it opens a chat interface sidebar where you can type questions or prompts like “enable dark mode” and click buttons to take actions. Microsoft will begin testing the feature in June, said Yusuf Mehdi, Microsoft’s marketing chief for consumer products.

    It’s a major new step in Microsoft’s embrace of artificial intelligence technology. Previously the company had built AI into its Bing search engine and Edge web browser, but Windows is used by millions more people and for many more hours a day.

    “We are bringing the Copilot to the biggest canvas of all, Windows,” CEO Satya Nadella said at the company’s Microsoft Build developer conference. The arrival of AI chat interfaces is as important to computing progress as other major moments like the arrival of the internet or the iPhone, he said.

    Read More: Windows 10 Is Being Phased Out. Here’s What That Means for You

    And the change reflects a growing seriousness in modern AI. Google has begun building AI directly into search, Gmail, Docs and other key services used by billions of people. Adobe on Tuesday released a beta version of Photoshop that uses AI to generate new imagery. AI remains experimental, but no longer is AI on the periphery of the world’s biggest tech products.

    thumbcnetthumbcnet
    Watch this: Windows 11 Gets AI Copilot

    09:08

    Microsoft also is building its Copilot technology into its Office suite of productivity tools.

    Google has taken a different approach with its AI, restricting its more free-wheeling chatbot technology to its Bard chatbot and adding more factual, literal tools to search, Gmail and other mainstream tools.

    Mehdi thinks that’s a mistake, though. Indeed, he hopes Google keeps the functions separate because that’ll help Microsoft’s prospects, he said.

    “Customers have told us they’re not a separate thing. They think it’s all integrated,” Mehdi said in an interview. “The ability to be able to ask any question from where you are, to get search-like answers, that’s a powerful thing for customers.”

    Read More: Microsoft Rolls Out Tool That Connects Your iPhone to Your PC

    Microsoft added AI-boosted search results and an AI chatbot to its Bing search engine in February. It relies on OpenAI, an artificial intelligence powerhouse in which Microsoft has invested, for the core language processing technology. Thanks in part to the feature, Bing usage crossed the threshold of 100 million people per day, Mehdi said, though he wouldn’t reveal the pace of the growth.

    Also at Build, Microsoft announced it’s making plugin technology available to Bing and Windows Copilot so developers can integrate their own software. That’ll let you tap into those apps using Microsoft’s AI interfaces.

    And Microsoft announced that OpenAI is using Bing search engine data to help improve its ChatGPT chatbot. Search engines can be used to “ground” generative AI tools that can often make up incorrect information.


    Editors’ note: CNET is using an AI engine to create some personal finance explainers that are edited and fact-checked by our editors. For more, see
    this post.

  • Save Up to $82 on Sony InZone Headsets at Amazon’s Game Week Sale

    Save Up to $82 on Sony InZone Headsets at Amazon’s Game Week Sale

    If you’re a serious online gamer, a decent headset is a must-have. It allows you to strategize with your teammates, trash-talk your opponents and the improved audio makes it easy to be aware of every shot and step happening around you. And right now, you can take advantage of Amazon’s Gaming Week sale to snag one for less. The online retailer is currently offering up to $82 off Sony InZone PS5 headsets, with prices starting at just $58. The sale runs through May 28, so we’d recommend getting your order in before then if you don’t want to miss out on these savings.

    There are three different InZone headset models to choose from, which all feature a flip-to-mute boom mic, and support 360-degree spatial audio for a truly immersive gaming experience. Plus, they allow you to create a personalized sound profile with custom EQ that’s optimized for your play style. The most affordable model available is the wired InZone H3, which you can snag for $58, $42 off the usual price. Or you can upgrade to the wireless InZone H7, which promises a 40-hour battery life and is on sale for $148, which saves you $82 compared to the usual price. Or, for hardcore gamers, there’s the high-end InZone H9 wireless headset. It’s only available with a small $22 discount, dropping the price down to $278, but gives you noise-canceling capabilities, LED lighting and synthetic leather earpads. All three headsets work with PS5 and PC.

    You can find more great deals on games, hardware and accessories at Amazon’s Game Week sale, and you can check out our full roundup of all the best PS5 deals for more bargains on Sony gaming gear.

  • Enjoy Your Games Wherever With Deals on Amazon Luna Cloud Gaming Gear

    Enjoy Your Games Wherever With Deals on Amazon Luna Cloud Gaming Gear

    The future of gaming is here, and it’s cloud-based. With Amazon Luna gaming gear, you can enjoy tons of great games — from AAA titles to charming indies — without a console or powerful PC rig. And right now, you can snag some for less during Amazon’s Gaming Week sale. The online retailer is currently offering up to 32% off Luna controllers and accessories, as well as bundles with streaming devices and tablets. The sale runs through May 28, so you’ll want to get your order in before then if you don’t want to miss out on these savings.

    Amazon Prime Member already get free access to a small selection of games, and with a $10/month Luna Plus subscription, you can stream a huge library of games on your phone, tablet, computer or smart TV — without having to download them or have a physical copy. All you need is a controller, which has Wi-Fi and Bluetooth built-in so it can easily connect to your devices wirelessly. Right now, you can pick up the basic Luna controller for $50 ($20 off), or you can bundle it with the phone mount for $65 ($18 off) and enjoy your games on the go. If you want a slightly larger screen that’s still portable, you can snag this controller and Fire HD 8 tablet bundle for $120 ($50 off). Or you can bundle the controller with the Fire TV Stick 4K Max, one of our favorite streaming devices for 2023, and convert just about any TV or monitor into a smart TV with cloud gaming for $85 ($40 off).

    And be sure to check out the full selection of Gaming Week deals for more bargains on games, controllers, headsets and much more.

  • Proton’s New Bundled Subscription Plan Offers Privacy for the Whole Family

    Proton’s New Bundled Subscription Plan Offers Privacy for the Whole Family

    Proton, the Swiss-based privacy company behind Proton Mail and Proton VPN, launched an all-inclusive online privacy solution for families on Tuesday. Proton Family bundles all of Proton’s services into a single subscription plan that covers up to six users. In addition to Proton’s flagship service, Proton Mail, the bundle includes access to Proton VPN (one of CNET’s top VPN picks), Proton Drive and Proton Calendar. Proton’s latest service, a password manager called Proton Pass, will be available with the Proton Family plan once it exits beta.

    Proton Family starts at $20 per month and includes premium access to Proton’s services, along with 3TB of shared storage space and an additional 20GB of bonus storage space per year, Proton said in a press release. The idea behind Proton Family is to ensure youngsters can safely go online while minimizing exposure to the often intrusive practices of Big Tech. Stressing online privacy to children and others who may not necessarily understand all of the potential risks that lurk online is more important than ever — especially at a time when apps designed for children are collecting alarming amounts of data.

    “A family plan has been among our most sought-after services, and I am delighted to announce its launch today. As a parent, I am eager to teach my children the proper ways to approach email, cloud storage, and internet security from the beginning,” David Dudok de Wit, Proton’s product lead said. “I know I am not alone in this. The Proton Family plan takes us one step closer to our mission of making privacy the default for everyone.”

    Proton offers a version of each of its services for free (including Proton VPN, which is the only truly free VPN CNET recommends), but full access to all of Proton’s premium features requires a paid subscription. Proton has built a solid reputation with its suite of online privacy tools, and $20 a month for all of those tools together for up to six users with Proton Family is an excellent deal — especially once Proton Pass is made available to subscribers. As a comparison, if you purchase individual subscriptions to the Proton services available now, you’ll pay $5 per month for Proton Mail, $5 per month for Proton Drive and $10 per month for Proton VPN. That adds up to $20 per user, which is the same price you’ll pay for the entire Family plan, which will also include the password manager once it releases.

    You can purchase Proton Family directly or upgrade your current subscription to any of Proton’s services to Proton Family. Once you’ve signed up, you can start inviting family members to join your Proton Family plan. If you want a bundled subscription to all of Proton’s services for yourself only, you can opt for the Proton Unlimited plan, which includes up to 500 GB total storage across the services for $12 per month or $120 per year.

    For more on privacy, check out CNET’s tips for creating better passwords, six tips for keeping your personal data private and what to know about VPN trackers.

  • Score 1 Month of Paramount Plus for Free With This Code

    Score 1 Month of Paramount Plus for Free With This Code

    There are a ton of streaming services to choose from these days, and if you want to subscribe to them all, it’ll cost you a pretty penny. However, Paramount Plus you can nab a month of service for free. It’s been 30 years since Cheers aired its final episode, but it remains a beloved and iconic series. Right now you can use code CHEERSATX to bump up the usual one-week free trial to an entire month, giving you the chance to binge the long-running show about a place everybody knows your name — or check out the rest of the massive catalog of TV, movies and live sports on the service.

    There are two different plans to choose from — Essential or Premium — and the code works for either version. The $5-a-month Essential plan gives you access to Paramount Plus shows and movies with limited commercials, as well as NFL on CBS, top soccer games and CBS live news. The $10-a-month Premium plan has no ads (except for live TV), gives you access to additional sports and your local CBS channel, and allows you to download shows and movies. After your trial, your subscription will auto-renew at the regular price unless canceled.

    It’s worth noting that the above code also works with the Paramount Plus and Showtime bundle, so you can actually get a month of both services for free if you want. Just be aware that you’ll be charged the bundle price (from $12 a month) on your renewal date if you don’t cancel before then. And be sure to check out our roundup of all the best streaming service deals for even more ways to save.

  • HBO Max Is Now Max: New Movies and TV Shows You Can Watch Right Now

    HBO Max Is Now Max: New Movies and TV Shows You Can Watch Right Now

    HBO Max is now officially Max, the revamped streaming service that merges HBO Max and Discovery Plus’ libraries. Today, new movies and shows premiere on the service, including a SmartLess docuseries and a family-friendly Gremlins cartoon. (Shazam! Fury of the Gods isn’t totally new, but it’s included in the list below, too.)

    Here’s more about what just hit Max on launch day and what’s coming in the future. If you stick with the service long enough, you’ll eventually catch a new Harry Potter series and Game of Thrones spin-off. Max streams Warner Bros., HBO, Max Originals, DC, HGTV, Food Network, Adult Swim, Cartoon Network, Discovery Channel, TLC, ID and more.

    What hit Max on May 23

    Also coming to Max relatively close to launch are Magnolia Network series Silos Baking Competition (May 28), ID docuseries The Curious Case of Natalia Grace (May 29), Sarah Silverman‘s comedy special (May 27), HBO documentary Being Mary Tyler Moore (May 26) and Reality, an HBO film starring Sydney Sweeney (May 29).

    More coming to Max in the future

    Everything we learned when Warner Bros. Discovery unveiled Max in April

    Max is the streaming home of HBO, so it isn’t leaving Game of Thrones behind. WBD revealed that HBO has ordered a new Game of Thrones prequel series, A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms: The Hedge Knight. The series will be set 100 years before the events of Game of Thrones, when “two unlikely heroes wandered Westeros … a young, naive but courageous knight, Ser Duncan the Tall, and his diminutive squire, Egg,” according to its description.

    “Set in an age when the Targaryen line still holds the Iron Throne and the memory of the last dragon has not yet passed from living memory, great destinies, powerful foes, and dangerous exploits all await these improbable and incomparable friends,” the log line says.

    Harry Potter fans will be able to get invested in a new show on Max. Casey Bloys, chairman and CEO of HBO and HBO Max content, said, “Over the course of the next decade … we will once again enter the wondrous world of Harry Potter as a multi-season live action series for the first time.” The Max original series will adapt the first seven Harry Potter books and star new actors.

    A first look at The Penguin and more:

    • WBD shared a first look trailer for previously announced series The Penguin, starring Colin Farrell in his role from Matt Reeves’ film The Batman. The spin-off will consist of eight episodes and premiere in 2024.
    • Food competition series Ciao House, which premiered on Food Network, will be on Max.
    • Survive the Raft, a reality show from Discovery Channel, hits Max in July.

    • Lost Women of Highway 20 will hit Max in 2023. The true crime series features Octavia Spencer.
    • Rick and Morty: The Anime will debut on Max along with Adult Swim in 2023.

    • Barbie Dreamhouse Challenge, a doll-themed home renovation competition series, hits Max this summer.

    • Tiny Toons Looniversity, a reboot of Tiny Toon Adventures, is coming to Max this fall.
    • A Peter and the Wolf animated short film, featuring artwork based on original illustrations by Bono, is coming to Max in 2023.
    • HBO series True Detective: Night Country released a new trailer. It’s coming in 2023 and stars Jodie Foster.
    • A trailer for HBO limited series The Regime dropped. The show debuts in 2024 and features Kate Winslet.
    • HBO limited series The Sympathizer also got a new trailer. It’s coming in 2024 and is based on the Pulitzer Prize-winning novel of the same name.
  • Your Paramount Plus Subscription Is About to Cost More

    Your Paramount Plus Subscription Is About to Cost More

    The price of your Paramount Plus subscription may rise in June, once the streaming platform integrates with Showtime.

    Starting June 27, a Paramount Plus with Showtime subscription will cost $12 a month, a $2 increase over the current Paramount Plus premium plan. The company will also raise the price of its ad-supported essential plan, which doesn’t include Showtime, from $5 to $6 per month.

    The new price for a premium Paramount Plus subscription is on par with the current cost of a Paramount Plus and Showtime bundle, at $12 a month. The price hikes will go into effect for both new and existing subscribers in the US.

    “By integrating the Showtime premium and critically acclaimed portfolio with the service’s already broad and popular slate, all at a competitive price, we will solidify Paramount Plus as a cornerstone in streaming,” Tom Ryan, president of Paramount Streaming, said in a statement.

    In January, Paramount announced the integration with Showtime and a month later announced price increases were impending. On Monday, Paramount also said it will nix its Showtime app.

    CNET’s review of Paramount Plus found “familiar, binge-worthy series and reality shows,” alongside a live TV component. It also pointed out the platform’s reliance on nostalgia-rich TV, like old Nickelodeon shows, Comedy Central standup performances and popular oldies like Frasier or Spongebob Squarepants. There’s plenty of shows for kids as well as major movie releases that arrive on the platform shortly after their theatrical release.

    More details on Paramount Plus with Showtime pricing were released a day before Warner Bros. Discovery on Tuesday integrated HBO Max with Discovery Plus, rebranding the streamer to Max. The services are among several streaming platforms competing for customers, with the best choice for you likely coming down to a mix of budget and shows and movies you like best. To help you decide, see CNET’s breakdown of the best streaming services of 2023.

  • Pixel 7 vs. Pixel 7A: Google’s Cheaper Phone Is the Winner

    Pixel 7 vs. Pixel 7A: Google’s Cheaper Phone Is the Winner

    Each new generation of Google’s Pixel A-series phones comes with fewer compromises than the last. That’s truer than ever with the Pixel 7A, which costs $499 and bears striking similarity to the $599 Pixel 7. After reviewing both phones, I’m convinced the Pixel 7A is the best value for most people.

    Both phones run on Google’s Tensor G2 processor, meaning you’ll get essentially the same performance and very similar photography and language translation features on both devices.

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    The biggest area in which they differ on paper comes down to their cameras and their size, although in practice I could barely tell the difference between photos taken on both devices.

    The only major reason to choose the Pixel 7 over the 7A is if you prefer having a slightly larger screen and can find it at a discount that brings it closer to the 7A in price. Here’s a closer look at how the two phones compare after testing them both.

    Pixel 7 vs. Pixel 7A: Cameras

    The Pixel 7A's camera against a blue backgroundThe Pixel 7A's camera against a blue background

    The Pixel 7A’s camera (pictured) is very similar to the Pixel 7’s.

    James Martin/CNET

    Looking at the camera specifications, you may think the Pixel 7A has the superior setup. It has a 64-megapixel main camera, while the Pixel 7’s primary shooter has a 50-megapixel sensor. The 7A also has a 13-megapixel ultrawide compared to the Pixel 7, which has a 12-megapixel one.

    But resolution isn’t everything when it comes to taking a great photo. Google says the Pixel 7’s camera sensor is larger and more light sensitive, which should result in better overall image quality. When comparing the two, I couldn’t really tell the difference. Both phones take excellent photos with vibrant color and crisp details. If you’re a casual photographer and just want a reliable camera for taking great photos of friends, family, vacations and pets, the Pixel 7A is more than enough.

    Take a look at some photo samples below.

    Since both phones have the same processor, they also share many of the same photo-editing and shooting features. That includes night mode, portrait mode, Face Unblur, Photo Unblur, Magic Eraser and Real Tone, Google’s tech for rendering skin tones more accurately. They can also both zoom digitally up to 8x.

    The cheaper Pixel 7A lacks Action Pan, which is present on the Pixel 7 and captures a moving subject sharply while blurring the background. Both phones have Long Exposure mode, though, which does the opposite by applying an action blur effect to a moving subject.

    The Pixel 7 and 7A also take relatively bright photos in dim environments, too, as shown below. However, on one occasion, the Pixel 7 was able to focus more sharply on the subject when taking photos in low light.

    Even though the Pixel 7A technically has a higher resolution front camera, I thought selfies from both devices generally looked equally good.

    The bottom line: The Pixel 7A and Pixel 7 both have very similar cameras. The Pixel 7A doesn’t have Google’s Action Pan feature, but you’re not missing much else.

    Pixel 7 vs. Pixel 7A: Size and design

    Google's Pixel 7A phoneGoogle's Pixel 7A phone

    The Pixel 7A

    James Martin/CNET

    The Pixel 7A inherits the Pixel 7’s design language, from its metallic camera bar to its matte edges. The main differences between the two devices come down to size and color options. The Pixel 7A has a 6.1-inch screen, which might be preferable if you like smaller devices. The Pixel 7 has a 6.3-inch screen, providing a bit more space for those who like to read and watch videos on their phones.

    Both devices can increase their screen’s refresh rate up to 90Hz when needed to make animations and scrolling look smoother, and they both have the same resolution at 1,080×2,400 pixels.

    However, both screens look dim in bright sunlight; I had to boost the brightness to the max when outdoors.

    The Pixel 7 pictured next to the Pixel Watch against a yellow backgroundThe Pixel 7 pictured next to the Pixel Watch against a yellow background

    The Pixel 7 is pictured next to the Pixel Watch.

    Andrew Lanxon/CNET

    In terms of color choices, the Pixel 7A is available in coral (orange), sea (light blue), charcoal (grayish) and snow (white). The Pixel 7, on the other hand, comes in lemongrass (light yellow), snow (white) and obsidian (black).

    There’s also a slight difference between the two phones when it comes to durability. The Pixel 7A is rated for IP67 dust and water resistance, while the Pixel 7 has an IP86 rating. While both phones are dust-tight, the Pixel 7A is only rated to withstand the effects of temporary immersion in water, while the Pixel 7 can endure continuous immersion in water.

    Pixel 7 vs. Pixel 7A: Battery life and performance

    Since they run on the same Tensor G2 processor and have the same amount of memory, performance is similar between the two. Launching apps, scrolling around the operating system and switching between apps and playing games felt smooth on both devices. They also scored similarly on benchmarks meant to test general performance and graphics, as shown below. (Note: Geekbench 6, the performance test, evaluates the performance of a processor’s single core in addition to how multiple cores perform together, as shown in the table).

    Pixel 7A vs. Pixel 7

    Pixel 7A 1,439 3,560 1,855Pixel 7 1,454 3,429 1,852
    • Geekbench 6 Single Core
    • Geekbench 6 Multicore
    • 3DMark Wildlife Extreme
    Note: Higher scores are better

    I generally got around a day of battery life out of both, although for you it may vary depending on your phone’s settings and which apps you’re using. In addition to using the devices as my personal phone when I reviewed them, I ran two battery tests: a 45-minute endurance test to see how much battery life is drained after tasks like making a video call, playing games and streaming video, and a three-hour test that involves streaming a YouTube video and measuring the battery percentage at each hour mark.

    The Pixel 7 won the 45-minute endurance test since it had 94% of its battery remaining versus the Pixel 7A’s 92%. But the Pixel 7A outperformed the Pixel 7 on the three-hour drain test, although the two were close. All told, battery life is similar between the two devices.

    Pixel 7A vs. Pixel 7 Battery Test

    Pixel 7A Pixel 7
    1 Hour 96% 95%
    2 Hour 90% 88%
    3 Hour 85% 81%

    Still, the Pixel 7 does charge slightly faster than the Pixel 7A, given that the former supports 18W charging while the latter supports 20W. In practice, the Pixel 7 went from 20% to 64% after 30 minutes of charging, while the Pixel 7A went from 20% to 58%. (Note: for this test, I used a non-Google 45-watt power adapter and the USB-C cable that came with each phone). Both phones also support wireless charging, which is notable considering the Pixel 6A lacked this functionality.

    Pixel 7 vs. Pixel 7A: Software and support

    The Pixel 7A showing its quick settings screen against a blue backgroundThe Pixel 7A showing its quick settings screen against a blue background

    The Pixel 7A (pictured) and Pixel 7 will likely both get Android 14 before other non-Pixel devices.

    James Martin/CNET

    Google provides a very similar software experience for the Pixel 7 and Pixel 7A. Both devices run Android 13 and will likely be among the first to be upgraded to Android 14 since they’re Pixel devices.

    You also get Google’s Pixel-specific features like the Recorder app, its suite of phone call tools that let Google wait on hold for you and transcribe automated menus and Google’s free VPN. Google also regularly releases minor software updates for Pixel phones called “feature drops” that introduce new additions throughout the year. Both devices offer the same biometric authentication options for unlocking your phone: face unlock and fingerprint scanning.

    But of the two phones, only the Pixel 7 supports spatial audio, which essentially creates the effect of surround sound in your headphones. When testing this feature while watching Stranger Things, I noticed the sounds of cars zooming by or insects chirping had a bit more movement and depth on the Pixel 7 compared to the Pixel 7A.

    The Pixel 7 and 7A will each get at least three years of Android version updates and five years of security updates. That means you can expect the Pixel 7 to get Android version updates up to October 2025, while the Pixel 7A will likely receive Android OS upgrades until May 2026.

    Pixel 7 vs. Pixel 7A: Which should you buy?

    The Pixel 7 (left) and Pixel 7A (right) behind held up next to each otherThe Pixel 7 (left) and Pixel 7A (right) behind held up next to each other

    The Pixel 7 (left) and Pixel 7A (right)

    Richard Peterson/CNET

    The Pixel 7A is the best overall choice for most people because it provides a very similar experience as the Pixel 7 for $100 less. You’ll get a few extras with the Pixel 7, but none that feel like deal-breakers.

    These include a slightly larger screen, charging that’s a bit faster than the Pixel 7A’s, the Action Pan photography feature, spatial audio and a higher protection rating against water submersion. Even though the camera specifications differ between the two devices, both phones capture impressive photos that are more than adequate for casual photographers.

    With the Pixel 7A, Google further closed the gap between its flagship Pixel device and its budget-friendly option. For that reason, I’m hoping to see more from the Pixel 8.

    Google Pixel 7A vs. Pixel 7 Specs

    Google Pixel 7A Google Pixel 7
    Display size, tech, resolution, refresh rate 6.1-inch OLED; FHD+; up to 90Hz refresh rate 6.3-inch OLED; FHD+; up to 90Hz refresh rate
    Dimensions (inches) 6 x 2.9 x 0.35 in. 6.1 x 2.9 x 0.34 in.
    Dimensions (millimeters) 152.4 x 72.9 x 9 mm 155.6 x 73.2 x 8.7 mm
    Weight (grams, ounces) 193g; 6.8oz. 197g; 6.9oz.
    Mobile software (at launch) Android 13 Android 13
    Camera 64MP main; 13MP ultrawide 50MP main; 12MP ultrawide
    Front-facing camera 13MP 10.8MP
    Video capture 4K at 60 FPS 4K at 60 FPS
    Processor Google Tensor G2 Google Tensor G2
    RAM/storage 128GB + 8GB 128GB + 8GB
    Expandable storage None None
    Battery 4,385-mAh; wireless charging 4,355-mAh; wireless charging
    Fingerprint sensor Yes (under screen) Yes (under screen)
    Face unlock Yes Yes
    Connector USB-C USB-C
    Headphone jack None None
    Special features Magic Eraser, Real Tone, Photo Unblur, Face Unblur, Long Exposure Mode, Hold For Me, Wait Times, Direct My Call Live Translate, Magic Eraser, Photo Unblur, Real Tone, Face Unblur, Long Exposure Mode, Action Pan; Hold For Me, Wait Times, Direct My Call Live Translate,
    US price off-contract $499 ($549 for mmWave) $599
    UK price 449 599
    Australia price AU$749 AU$999

    Google's Pixel 7A phoneGoogle's Pixel 7A phone

    James Martin/CNET

    Google’s budget phone took a leap forward in 2023 with the Pixel 7A, which offers many of the same benefits as the Pixel 7 but at a cheaper price. Like the Pixel 7, the Pixel 7A runs on Google’s Tensor G2 processor, meaning it has many of the same photo editing and language translation features as its pricier sibling. The Pixel 7A’s 64-megapixel camera also takes excellent photos that rival the Pixel 7’s in quality.

    While we still like the Pixel 7, the Pixel 7A’s lower price makes it a better deal for most people. Only opt for the Pixel 7 if you really want a slightly larger screen and are willing to pay the extra $100 for it. Otherwise, the main differences between the Pixel 7 and 7A come down to the former’s more durable build, slightly faster charging and its ability to wirelessly charge compatible accessories. The Pixel 7 also has a larger camera sensor that’s more sensitive to light, according to Google, but CNET’s Lisa Eadicicco didn’t notice much of a difference.

    Read our Google Pixel 7A review.

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    Google's Pixel 7Google's Pixel 7

    Google

    Google’s flagship phone has a solid 50-megapixel camera, a 6.3-inch screen and Google’s Tensor G2 processor. While we generally recommend the Pixel 7A since it’s $100 cheaper and offers a similar experience, the Pixel 7 is still a great choice for those in need of a relatively affordable Android phone with a larger screen.

    Read our Google Pixel 7 review.

  • I Just Tried Photoshop’s New AI Tool. It Makes Photos Creative, Funny or Unreal

    I Just Tried Photoshop’s New AI Tool. It Makes Photos Creative, Funny or Unreal

    Adobe is building generative AI abilities into its flagship image-editing software with a new Photoshop beta release Tuesday. The move promises to release a new torrent of creativity even as it gives us all a new reason to pause and wonder if that sensational, scary or inspirational photo you see on the internet is actually real.

    In my tests, detailed below, I found the tool impressive overall but far from perfect. Adding it directly to Photoshop is a big deal, letting creators experiment within the software tool they’re likely already using without excursions to Midjourney, Stability AI’s Stable Diffusion or other outside generative AI tools.

    With Adobe’s Firefly family of generative AI technologies arriving in Photoshop, you’ll be able to let the AI fill a selected part of the image with whatever it thinks most fitting – for example, replacing road cracks with smooth pavement. You can also specify the imagery you’d like with a text prompt, such as adding a double yellow line to the road.

    Firefly in Photoshop also can also expand an image, adding new scenery beyond the frame based on what’s already in the frame or what you suggest with text. Want more sky and mountains in your landscape photo? A bigger crowd at the rock concert? Photoshop will oblige, without today’s difficulties of finding source material and splicing it in.

    Photoshop’s Firefly skills can be powerful. In Adobe’s live demo, the were often able to match a photo’s tones, blend in AI-generated imagery seamlessly, infer the geometric details of perspective even in reflections and extrapolate the position of the sun from shadows and sky haze.

    Such technologies have been emerging over the last year as Stable Diffusion, Midjourney and OpenAI’s Dall-Ecaptured the imaginations of artists and creative pros. Now it’s built directly into the software they’re most likely to already be using, streamlining what can be a cumbersome editing process.

    “It really puts the power and control of generative AI into the hands of the creator,” said Maria Yap, Adobe’s vice president of digital imaging. “You can just really have some fun. You can explore some ideas. You can ideate. You can create without ever necessarily getting into the deep tools of the product, very quickly.”

    Now you’d better brace yourself for that future.

    Photoshop’s Firefly AI imperfect but useful

    In my testing, I frequently ran into problems, many of them likely stemming from the limited range of the training imagery. When I tried to insert a fish on a bicycle to an image, Firefly only added the bicycle. I couldn’t get Firefly to add a kraken to emerge from San Francisco Bay. A musk ox looked like a panda-moose hybrid.

    Less fanciful material also presents problems. Text looks like an alien race’s script. Shadows, lighting, perspective and geometry weren’t always right.

    People are hard, too. On close inspection, their faces were distorted in weird ways. Humans added into shots were positioned too high in the frame or in other unconvincing ways.

    Still, Firefly is remarkable for what it can accomplish, particularly with landscape shots. I could add mountains, oceans, skies and hills to landscapes. A white delivery van in a night scene was appropriately yellowish to match the sodium vapor streetlights in the scene. If you don’t like the trio of results Firefly presents, you can click the “generate” button to get another batch.

    Given the pace of AI developments, I expect Firefly in Photoshop will improve.

    “This is the future of Photoshop,” Yap said.

    Automating image manipulation

    For years, “Photoshop” hasn’t just referred to Adobe’s software. It’s also used as a verb signifying photo manipulations like slimming supermodels’ waists or hiding missile launch failures. AI tools automate not just fun and flights of fancy, but also fake images like an alleged explosion at the Pentagon or a convincingly real photo of the pope in a puffy jacket, to pick two recent examples.

    With AI, expect editing techniques far more subtle than the extra smoke easily recognized as digitally added to photos of an Israeli attack on Lebanon in 2006.

    It’s a reflection of the double-edged sword that is generative AI. The technology is undeniably useful in many situations but also blurs the line between what is true and what is merely plausible.

    For its part, Adobe tries to curtail problems. It doesn’t permit prompts to create images of many political figures and blocks you for “safety issues” if you try to create an image of black smoke in front of the White House. And its AI usage guidelines prohibit imagery involving violence, pornography and “misleading, fraudulent, or deceptive content that could lead to real-world harm,” among other categories. “We disable accounts that engage in behavior that is deceptive or harmful.”

    Firefly also is designed to skip over styling prompts like that have provoked serious complaints from artists displeased to see their type of art reproduced by a data center. And it supports the Content Authenticity Initiative‘s content credentials technology that can be used to label an image as having been generated by AI.

    Generative AI for photos

    Adobe’s Firefly family of generative AI tools began with a website that turns a text prompt like “modern chair made up of old tires” into an image. It’s added a couple other options since, and Creative Cloud subscribers will also be able to try a lightweight version of the Photoshop interface on the Firefly site.

    When OpenAI’s Dall-E brought that technology to anyone who signed up for it in 2022, it helped push generative artificial intelligence from a technological curiosity toward mainstream awareness. Now there’s plenty of worry along with the excitement as even AI creators fret about what the technology will bring now and in the more distant future.

    Generative AI is a relatively new form of artificial intelligence technology. AI models can be trained to recognize patterns in vast amounts of data – in this case labeled images from Adobe’s stock art business and other licensed sources – and then to create new imagery based on that source data.

    Generative AI has surged to mainstream awareness with language models used in tools like OpenAI’s ChatGPT chatbot, Google’s Gmail and Google Docs, and Microsoft’s Bing search engine. When it comes to generating images, Adobe employs an AI image generation technique called diffusion that’s also behind Dall-E, Stable Diffusion, Midjourney and Google’s Imagen.

    Adobe calls Firefly for Photoshop a “co-pilot” technology, positioning it as a creative aid, not a replacement for humans. Yap acknowledges that some creators are nervous about being replaced by AI. Adobe prefers to see it as a technology that can amplify and speed up the creative process, spreading creative tools to a broader population.

    “I think the democratization we’ve been going through, and having more creativity, is a positive thing for all of us.”