Google is using ML to give phones running Android Go edition, which often cost under $50, similar capabilities as a full-fledged Android 12 device. ML will enable them to have access to many of the same advanced features that were traditionally only available to expensive phones that used the brute force processing power provided by expensive high-end chips. Affordable phones aren't equipped with the fastest processor or most RAM. Machine learning will also make phones more powerful by making them more intelligent. How will the device in our pocket be more helpful, powerful and thoughtful to use? Yet in looking ahead to phones in 2022, instead of focusing on predictable roadmaps like Google's eventual Android 13 and iPhone 14 rumors, I want to know how smartphones could actually get smarter in 2022. Google revealed a full redesign with the Pixel 6 and Pixel 6 Pro, complete with Google's first ever chip. OnePlus partnered with camera-maker Hasselblad to revamp the photographic chops on its phones starting with the OnePlus 9 Pro. OnePlus and Google had a different strategy in 2021, releasing phones that charted new directions beyond simple refinements. These new phones debut after a year where outstanding devices like the Galaxy S21 Ultra, the Galaxy Z Flip 3, the Asus ROG Phone 5 and the iPhone 13 series refined the rough spots of their predecessors, often adding more 5G support, higher refresh rate screens or improving their cameras with new sensors, modes and software. This story is part of The Year Ahead, CNET's look at how the world will continue to evolve starting in 2022 and beyond.
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