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Another deceptively realistic image of a so-called "Google Pixel Ultra" is slamming clicks on the web. This uses a previously released image of a 3 XL pixel to serve as a starting point for an edited final product. With an application like Photoshop, creating an image in another – especially an image like this – is extremely simple.
If you look at the left image below, then the right image below, you will notice similarities. These are both built with the same graphical elements. Note the slight change in the thickness of the white lines on the left and right of the screen, on the "Ultra" version. Not quite perfect
The ease with which this type of image is falsified stems largely from the fact that the original is also a rendering. Google uses renderings when delivering marketing material at the production level. This case and this phone were for the Google online store. As such, they must be perfect. They must be returned, not photographed.
Our eyes are trained to wait for a certain level of perfection when an image is rendered – and another level of imperfection when we look at a photo. We expect the regularity of the items on hand – so it's easier to pretend. I went ahead and you made two other Google Pixel Ultra models, while we are there.
Look how big this phone is! It's huge! Look at each other – it's also huge, and it does not need that USB-C port! It also has a very strange notch with all kinds of sensors and cameras, as well as a speaker and an LED flash, because ALL THINGS must be there! After all, it's Ultra? Take a look at the timeline below to learn more about the upcoming Google Pixel range – without the Ultra. Look especially for the article called "Pixel 3 and our desperate need to be surprised and delighted"!
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