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Pixel Slate and Keyboard hands-on: A pleasure to type on, but otherwise an average tablet

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Google’s Pixel Slate is a compelling convertible that runs Chrome OS. Its keyboard accessory, the Pixel Slate Keyboard, delivers a great typing experience.
Google kicked off its hardware event this morning with a slew of smartphone and smart display announcements, but it didn’t leave the tablet enthusiasts in the room hanging. The Mountain View company today debuted the Pixel Slate, a tablet running Chrome OS. And we took it for a brief test drive.
So, first impressions: It has quite a footprint. The Slate’s 3:2 aspect ratio screen measures 12.3 inches across, and the whole thing — screen, enclosure, and all — clocks in at 1.6 pounds. You’ll be able to just about fit it in a backpack or briefcase, but anything smaller would definitely be a stretch.
That screen looks pretty darn good, though. It’s what Google calls a “Molecular Display,” a low-temperature polycrystalline silicon (LTPS) 3,000 by 2,000 resolution LCD with faster response times and brighter colors than conventional panels. It seemed vibrant to my eyes, but the demo area’s tall windows didn’t do it any favors. We’ll have to save in-depth testing for more neutral lighting.
As a sometime Microsoft Surface Pro user, it didn’t take long for the Pixel Slate’s form factor to grow on me. It’s got bezels thick enough to grip in portrait or landscape orientation, and a fingerprint sensor on the top-left that supports Chrome OS’ biometric authentication features.
There are two cameras on tap: an 8-megapixel sensor with a f/1.9 aperture and 1.4μm pixel size, with a wide field of view and 1080p/30fps recording; and an 8-megapixel Sony Exmor RS-class IMX355 sensor with a f/1.8 aperture and larger 1.12μm pixel size. Both can take advantage of the Google Camera, Google’s AI-embued photography app that enables features like portrait mode, which blurs the background in photos while keeping the foreground in focus
Other hardware of note is dual front-firing speakers and a Titan Security chip — the same chip inside the Pixel 3 and Pixel 3 XL — that enables things verified boot and storage of “encrypted approximations” of fingerprints in an offline, discrete processing unit.
The exact processor, memory, and storage mix will depend on the model. At launch, you’ve got four flavors to choose from:
The Pixel is peas in a pod with the Pixel Slate Keyboard, a detachable case with circular backlit keys (including dedicated Assistant and control panel keys in the top row). It doesn’t draw power from the tablet’s battery — Google pegs the Slate’s battery life at about 12 hours of mixed use — and it feels fantastic to type on. Compared to my handy Microsoft Surface Touch Cover, the key travel is noticeably less shallow, and there’s less resistance. I’m a mechanical keyboard devotee, but I wouldn’t mind swapping it from the Pixel Slate Keyboard now and again.
Among the Pixel Slate Keyboard’s other cool tricks are an adjustable hinge (Google calls it “the folio”) that can lock it in the angle of your choosing, and a “hushed key” design that dampens typing noises.
What about the Pixel Slate’s software? It’s Chrome OS through-and-through, right down to the ability to install Linux distros and Android apps from the Play Store, the latter of which make great use of the Pixel Slate’s touchscreen. But it’s been spruced up to improve the touch experience.
The launcher bears the most obvious changes. When the Pixel Slate is detached from the Pixel Slate Keyboard, installed apps surface in a large, scrollable, list of shortcuts. There’s a search bar on top, and beneath it’s a list of app recommendations informed by the same contextual AI built into Android Pie.
In the bottom-right corner of the screen is the redesigned settings menu, which has larger buttons that are easier to tap with a finger (and more forgiving if you miss the touch targets). The Google Assistant — Google’s omniscient voice intelligence — is present and accounted for, and made easily reachable from a small tab near the bottom-center of the taskbar. Finally, there’s a Pixel Slate-optimized version of Adobe Acrobat onboard, which I didn’t get a chance to test.
There’s a lot to unpack with the Pixel Slate, needless to say. It’s a compelling foray into the world of convertibles, but it’s going up against a juggernaut — Microsoft’s Surface series. It remains to be seen whether Google can convince would-be Surface buyers of the merits of Chrome OS, especially considering the Slate starts at $599 without the $199 Pixel Slate Keyboard and $99 Pixelbook Pen stylus.
The Pixel Slate is available for preorder starting today, and comes bundled with a USB-C adapter and three free months of YouTube Premium.

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