Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold: Bigger, mostly better

Image Credits: Brian Heater

All credit goes to Samsung for inventing and popularizing the foldable. The form factor had plenty of doubters — I admit I was skeptical — when the first Galaxy Fold hit the market in 2019. It was the first Galaxy Flip, which arrived a year later, that taught me to truly appreciate foldables.

When the original Pixel Fold debuted in 2023, it quickly became my favorite foldable. Google demonstrated how a few tweaks to its aspect ratio can make a foldable much less unwieldy. But for all the impressive technology that went into the device, I discovered it also doubled as a great e-reader.

The Pixel Fold was a formidable entrant, which — to my mind — has only been rivaled by the OnePlus Open. The addition of those products, along with others from companies like Oppo, have opened the field in a nice way. The competition has pushed innovation, rather than being content to let Samsung rest on its laurels.

a white and brown cute bunny up close
Taking advantage of the tri-camera system on June.
Image Credits: Brian Heater / TechCrunch

By the time it was ready to announce the Fold’s successor, Google had enough confidence in the product to fully integrate it into its flagship line. There will never be Pixels 2 through 8. Instead, Google gave the world the Pixel 9 Pro Fold, slotting the device in as a kind of ultra-premium sibling to the Pixel 9 and Pixel 9 Pro. That, frankly, is just branding. At the end of the day, it means nothing for consumers.  

What matters is that the Fold is back, bigger and better than before. I confess that the “bigger” part initially gave me pause. One of the things I liked most about the original Pixel Fold was that it felt more manageable than Samsung’s versions. I suppose it’s something of an inevitability that foldables join the rest of the smartphone space in the great screen embiggening.

Mercifully, Google managed to make strides in screen size without building an unwieldy phone around it. The front screen has increased from 5.8 to 6.3 inches and is steadily inching closer to edge to edge. That will be more than enough screen real estate for most of the things you do day to day.

More impressive is the interior display’s jump from 7.6 to a full 8 inches of 120Hz AMOLED. For reference, the iPad mini’s screen is only 0.3 inch larger. When unfolded, this thing is legitimately a tablet. Google’s settled on a nice aspect ratio as well. When you’re finished responding to emails on the front display, you can pop it open and watch a movie.

The Pixel 9 Fold has grown up and out while actually losing weight in the process, down from 283 to 257 grams. Unfortunately, shedding 100 or so extra grams comes with a smaller battery, down to 4,605 from 4,821 mAh. Google largely circumvents any issue there with a more power-efficient SoC, skipping a generation from Pixel Tensor G2 to the G4. It’s worth noting that, in spite of the eye-popping $1,000 price differential between the Pixel 9 and 9 Fold, Google opted to employ the same chip across the line.

One major upgrade you do get with the Fold over the standard Pixel is an excellent tri-camera system. Don’t tell Connie, but I’ve been using the 9 Fold to take product shots for the site. It’s that good. All of the images in the Snap Spectacles story, for instance, were taken on the foldable.

The numbers haven’t changed much from the original Fold’s setup, moving from 48MP wide, 10.8 ultrawide, 10.8 telephoto, 8MP to 48MP wide, 10.5 ultrawide, 10.8MP telephoto. But Google has continued tweaking its computational imaging processing, so the quality keeps improving.

The Pixel 9 Fold had a lot to live up to after the first Pixel Fold entered the world fully formed. The new handset is a worthy successor and one of the best foldables out there.

Google CEO Sundar Pichai announces $120M fund for global AI education

Image Credits: Kenzo Tribouillard / AFP / Getty Images

Speaking Saturday at the UN Summit of the Future, Google CEO Sundar Pichai described AI as “the most transformative technology yet” and announced a new fund for AI education and training around the world.

Pichai pointed to four broad opportunities he sees for AI and sustainable development: helping people access information in their own language, accelerating scientific discovery, providing alerts and tracking around climate disasters, and fueling economic progress.

Pichai acknowledged that AI also presents risks, for example with deep fakes, though he didn’t mention AI’s impact on the climate.

He added that he wants to avoid a global “AI divide” and that Google is creating a $120 million Global AI Opportunity Fund through which it will “make AI education and training available in communities around the world” in partnership with local nonprofits and NGOs.

On the same theme, Pichai called for “smart product regulation that mitigates harms and resists national protectionist impulses” — otherwise, he predicted regulation could “widen an AI divide and limit AI’s benefits.”

Google Cloud Partners With TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

TechCrunch Disrupt Partners With Google Cloud

TechCrunch is joining forces with Google Cloud as its lead partner for Startup Battlefield 200. This event will highlight and support the most promising startups from around the globe at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024, which will take place in San Francisco from October 28-30.

At the heart of this collaboration is a shared vision of fostering innovation. Google Cloud is dedicated to helping startups scale faster and smarter through a combination of robust infrastructure, advanced AI capabilities, and global networks. This approach aligns seamlessly with the goals of TechCrunch Disrupt and Startup Battlefield 200, which aim to spotlight and nurture the next wave of industry disruptors.

TechCrunch Startup Battlefield 200 has a rich history of propelling early-stage companies to stardom, with notable alumni such as Dropbox, Mint and Trello. This year, the event will showcase 200 startups, selected for their innovative potential and diverse industry representation.

Participants in Startup Battlefield 200 receive invaluable exposure, networking opportunities and the chance to compete for a $100,000 equity-free prize. Beyond these tangible benefits, the event fosters an environment where cutting-edge ideas can flourish and the seeds of future industry leaders can be planted.

More information about Startup Battlefield 200 can be found here.

About TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

TechCrunch Disrupt is where you’ll find innovation for every stage of your startup journey. Whether you’re a budding founder with a revolutionary idea, a seasoned startup looking to scale or an investor seeking the next big thing, TechCrunch Disrupt offers unparalleled resources, connections and expert insights to propel your venture forward. Over 10,000 startup leaders will be attending this year’s event on October 28-30 in San Francisco. Learn more here.

Meet Brex, Google Cloud, Aerospace and more at Disrupt 2024

TechCrunch Disrupt 2024

We’re about four months away from TechCrunch Disrupt 2024, taking place October 28 to 30 in San Francisco!

We could not bring you this world-class event without our world-class partners — some of the startup ecosystem’s leading tech companies. Why? They show up armed with their expertise, educational resources and connections. They present sessions on topics that help founders — on every point along the startup journey — take their next steps toward building a solid, successful business.

They also show up looking for opportunities to form alliances and partnerships or to, potentially, become a startup’s next client. If there’s one thing we know, magic happens at Disrupt.

The TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 parade of partners continues

We already announced some of our partners here. Let’s take a look at the latest group of companies eager to meet you in San Francisco — and where you’ll find them. Pro tip: Some of them appear in multiple categories.

Many thanks to Google Cloud, which will be meeting and greeting Disrupt attendees for a second year in a row in its 30×30 spot in the Level 2 Lobby. Google Cloud is also the exclusive sponsor of the AI Session Track.

Industry stage partner session — Space

The Aerospace Corporation

Broadcast partner session on the Builders Stage

Golub Capital

AI Stage

Nebius AI

Event badges

Nebius AI

Roundtable discussions

TELUS10TimesUC Berkeley SCETGreentank500 Global

Breakout sessions

Llama LoungeThis Week in FintechSOSVHackerOneTheory Ventures Girls in Tech

Charging stations

Brex

The TechCrunch Disrupt Exhibition floor

BrexFyeLabsElectronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)DomEN DOOCodelinkCodevRezoomexDescope

Startup pavilions

Japan External Trade Organization (JETRO)SilkRoad

Is your company interested in sponsoring or exhibiting at TechCrunch Disrupt 2024? Contact our sponsorship sales team by filling out this form.

Watch a robot navigate the Google DeepMind offices using Gemini

Google DeepMind robot

Image Credits: Google DeepMind

Generative AI has already shown a lot of promise in robots. Applications include natural language interactions, robot learning, no-code programming and even design. Google’s DeepMind Robotics team this week is showcasing another potential sweet spot between the two disciplines: navigation.

In a paper titled “Mobility VLA: Multimodal Instruction Navigation with Long-Context VLMs and Topological Graphs,” the team demonstrates how it has implemented Google Gemini 1.5 Pro to teach a robot to respond to commands and navigate around an office. Naturally, DeepMind used some of the Every Day Robots that have been hanging around since Google shuttered the project amid widespread layoffs last year.

In a series of videos attached to the project, DeepMind employees open with a smart assistant-style “OK, Robot,” before asking the system to perform different tasks around the 9,000-square-foot office space.

Image Credits: Google DeepMind

In one example, a Googler asks the robot to take him somewhere to draw things. “OK,” the robot responds, wearing a jaunty yellow bowtie, “give me a minute. Thinking with Gemini …” The robot then proceeds to lead the human to a wall-sized white board. In a second video, a different person tells the robot to follow the directions on the whiteboard.

A simple map shows the robot how to get to the “Blue Area.” Again, the robot thinks for a moment before taking a long route to what turns out to be a robotics testing area. “I’ve successfully followed the directions on the whiteboard,” the robot announces with a level of self-confidence most humans can only dream of.

Prior to these videos, the robots were familiarized with the space using what the team calls “Multimodal Instruction Navigation with demonstration Tours (MINT).” Effectively, that means walking the robot around the office while pointing out different landmarks with speech. Next, the team utilizes hierarchical Vision-Language-Action (VLA) to “that combin[e] the environment understanding and common sense reasoning power.” Once the processes are combined, the robot can respond to written and drawn commands, as well as gestures.

Image Credits: Google DeepMind

Google says the robot had a 90% or so success rate across more than 50 interactions with employees.

Retro app on a smartphone screen on a smartphone laying on a tiled table

Photo-sharing startup Retro spots Google Photos copying its idea and design

Retro app on a smartphone screen on a smartphone laying on a tiled table

Image Credits: Romain Dillet / TechCrunch

You know you’ve made it as a startup when the Big Tech companies start ripping you off. That appears to be the case with Retro, the popular photo-sharing app that’s gained a following among those who appreciate the ability to share photos and videos more privately with friends and family. The company was recently caught off guard by a post on X (formerly Twitter), which offers a first look at a new Google Photos feature called “My Week.” Unfortunately for Retro, the feature looks a lot like its own app for photo-sharing, as it also encourages users to take photos to document their days, which are then showcased in a week-by-week format.

Retro co-founder and CTO Ryan Olson reshared the post circulating on X with a comment, “feel like I’ve seen this somewhere …” along with the inquisitive face with a monocle emoji.

The X post detailing the new Google Photos addition links to Android Authority’s APK teardown, which digs into the Android app to find possible upcoming changes. The site was able to switch on the My Week feature, suggesting a public rollout could be coming soon.

According to its findings, Google Photos will add a new “Introducing My Week” tile to its existing Memories carousel, which will include a setup wizard that helps people select the photos from their week that they want to share. Users can also invite others to view their weekly memories, similar to how Retro lets people invite friends to its app for the same purpose.

Image Credits: Android Authority (opens in a new window)

After setup is complete, the photos selected by the Google Photos user will show up in a dedicated card in the Memories carousel, the blog said. Users can also tap on the card to add more photos, view those shared in previous weeks, and message their contacts.

In other words, Google has taken much of the Retro app experience and turned it into a feature to add to its larger Google Photos product.

Reached for comment, Google didn’t speak to the similarities between its My Week feature and Retro, but it did confirm that My Week was something the company was experimenting with in an invite-only mode. “We’re always experimenting with new ways to help people reflect and share their memories with the people that matter most to them,” Google spokesperson Michael Marconi said. “We’re looking forward to getting feedback on My Week but don’t have anything else to share on future availability.”

Retro CEO Nathan Sharp isn’t worrying just yet about Google’s plan to copy his app’s experience, despite the numerous similarities. However, he noted that in addition to making the user’s week the main unit for the photo journal, Google Photos’ design also looks a lot like Retro. Like his app, the Google Photos journal is displayed in a horizontal “filmstrip”-style format, with rounded corners on the outside.

Still, Sharp said, Google’s product is not yet public and could change.

Three screenshots of Retro's new journal feature
Image Credits: Retro

“We’ve worked inside of big companies as well, and we know there’s a lot of testing going on inside, and oftentimes those are rough and they change dramatically before they ship,” Sharp said. Before building Retro, he and Olson — the co-founder of Retro’s parent company, Lone Palm Labs — had worked together at Instagram and they understand what it’s like to be on the other side of things.

“At first, when you see this, it does make you a little angry, because it seems like some things are lifted one to one. But … this isn’t what they’re shipping,” he explained. “They aren’t asking to be judged on what’s on Twitter today. So I have to kind of step back and say, this is probably a team in progress.”

If the feature does ship, Sharp says he won’t underestimate Google’s potential to compete in his space — and “potentially with the same exact designs.” But he does think Retro users may appreciate that the app serves a specific purpose — that is, one that’s dedicated to catching up with friends and family.

That, he says, is very different from an app you use to store “every single photo and screenshot you’ve ever had,” as well as edit those, and free up storage space on your phone, which are the primary use cases for Google Photos.

“One of the things with Retro is that we have a unique approach — both to the product but also the ethos of things,” Sharp said. “On Retro, your photos are incredibly private. We don’t sell or rent our user data to anybody. We aren’t an ad-driven model. We don’t have a public feed of people that are trying to build audiences, so you don’t run into distractions outside of family and friends. We don’t train AI models on any of your photos. I think the simplicity and the focus of that still helps us differentiate from any kind of bigger multi-use case app.”

Image Credits: Retro

Retro continues to push out new features to cater to this audience as well. It launched collaborative journals and the ability to send photo postcards directly in the app, even if you don’t know your friend’s address. Instead, the app will simply prompt the friend to enter their address to receive the postcard, but the address itself remains private. Plus, on Android, users can now send postcards directly from the camera roll itself. (And because Retro hasn’t yet built out the payment flow, the feature is free to use.)

The startup is also working to bring its widget to iOS, which would allow users to customize their iPhone’s Home Screen, and it’s developing a feature to enable direct sharing with “keyholders,” or people who’ve been given access to a user’s entire photo archive, not just photos from the past month.

Eventually, Retro will look to monetize by offering a premium subscription, but nothing has rolled out on that front as of yet.

Google backs Indian open source Uber rival

Moving Tech team photo

Image Credits: Moving Tech

Google has become one of the latest investors in Moving Tech, the parent firm of Indian open source ridesharing app Namma Yatri that is quickly capturing market share from Uber and Ola with its no-commission model.

Bengaluru-based Moving Tech has raised $11 million in a pre-Series A funding round co-led by Blume Ventures and Antler, the startup said. Google, which has pledged to invest $10 billion in India, participated in the round.

Namma Yatri works atop the Open Network for Digital Commerce (ONDC), an interoperable scheme backed by the Indian government that is aiming to democratize e-commerce in the country. Namma Yatri’s app connects customers with auto-rickshaw and cab drivers without charging either party for rides. Instead, the startup collects a small monthly fee from its driver partners.

Uber and Ola, in comparison, charge their driver partners as much as 25%-30% of the ride cost, and have refused to join the ONDC network for their core mobility offerings.

Moving Tech’s co-founders, Magizhan Selvan and Shan M S, told TechCrunch that they identified an opportunity after they found out how frustrated drivers were with their treatment in the existing system.

“There was a lack of differentiated approach,” Shan said, reflecting on the decade-long duopoly that Uber and Ola have enjoyed unchallenged in India. Moving Tech doesn’t offer customer discounts or driver incentives, and it is banking on providing a service that people find genuinely useful, he added.

To understand drivers’ challenges, Selvan drove over 500 auto-rickshaw rides, and he said the startup’s guiding principle is to infuse empathy into its services.

Namma Yatri is operational in more than half-a-dozen Indian cities, including Bengaluru and Hyderabad, and has had over 46 million rides since its launch in 2022, according to its public dashboard. The startup was incubated by Juspay, a SoftBank-backed financial services startup.

The startup said it is operationally profitable, and doesn’t see the need to raise a lot of capital.

Over the past decade, India has been pursuing an ambitious strategy to digitize its economy and public services through the “India Stack,” a set of open APIs for identity, payments and data sharing. This government-led initiative aims to create unified digital infrastructure that can be leveraged by both public and private sectors to deliver services more efficiently and inclusively to India’s 1.4 billion citizens.

Notably, India has revolutionized the mobile payments landscape in the country with UPI, an interoperable network that now processes over 11 billion transactions a month — surpassing the combined volume of all card companies.

Karthik Reddy, a partner at Blume Ventures, said Moving Tech was at the forefront of transforming mobility “with a fresh and innovative model.” He added, “We were amazed by the simplicity of what the tech and a robust product can do to solve mass mobility. We are glad to partner with an exceptional team and back their grand vision.”

Namma Yatri will deploy the fresh funds to expand its engineering and research and development teams, its founders said. It’s also seeking to expand its offerings to more types of transportations, including buses, they added.

Wiz walks away from Google’s $23B acquisition offer: Read the CEO's note to employees

Wiz Founders

Image Credits: Avishag Shaar-Yashuv / Wiz (opens in a new window) under a CC BY 2.0 (opens in a new window) license.

Cybersecurity startup Wiz has turned down a $23 billion acquisition offer from Alphabet, Google’s parent company, according to a source familiar with discussions.

Despite the offer representing a substantial premium over its last private valuation of $12 billion, Wiz’s management team with the support of investors has opted to remain independent, the person said.

Wiz’s CEO, Assaf Rappaport, sent an email to Wiz’s 1,200 employees around the world, writing that, “Saying no to such humbling offers is tough, but with our exceptional team, I feel confident in making that choice.”

New York-based Wiz was founded in 2020 by four former Israeli military officers who previously co-founded a cloud cybersecurity company called Adallom that Microsoft later acquired for $320 million.

Each of them — including Rappaport, Yinon Costica, Roy Reznik, and Ami Luttwak — reportedly owns 9% of Wiz. The outfit’s venture backers include Index Ventures, Sequoia Capital, and Thrive Capital, among others.

Below is the email that Rappaport sent to employees:

Wizards,

I know the last week has been intense, with the buzz about a potential acquisition. While we are flattered by offers we have received, we have chosen to continue on our path to building Wiz.

Let me cut to the chase: our next milestones are $1 billion in ARR and an IPO.

Saying no to such humbling offers is tough, but with our exceptional team, I feel confident in making that choice.

The market validation we have experienced following this news only reinforces our goal — creating a platform that both security and development teams love. We are grateful for the faith our employees, investors, and customers have in us as we build the best cybersecurity company in the world.

Thank you for your hard work and focus during these days, which helped us stay on track and finish the quarter stronger than ever. As we always say: LFG.

Assaf