## Pixel 8: “Ảnh Đỉnh Cao” nhờ AI – Đánh giá chi tiết!
Google Pixel 8 đã chính thức ra mắt và hứa hẹn mang đến trải nghiệm chụp ảnh vượt trội nhờ sức mạnh của trí tuệ nhân tạo. Bài đánh giá chi tiết dưới đây sẽ giúp bạn hiểu rõ hơn về những nâng cấp đáng kinh ngạc của chiếc smartphone này.
Thiết kế và hiệu năng: Pixel 8 kế thừa ngôn ngữ thiết kế tinh tế của người tiền nhiệm, nhưng được hoàn thiện hơn với chất liệu cao cấp và khả năng hoàn thiện tốt hơn. Hiệu năng mạnh mẽ nhờ con chip Tensor G3 mới, xử lý mượt mà mọi tác vụ, từ chơi game nặng đến đa nhiệm.
Camera – Điểm nhấn của Pixel 8: Đây mới thực sự là điểm đột phá của Pixel 8. Tính năng “Best Take” sử dụng AI để lựa chọn ảnh chụp đẹp nhất từ nhiều bức ảnh liên tiếp, loại bỏ hoàn toàn những khoảnh khắc bị nhòe, thiếu sáng hay bị chớp mắt. Chất lượng ảnh được nâng lên một tầm cao mới với độ chi tiết cao, màu sắc sống động và dải dynamic range rộng hơn. Chế độ chụp đêm cũng được cải thiện đáng kể, cho ra những bức ảnh sáng rõ và ít nhiễu hạt hơn.
Phần mềm và tính năng: Giao diện Pixel UI mượt mà, thân thiện và được tối ưu hóa để tận dụng tối đa sức mạnh của phần cứng. Các tính năng thông minh tích hợp sẵn như Google Assistant, Live Translate và Call Screen đều hoạt động chính xác và tiện lợi.
Tổng kết: Google Pixel 8 là một chiếc smartphone toàn diện, với thiết kế đẹp, hiệu năng mạnh mẽ và đặc biệt là khả năng chụp ảnh vượt trội nhờ AI. Nếu bạn đang tìm kiếm một chiếc điện thoại có camera xuất sắc, Pixel 8 chắc chắn là một lựa chọn hàng đầu.
Mua ngay Pixel 8 chính hãng tại Queen Mobile! Queen Mobile là địa điểm uy tín cung cấp điện thoại iPhone và các sản phẩm công nghệ hàng đầu, cam kết chất lượng và dịch vụ tốt nhất. Hãy đến ngay cửa hàng gần nhất hoặc truy cập website của chúng tôi để sở hữu Pixel 8 ngay hôm nay!
#Pixel8 #GooglePixel8 #ReviewPixel8 #ĐánhGiáPixel8 #ĐiệnThoạiPixel8 #ChụpẢnhAI #QueenMobile #CôngNghệ #Smartphone #MuaNgay
Giới thiệu Google Pixel 8 Review: ‘Best Take’ Levels Up AI-Enhanced Photos
: Google Pixel 8 Review: ‘Best Take’ Levels Up AI-Enhanced Photos
Hãy viết lại bài viết dài kèm hashtag về việc đánh giá sản phẩm và mua ngay tại Queen Mobile bằng tiếng VIệt: Google Pixel 8 Review: ‘Best Take’ Levels Up AI-Enhanced Photos
Mua ngay sản phẩm tại Việt Nam:
QUEEN MOBILE chuyên cung cấp điện thoại Iphone, máy tính bảng Ipad, đồng hồ Smartwatch và các phụ kiện APPLE và các giải pháp điện tử và nhà thông minh. Queen Mobile rất hân hạnh được phục vụ quý khách….
_____________________________________________________
Mua #Điện_thoại #iphone #ipad #macbook #samsung #xiaomi #poco #oppo #snapdragon giá tốt, hãy ghé [𝑸𝑼𝑬𝑬𝑵 𝑴𝑶𝑩𝑰𝑳𝑬]
✿ 149 Hòa Bình, phường Hiệp Tân, quận Tân Phú, TP HCM
✿ 402B, Hai Bà Trưng, P Tân Định, Q 1, HCM
✿ 287 đường 3/2 P 10, Q 10, HCM
Hotline (miễn phí) 19003190
Thu cũ đổi mới
Rẻ hơn hoàn tiền
Góp 0%
Thời gian làm việc: 9h – 21h.
KẾT LUẬN
Hãy viết đoạn tóm tắt về nội dung bằng tiếng việt kích thích người mua: Google Pixel 8 Review: ‘Best Take’ Levels Up AI-Enhanced Photos
9.0
Google Pixel 8
Like
- New design
- Best Take works well
- The brighter screen
- 7 years of OS support
Don’t like
- Higher price
- Audio Magic Eraser doesn’t have a live preview
- Magic Editor is hit or miss
- Some AI tools like “summarize” don’t work
The Google Pixel 8 is unlike any other phone you can buy today. After testing it for nearly a week, I realized that the Pixel 8 and its AI features offer an early glimpse at how photography, calling and even our phone’s wallpaper could evolve. I wouldn’t run out and buy a Pixel 8 today solely because of these features, but it certainly shows how AI will continue to be integrated into our daily lives.
This photo never happened. CNET’s Jessica Fierro and Abrar Al-Heeti are normally all smiles. While taking a bunch of photos of them in a row, I was able to use Best Take and change their faces with these more serious ones from other photos. Can you tell that AI helped make this?
At first, Best Take creeped me out. But after applying it to a variety of photos of friends and coworkers, I think it’s incredible and works remarkably well. I can’t see any lines where the heads were swapped. (Yep, I actually wrote that.) And I still can’t fully get my head around the possibilities that Best Take opens up. It’s the start of a path where our photography can be even more curated and polished, even if the photos we take don’t start out that way.
Will Best Take make us more vain by giving us another tool to present a seemingly ideal version of ourselves online? Or should I just enjoy that I can have a nice photo where my friends look their best at that possible moment? I’m still conflicted.
Watch this: Review: We Tested the Google Pixel 8 and Its AI Features
10:48
The Pixel 8 in rose.
The screen is smaller, but so are the bezels around it. The 6.2-inch display now has a 60 to 120Hz variable refresh rate for smoother scrolling and a higher max brightness. It’s easy to see under bright sunlight, especially compared with the Pixel 7 and 7A, which look dim by comparison. Watching films, playing games or just admiring mundane Android 14 animations were all enjoyable on the Pixel 8’s screen.
The back is still defined by that wide camera bar, which I like. Overall, the Pixel 8 looks dapper and almost chic.
The Pixel 8 has a new main camera sensor

A slice of Medovyk from Veselka in NYC taken with the Pixel 8.

Here are a couple of selfies I took with the Pixel 8.
Does the Pixel 8 take better photos than the Pixel 7? Yes. But they’re not dramatically different. Check out the photos below of the Manhattan Bridge. Both look great.
Both of these photos of the Manhattan Bridge were taken seconds apart. The left image is from the Google Pixel 8 and the right one from the Pixel 7.
But if I punch in on where the main upright section intersects with the deck, you can see that the Pixel 8’s image below has more detail and sharpness. Notice the individual rivets on the metal uprights compared to the Pixel 7’s photo, where most of them don’t show up.
Here are 100% crops from the photos above with the Pixel 8’s image on the left and the Pixel 7’s image on the right.
The Pixel 8 is defined by its camera AI tools
The Pixel 8’s AI features like Best Take steal the show when it comes to the camera. By the way, Best Take not only works on photos taken with the phone, but any photos in your Google Photos library on your Pixel 8. I used Best Take to swap out faces in photos I took on the iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max as part of my review last month.
Best Take only works on a series of photos in a sequence. So you can’t take a photo of yourself at 40 and replace your head with one from a photo of when you were in your 20s. Also, the feature works only on people. But I can almost hear Google’s SVP for devices and services, Rich Osterloh, say at the Pixel 9 or Pixel 10 launch, “we heard you and we now offer Best Take for pets.” Applause and cheers!

On the left is the original photo that I took from the Pixel 8. One the right is the same photo with the Magic Eraser applied to the rock. It doesn’t look great.
Below is the same photo after I used the new Magic Editor. It’s not perfect, but it’s an improvement over the Magic Eraser photo.

I used the Magic Editor to replace the ground and rock with one made of bricks. There weren’t any bricks at this park, but it does make the photo look better.
A majority of the time, Magic Editor generations took a matter of seconds. It didn’t feel like I waited long. But there were a couple of times where it took 10 seconds and another one time where I had to close the Google Photos app because it seemed stuck. Best Take feels like a more mature feature than Magic Editor which still has an experimental vibe to it.

Here is an instance where the Magic Editor went wild, replacing the floor and walls (not sure where it got this art deco backdrop from) and removing Jessica’s arms and feet.
The Magic Editor is a lot of fun, and I truly believe it adds another level of creativity to phone photography. But it does so while raising ethical questions around image manipulation. Fortunately, Magic Editor-generated photos have flaws, or at least the majority of the photos that I used it on did. I can usually spot the differences between photos I applied it on versus unedited images. The way the AI tries to fill in the background usually results in something looking off. But not everyone may be as photo-savvy as me, and I imagine that Google will keep refining the AI behind it to a point where it’s hard to tell the difference between an altered photo and an unedited one.

I used the Magic Editor to remove Abrar. Notice the way it filled in the background where Abrar was, especially the door and wall.
There’s one more AI-powered camera tool called Audio Magic Eraser, which can clean up audio in recorded videos for better clarity. It removes distracting background noise or music that might interfere with your video’s audio. Watch the review video that accompanies this article to see examples of it before and after, with and without the Audio Magic Eraser applied.
Using the tool was easy enough. However, the live preview didn’t reflect the changes to the audio that I made, which seems like a bug. I had to save a copy of the edited video to hear the difference Audio Magic Eraser made – which was impressive.
Taken in total, the Pixel 8 has an outstanding camera system with a lot of features you just don’t find on the more expensive iPhone 15 and Galaxy S23. It’s fascinating to see Google, who has an excellent reputation when it comes to getting the best images out of a phone camera, still be able to match the likes of Apple and Samsung all while leaning heavily into these hit-or-miss AI camera features.
My CNET colleague Andrew Lanxon, who is reviewing the Pixel 8 Pro, wasn’t as enamored with Best Take as I was.
Pixel 8 performance and battery

Google Pixel 8 Pro in blue (left) and Pixel 8 in rose).
The two biggest changes to the Pixel 8 don’t have anything to do with the physical phone. The first is the price. The Pixel 8 costs $699, which is $100 more than the Pixel 6 and 7’s launch prices. But the updates you get, like the refined design, new display and main camera improvements, are worth it. And the Pixel 8’s higher price is more reflective of just how ridiculously affordable Google priced the Pixel 6 and 7 compared with other major smartphone makers at the time. Outside the US, the Pixel 8’s price increase might be steeper.
The other big feature is software support. The Pixel 8 will receive seven years of OS support, which is longer than most Android phones. But the Fairphone 5 takes the crown with 8 years of support. Will the Pixel 8 survive until 2030? Maybe? I don’t know.
But in that spirit, I casually polled some of my CNET colleagues over Slack to ask them what was the longest amount of time they owned a phone. Most kept their phones for less than 5 years, but a few of my coworkers had nearly 6-year-old phones like the iPhone 8 and Galaxy Note 8. So perhaps there is an audience for this benefit.
I recommend the Pixel 8 to anyone coming from a Pixel 6A or older, or any phone that’s at least three years old. If you’re trying to decide between the Pixel 7A and Pixel 8, know that the Pixel 8 is better in nearly every way but does cost $200 more. And in terms of the Pixel 8 and 8 Pro, you get 85% of that Pixel 8 Pro experience on the regular Pixel 8. The Pixel 8 Pro has a nicer screen, a new higher resolution ultra wide camera, more RAM and a dedicated 5x telephoto camera, all of which the Pixel 8 lacks. The Pixel 8 Pro also has more camera tools, like video boost, compared to the Pixel 8.
With the Pixel 8’s launch, Google’s current lineup has a phone for every budget: $499 for the Pixel 7A, $699 for the Pixel 8, $999 for the Pixel 8 Pro and $1,799 for the Pixel Fold. The Pixel 8 isn’t Google’s most affordable device, but it’s a phone most people should consider. Its AI features, reasonable price and seven years of software support help it stand out among its Pixel siblings.
Google Pixel 8 specs vs. Pixel 8 Pro, Pixel 7A, Pixel 7
How we test phones
Every phone tested by CNET’s reviews team was actually used in the real world. We test a phone’s features, play games and take photos. We examine the display to see if it’s bright, sharp and vibrant. We analyze the design and build to see how it is to hold and whether it has an IP-rating for water-resistance. We push the processor’s performance to the extremes using both standardized benchmark tools like GeekBench and 3DMark, along with our own anecdotal observations navigating the interface, recording high-resolution videos and playing graphically intense games at high refresh rates.
All the cameras are tested in a variety of conditions from bright sunlight to dark indoor scenes. We try out special features like night mode and portrait mode and compare our findings against similarly priced competing phones. We also check out the battery life by using it daily as well as running a series of battery drain tests.
We take into account additional features like support for 5G, satellite connectivity, fingerprint and face sensors, stylus support, fast charging speeds, foldable displays among others that can be useful. And we of course balance all of this against the price to give you the verdict on whether that phone, whatever price it is, actually represents good value. While these tests may not always be reflected in CNET’s initial review, we conduct follow-up and long-term testing in most circumstances.
!function(f,b,e,v,n,t,s)
{if(f.fbq)return;n=f.fbq=function(){n.callMethod?
n.callMethod.apply(n,arguments):n.queue.push(arguments)};
if(!f._fbq)f._fbq=n;n.push=n;n.loaded=!0;n.version=’2.0′;
n.queue=();t=b.createElement(e);t.async=!0;
t.src=v;s=b.getElementsByTagName(e)(0);
s.parentNode.insertBefore(t,s)}(window, document,’script’,
‘https://connect.facebook.net/en_US/fbevents.js’);
fbq(‘set’, ‘autoConfig’, false, ‘789754228632403’);
fbq(‘init’, ‘789754228632403’);
Xem chi tiết và đăng kýXem chi tiết và đăng kýXem chi tiết và đăng ký
Khám phá thêm từ Phụ Kiện Đỉnh
Đăng ký để nhận các bài đăng mới nhất được gửi đến email của bạn.