Jack up the prices, remove the headphone jack, and now add a notch?
Yeah, it's pretty clear that the Pixel's looking more and more like the iPhone of Android, and not for the better.
I can only hope that they got their screen QC act together this time. Pixel 2 XL buyers deserved better for the price - much better.
And yeah, I'm with everyone else in saying that they shouldn't be shipping with just 4 GB of RAM when similarly-priced phones can offer 6 GB or even 8 GB. Sure, you may not need it now, but think two or three years down the line, after software updates.
Also consider that USB-C desktop/laptop docks may become more of a thing, and we'll want better multitasking to go with a bigger screen. That takes more RAM.
The prices, at least, I can understand.
So many people act as if the Nexus-era pricing represented the 'real' price of Google's phones, and that the higher-priced Pixel phones are somehow a temporary error that Google will fix. Sorry, folks, those Nexus days are never coming back, and probably shouldn't. You know what barely-above-cost pricing meant? It meant low manufacturing numbers. It meant that Google couldn't push the boundaries of hardware features as much as it might like. It led to reluctant hardware partners. And it meant that few people outside of developers and hardcore enthusiasts knew that Google even had its own phones. You want to spread the gospels of stock Android and AI-based camera photography? Don't be surprised if the price goes up.
After that? Well, the notch I can sort of understand (Android P includes notch support, so Google wants to show how it's done), but the lack of a headphone jack feels somewhat arbitrary since Google hasn't had particular reasons to do it. Even Apple could point to its advanced haptic engine as a decent excuse. More RAM would be nice, although mainly on the Pixel 3 XL -- the regular Pixel 3 may be helped somewhat by having a lower resolution than, say the Galaxy S9.