Google Pixel 11 Amazon Leak: $899-$1899 Price Range, New Colors, and a Surprise ‘Pixel Tag’ Tracker

At this point, a Google hardware leak ahead of launch feels almost ceremonial. Long before the keynote lights come up, the phones usually arrive in fragments through retailer pages, spec sheets, teaser campaigns, and the wider rumor mill. The Pixel 11 now seems to be following that familiar script, with Amazon reportedly revealing major details early and introducing an unexpected side character in the form of a Pixel Tag tracker ahead of Google’s August 12 event.

The leaked lineup already sketches out Google’s fall hardware palette in surprising detail. The base Pixel 11 appears in Obsidian, Frost, Hibiscus, and Pistachio, with 256GB storage priced at $899. The Pro shifts to Canyon and Obsidian, the Pro XL climbs from $1,299, and the Pixel 11 Pro Fold stretches the range to $1,899 in Obsidian with an Olive variant that may also be tied to the name Pine. Taken together, the colors feel as intentional as the pricing, and the Pixel Tag mention adds one more clue that Google may be building a broader visual ecosystem around the phones rather than treating accessories as an afterthought.

Image Credits: Android Authority

Google appears to be making 256GB the new base storage tier across the Pixel 11 family, which is probably overdue given how aggressively on-device AI has been eating into storage headroom. Droid Life also spotted a 512GB variant priced at $1,019, all but confirming that Google is dropping the longstanding 128GB entry-level option entirely. That’s a sensible call on paper, but it also means buyers have fewer options to quietly trade down on storage to save money at the baseline.

Then the pricing hits, and it hits hard. The Pixel 11 Pro reportedly starts at $1,099 for 256GB in Canyon, with the 1TB configuration reaching $1,449. The Pro XL tops out at $1,649 for 1TB. The Pixel 11 Pro Fold reportedly opens at $1,899 and climbs to $2,249 for a 1TB model. These are numbers that would have seemed audacious five years ago, and in 2026, with the broader economy and RAM shortage doing what it’s doing, I don’t blame you for still wondering what nightmarish timeline we live in. Google is clearly betting that its AI-forward software story justifies the ask, but at nearly $1,900 just to get into Fold territory, it really does feel like Google isn’t betting on this one selling like hot-cakes.

Image Credits: Android Authority

The Pro models also carry an unusual RAM decision I couldn’t help but notice. The 256GB Pixel 11 Pro will reportedly ship with 12GB of RAM, while the 512GB and 1TB variants retain 16GB, a departure from the Pixel 10 Pro lineup where every storage configuration included 16GB. It creates a situation where the least expensive Pro is also the most memory-limited, which sends a strange signal in a product cycle so heavily defined by AI features that depend on RAM headroom to run locally.

One detail on the Fold worth watching is the listed 4,750mAh battery, which would actually be smaller than the Pixel 10 Pro Fold’s 5,015mAh pack. Given that several other listing details appear unfinished, it’s possible this battery figure is also placeholder information. Still, the kind of number that makes you squint twice before scrolling on.

Image Credits: Android Authority

Through all of this, Pixel Tag stays the most intriguing footnote. A first-party tracker from Google would put the company directly in AirTag territory, and while tracker specs are almost beside the point, design language very much is not. Whatever Pixel Tag looks like, it will need to feel at home on a keyring and inside a product lineup simultaneously. If August 12 brings a formal reveal, the smallest object on stage may end up carrying the largest story.

The post Google Pixel 11 Amazon Leak: $899-$1899 Price Range, New Colors, and a Surprise ‘Pixel Tag’ Tracker first appeared on Yanko Design.

5 Best Nightstand Gadgets That Turn Your Bedroom Into the Setup You Actually Want

The nightstand is one of the most underestimated surfaces in any home. It accumulates cables, three chargers doing the job of one, a lamp chosen in five minutes, and a rotating cast of objects that never formally earned their place. Most people accept this as normal. The result is a space that begins every evening and ends every morning with the kind of visual noise that makes a room feel smaller and less intentional than it actually is.

The five products below were chosen because each one solves a specific nightstand problem without introducing three new ones. None of them overlap in function. Start with the one that addresses your most pressing problem first, and the case for the next one tends to become clear in about a week.

1. Anywhere-Use Lamp

Most nightstand lamps are compromises. The color temperature drifts toward clinical white at exactly the wrong hour, the base requires an outlet placement that dictates where everything else goes, or the design was selected in poor lighting at a furniture store and has been quietly resented ever since. The Anywhere-Use Lamp removes most of those friction points from the equation. Available in black, white, and a new Industrial edition, it is a portable, cord-free table lamp with a clean minimalist silhouette and a warm, contained glow that changes the character of a bedroom after the main lights go off.

Ambient light quality at bedtime is one of the most underrated variables in how quickly a bedroom shifts from a room you happen to be in to a place that actually invites rest. Warm, directionless light at eye level, rather than overhead, does a significant portion of that work without requiring any configuration. There is no companion app, no color temperature slider, and no smart home integration to set up. The Anywhere-Use Lamp delivers exactly the quality of light a nightstand surface deserves.

Click Here to Buy Now: $149.00

What We Like

  • Portable and cord-free — works on a nightstand, in a travel bag, and on a hotel desk without adapters or outlets
  • Industrial edition offers a raw material finish that integrates well into modern and minimal bedroom aesthetics

What We Dislike

  • At $149, it occupies the premium end of portable lamp pricing, a harder case to make without seeing the build quality in person

2. ADAM elements Mag 3 Ultra

The Mag 3 Ultra addresses the charging problem Apple created and never solved. When Apple canceled AirPower in 2019, it left iPhone users managing three separate charging solutions on one surface: a MagSafe puck for the phone, a dongle for the Watch, and a Qi pad for the AirPods. This aluminum alloy dock collapses all three into a single folding station that snaps into position magnetically and arrives in a copper-orange colorway that reads more like a considered desk object than a utility accessory hiding under a lamp.

The engineering detail that separates it from most competitors is the elevated phone pad, which keeps the iPhone camera module completely clear of the stand body so the phone sits flush and upright without an awkward tilt. With Qi2 support and up to 25W magnetic fast charging, the Mag 3 Ultra handles all three devices simultaneously without any of them competing for priority. StandBy mode works properly through the night. Foreign Object Detection protects both the dock and whatever else lands on the surface. A three-year warranty backs a product designed to stay in one place permanently.

What We Like

  • Folds completely flat for travel, collapsing all three charging positions into a square barely thicker than a deck of cards
  • Elevated phone pad prevents camera module contact, solving a real alignment problem most flat docks quietly introduce

What We Dislike

  • Peak 25W performance requires a 45W or higher single-port USB-C adapter, sold separately and adding to the total cost
  • Ships with one cable, so integrating it cleanly into an existing setup may require an additional purchase

3. Divoom FlowToo

Three devices disappear from the nightstand for under a hundred dollars. The Divoom FlowToo combines a Bluetooth speaker, white noise machine, and alarm clock in a single compact unit, and handles each of those functions with more care than most products that attempt the combination. Its 10W amplifier and 45mm full-range driver are genuine audio hardware, not the obligatory speaker feature most alarm clocks bolt on as an afterthought. More than 90 built-in sounds cover the most-used sleep and focus categories, and the Divoom app keeps alarm scheduling and sound selection manageable from your phone without requiring physical interaction in the dark.

The 2.26-inch smart display does more than show the time. It runs multiple clock face designs, music visualizers that respond to whatever is playing, sleep scene animations, and a mood lighting mode that shifts the character of the room across the evening. The wake system layers natural sounds and soft light simultaneously, so the morning alarm builds gradually rather than firing at full volume from silence. It comes in black and white, both clean enough to sit beside almost any existing bedroom setup without visual conflict. For a first nightstand upgrade, this is the most efficient starting point.

What We Like

  • Gradual wake system combines natural sound and light simultaneously, removing the cortisol spike of a standard alarm entirely
  • Smart display handles mood lighting and timekeeping in one surface, so no additional ambient screen is needed

What We Dislike

  • Alarm management requires the Divoom app, which means keeping the phone nearby and partly contradicts a phone-free sleep routine
  • 10W speaker output suits a nightstand well but will not satisfy listeners who prioritize audio quality as the primary function

4. Dreamie by Ambient

Dreamie is built around one design argument: the phone does not belong beside the bed. Ambient’s founder Adrian Canoso, who brings an industrial design and audio engineering background to the company, built Dreamie to consolidate every legitimate reason a phone lives on a nightstand — alarm, ambient sound, light, podcasts, simulated sunrise — into a single device that offers none of the reasons phones keep people awake. There are no notifications, no feeds, no accounts, and no subscription fee. The Calm Tech Institute awarded it their highest certification, a signal that carries real weight in a category full of vague wellness claims.

The 50mm speaker with a 360-degree grille diffuses sound into the room rather than projecting it forward, creating an ambient quality that wraps the space during wind-down. A hidden volume dial and a touch strip for lamp brightness handle all physical interaction without requiring a menu or a screen tap. All sensor data stays on-device. Contactless sleep tracking arrives as a free over-the-air update later this year. At $249.99, the value case is most honest when compared to a wearable you already charge every night: Dreamie costs about the same, stays on the nightstand, and keeps the phone across the room where it belongs.

What We Like

  • No subscription, no account, no data collection — everything runs on-device and stays there indefinitely
  • Tactile controls function reliably in complete darkness without triggering a screen or making any sound

What We Dislike

  • At $249.99, the value argument requires genuinely committing to leaving the phone elsewhere, not supplementing existing nightstand devices
  • Audio output is Bluetooth only, so wired headphone use for partner-friendly late-night listening is not an option

5. 3-in-1 Luminous Mirror Diffuser

The 3-in-1 Luminous Mirror Diffuser follows this design philosophy — an object that earns permanent placement by doing several things with uncommon care, rather than one thing with a list of compromises attached. The oval anodized aluminum body houses three genuinely distinct functions: a customizable lamp, a 360-degree rotatable mirror, and a patented aroma plate that uses aluminum matrix technology to gently diffuse fragrance from a few drops of essential oil. None of the three feels like an afterthought added to justify a price point.

The lighting system moves between three color temperatures — 2400K warm amber for wind-down, 3800–3250K neutral for calm focus, and 6000K daylight clarity for precision — across four brightness levels, which makes it the one lamp on this list that adapts to both ends of the evening. A wireless charging pad integrated into the base handles device power without adding a cable to the surface. The mirror eliminates the separate grooming mirror that occupies nightstand real estate in most bedrooms. And the aroma diffuser, with its washable aroma plate and temperature-controlled heating, replaces a plug-in ultrasonic unit with something that requires no water tank, no misting, and no countertop clutter.

Click Here to Buy Now: $800.00

What We Like

  • Three color temperatures and four brightness levels make it genuinely useful at every stage of the evening, from bright grooming light to dim amber wind-down
  • Wireless charging pad built into the base means the charging dock and lamp footprint collapse into a single object on the surface

What We Dislike

  • At $800, it sits in a different spending bracket from the rest of this list and requires treating it as a long-term investment rather than an upgrade purchase
  • The mirror function adds real utility for grooming but may feel surplus to requirements in bedrooms where a bathroom mirror is steps away

The Nightstand You Actually Want Starts With One Good Decision

The nightstand is the last surface you interact with before sleep and the first thing you look at when you wake up. What lives there shapes both experiences more than most people give credit for. Each product here earns its place by solving something specific: warm light that belongs in the space, three devices charging cleanly, a room filled with gradual sound, a phone that stays across the room where it always should have been, and a single object that handles light, scent, and reflection with equal care.

The best nightstand setups are not minimal out of discipline. They are minimal because every object on the surface was actually chosen. None of these five products overlap in function, and none requires the others to justify its place. Start with the one that solves the most visible problem on your nightstand today, and the argument for the next one tends to present itself without much effort.

The post 5 Best Nightstand Gadgets That Turn Your Bedroom Into the Setup You Actually Want first appeared on Yanko Design.

The $8 Steam Cartridge Every PC Gamer Has Always Wanted

PC gaming has never had a proper physical media equivalent. Console players have always had something tangible to hold and shelve, a disc or cartridge that represents one specific game. On PC, games live in a library on a platform that’s only yours as long as the platform stays up. It’s convenient, but a lot of PC gamers quietly miss the ritual of picking something physical off a shelf.

A post on Reddit recently took a direct swing at that gap. A gamer picked up a handful of secondhand 2.5-inch SATA SSDs, each 128 GB and priced at around €7 ($8) a piece, and built a cartridge system for Steam. Each drive holds a single game alongside a script that auto-navigates Steam to that game’s page once the drive is plugged in. Auto-launching the game directly is also possible.

Designer: Jibril-sama (images courtesy of Tom’s Hardware)

What really sells the effect is the presentation. Rather than leaving the drives as bare hardware with labels stuck on, each SSD sits inside a colorful protective case with custom game art on the cover. The result looks genuinely like a cartridge collection, not a pile of storage drives. It’s the kind of detail that makes the idea land visually rather than just functioning as a clever technical trick.

The system runs on Linux. When an SSD is plugged into a SATA dock connected to the PC, a udev rule detects the mount event and triggers a systemd daemon, which finds the script on the drive and executes it. Valve’s Steam URL Protocol handles navigating to the game’s page or launching it. The hardware side requires nothing more unusual than a standard SATA dock.

There are genuine practical limits. Steam still needs to be installed, and the game needs to be in your library, so this isn’t a workaround for ownership or a way to share games. Updates are the bigger friction point, since multi-gigabyte patches push regularly even to older titles. The creator’s approach is to keep cartridges for games worth replaying occasionally rather than live-service titles that need constant updating.

The reaction ran heavily nostalgic, with comparisons to NES cartridges, Switch game cards, and the general ritual of pulling a game off a shelf. Some commenters want the system extended to GOG libraries. Others are already planning their own versions, with several suggesting 3D-printed cartridge shells to push the aesthetic even further.

What the project surfaces is how much the ritual of physical media matters, separate from convenience or ownership. These drives don’t give you anything you couldn’t already get by clicking a game in your Steam library. The Linux requirement narrows who can replicate it directly, but at €7 ($8) per drive, the cost to build a collection of ten or fifteen games is still less than a single new release.

The post The $8 Steam Cartridge Every PC Gamer Has Always Wanted first appeared on Yanko Design.