Summary created by Smart Answers AI
In summary:
- Tech Advisor delves into Google’s upcoming Pixel Glow feature, found in the Android 17 beta code, anticipated to debut on the Pixel 11 smartphone.
- This notification system might offer subtle lighting and color on the phone’s back, akin to Nothing’s Glyph lighting, with possible customization options for specific contacts.
- The feature could be incorporated into the camera bar or ‘G’ logo, providing users a distinctive method to identify crucial notifications without needing to check their screen.
Overall, the Pixel 11 series appears to be quite similar to the Pixel 10 models. However, the introduction of Pixel Glow represents a new feature, and its appearance remains a topic of speculation.
Details about the feature are limited, having been uncovered in the Android 17 beta code. It is expected to appear on the Pixel 11 phones as a hidden design feature. It is described as “subtle light and color on the back of your device to inform you of important activity when it’s face down.”
This concept echoes Nothing’s Glyph lighting on various phones, providing notifications without the need to check the phone’s display. Yet, the latest CAD-based renders of the Pixel 11 series do not reveal any such features.
It seems likely that these features are concealed within the modified camera bar or possibly in the ‘G’ logo on the back, reminiscent of the illuminated Apple logo on MacBook lids.
Driven by curiosity, I asked Gemini what the Pixel Glow lights on the back of a Pixel 11 might resemble, as I had done previously for a conceptual Pixel Ring.
The initial image presented at the top of the article offers a creative concept of Pixel Glow (with the white model appearing more plausible, in my opinion), but it wasn’t quite what I envisioned.
After providing additional prompts, Gemini depicted the lights around the camera bar in Google’s signature set of four colors (disregard the random light emitted from the phone’s bottom).
Chris Martin / Foundry
The code suggests subtle light and color, which might indicate how Google plans to implement it, in my view. The code also implies that Pixel Glow could be customized for your favorite contacts, perhaps allowing different colors for your four most important friends or family members.
Another possibility, though less likely, is a light-up logo option, shown here with the ‘G’ divided into four sections, each representing a color. This would function similarly in my mock-up, but it doesn’t have the same appeal as the camera bar option.

Chris Martin / Foundry
If Pixel Glow is included in the Pixel 11 release and not postponed to a later model, we shouldn’t have long to wait. Google is expected to unveil the phones in August, and there might be an opportunity to get a preview of the devices or Pixel Glow during this month’s Google I/O developer conference.

