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8,640
4.3 out of 5 stars

Google ga00655-us Pixel 3a 64gb (Open Box)

$154.29
$399 61% off Reference Price
Condition: New; Open Box
Color: Black
Carrier: Unlocked
Capacity: 64GB
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Top positive review
22 people found this helpful
Best features in an Android for under $400
By Jenn T. on Reviewed in the United States on June 23, 2020
I was an early adopter of Google's phones when they came out with the Nexus line. Unfortunately, I never bought a Pixel because Google chose, at first, to compete with the expensive flagship phones that cost $800 or more being put out by Apple and Samsung every year. That has since changed, and I'm a welcome convert back to the Google fold. My last phone was a Moto Z Play, which I purchased for $400 about three and a half years ago. I loved the battery life, but the bluetooth died almost entirely when the phone was two years old, and the camera was never great. By the time I had had it for three years, I couldn't run more than two or three apps without experiencing issues with crashing. Likewise, if I opened more than 50 or so tabs in the web browser, it would typically crash. It's a relief to no longer have those issues. COST: I purchased this phone when it was $320, so I already saved $80 over my last phone purchase. This phone does everything you need and looks sharp. It doesn't have 5G, but the amount of features you get for less than $400 more than justifies the price. CAMERA: Google has really outdone itself with the Pixel 3a's. The camera is fantastic; I no longer need to bring a dedicated digital camera when I'm traveling or attending major celebrations like graduations that need a good camera. It's performance in low-light conditions is fantastic and really something to write home about. Sure, my brother's iPhone 11 Pro has a better camera, but he paid over $1000 for it, so that's not a fair comparison. I'd say that the Pixel 3A's camera and camera software is every bit as good as my wife's Galaxy 10, if not better. BATTERY LIFE: A full charge doesn't last the 2-3 days that my old Moto Z Play did, but the rapid charging feature makes it not matter as much. In my daily commute of 20-30 minutes to work, I can add about 30-40% to my battery, which means I never have to worry about my phone going dead, even if I forget to charge it at night. A full charge tends to last a little over a day with heavy use. For the record, nearly every day I browse the internet for hours, play Sudoku, listen to Spotify, and post and browse on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook. HARDWARE: It's not a flagship phone, so it's not going to hold up to intensive use. That said, nothing I've thrown at it so far as crashed it. Like I said, I'm a heavy phone user. I don't have to close my apps before switching to another one like I did with my last phone to avoid crashes. I also have experienced hangs like I did with my last phone either. This really does everything you need it to do. I don't think that a normal to heavy phone user needs much more power than this unless they're gaming or photo editing on their phone or something. The bluetooth works a lot better than my old phones did. I have an aging 2013 Prius that does not like to play nice with bluetooth in a lot of my devices. I get in the car, and the phone automatically hooks to the bluetooth and brings up my last Spotify podcast without me fussing with it past the initial setup. I forgot how nice it was when things just worked, you know? LOOK & FEEL: I really like that it's lighter than my last phone even though the screen and the screen's resolution is much larger. It doesn't have a trendy notch, but I don't really care. The fingerprint is located in a nice place in the back that feels very intuitive. There is a feature that lets you squeeze the phone to bring up Google Assistant that I could see some people enjoying, but I never use it because my hands are too small to put enough pressure on the phone to bring it up. Some people may dock a point or two for this, if it's important to you. I don't because I can just shout "hey google" at the phone to the same effect, and perhaps the feature works fine if you don't have tiny baby hands like me and buy a phone that's over 6 inches. The phone itself is mostly metal and glass and doesn't feel cheap. I don't think it looks like you spent less than $400 on it at all. Most importantly, it still has an aux port. Not all of us want the hassle of charging and keeping track of bluetooth earbuds that can cost more than your phone and don't sound any better than a $10 wired headset you can get at the pharmacy. The screen is absolutely huge and the resolution makes everything tiny. I don't have bad eyes and I'm not an old maid, but I had to set the text size to "large" otherwise every website looks like those old Myspace profiles people made back in 2002 with size-6 font. It's very comfortable to read on; I don't feel like someone would need a dedicated tablet with a phone with a screen this big. SOFTWARE & OS/UI: If you're getting an Android OS, you've probably fine with the OS. That said, Google's UI is so much better than everyone else's (I've used UIs by Asus, Samsung, and Motorola in other phones). The home screen is easier to customize, the app launcher makes sense, and the app switcher is intuitive and quick. Since it's Google, you'll have the newest Android OS's at launch and support for longer than other manufacturers. That was one thing I missed dearly about my old Nexus, and I'm glad Google is finally back in the sub-$500 market again so I can take advantage of it. I think my favorite feature about the UI is that I can turn on "dark mode" 24/7 so that I never have white bars or menus anywhere, just nice black ones. It's really saved my eyes. I also like that the volume and brightness on the phone has a very wide range of levels, much moreso than any other phone I've had before, which always had "silent," "soft-ish" and "extremely loud" with little in between. I can turn down the volume to almost-silent and the brightness to actually quite dark without installing third party apps. Also, there's no bloatware on the phone when you purchase it. That's really nice. All in all, it's a very solid phone and I'm honestly thrilled with how nice the screen and camera is at this price-point. Everything else I've looked at with comparable specs and features is at least $100 more. I've been using mine for the past couple of weeks, and every day I like it more. Full five stars from me.
Top critical review
18 people found this helpful
Great Phone Until It Doesn't Work - Horrible Google Customer Service
By Fatemeh Mehrabi on Reviewed in the United States on February 6, 2020
I don't usually write reviews but I promised Google I would write one so here it is: This phone worked great for the first 3 months I had it. It took beautiful pictures and was very convenient (although I did find Google's incessant "suggestion" to use the Google Assistant and constant attempts to get into my personal info very annoying). It's a good size and light weight. Coming from an iPhone 6s, it was a seamless transition and the price was reasonable. After 3 months, the speaker started to cackle. A couple of weeks later, it completely died. With it went my ringer, which essentially meant there went my alarms. I couldn't put the phone on speaker for calls anymore and so there went my Skype calls for the family to join in on my side. I contacted Google through the phone's chat feature. They told me to reboot in Safe Mode because another application was causing the speakers not to work. Red flag: if your phone's hardware is disabled because another application is running in the background, that's an issue. I tried and it didn't work. Google Support then told me to wipe the phone clean. This was the very reason I no longer wanted an iPhone; I lost a lot of data when I had to wipe the phone clean. Only then, it was after 3 years whereas here, it was after 3 months. At this point, the phone was getting slow and the screen wouldn't rotate. Their suggestion was to take it to a store (UBreakIFix) where it can be physically looked at. Took time off of work, went there and was told I had to wipe the phone clean. Red flag #2: A phone that has to be wiped clean and hard reset after only 3 months. I begrudgingly agreed. Nope, didn't fix the problem. The speaker didn't work (although the screen rotate did). The store told me I would have to leave my phone for 2 business days so they can fix it. I don't have extra phones laying around the house and I need my phone to be on call so this wasn't an option for me. I called Google Support again. Here's the kicker: their solution was to send the phone into Google and they would look at it to fix it. It would be 5-10 BUSINESS days before I found out what was wrong with my phone. I asked them to send me a phone and I would immediately send this back. I even offered my credit card number so they could charge me for the new phone if I didn't send the old one back. Nope. Their only solution, for a brand new phone that has hardware issues after 3 months, was that I would be without it for at least two weeks. When I told them I couldn't be without a phone for that long, they suggested that I contact Amazon since my phone was under warranty. For a multi-billion dollar company to not offer a replacement phone ASAP or to have a store where I can actually take my phone and get a new one is ridiculous. After an hour on the phone with Amazon, they agreed to authorize a return since Google gave me an email saying the item had to be returned via Amazon for the warranty. Then I had to spend another hour on the phone to convince them to waive the restocking fee, which the customer service manager kindly agreed to do. I now have a phone I've borrowed from someone else to cover the 3 days between returning the phone and getting a new one. So if you want a phone that works great for 3 months and then is a month of headaches and frustration, get this phone. My suggestion: save yourself the trouble and buy something else. I wish I had,.

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