offered some fine uplifting weepiness but seemed to disappear fairly quickly.
This time, the Nexus 5X wants to hang around and even share your nachos.
Why might this be?
Google has never had great success with hardware. Essential design lovability (or, perhaps taking hardware seriously enough) seemed to pass it by. (Disclosure: I have a Nexus 7tablet. It's pleasant, but if it left me I wouldn't chase after it.)
This time around, CNET reviewer Sean Hollisterdescribed the Nexus 5x as pleasantly lightweight and affordable. I didn't detect him leaping out of his trousers and performing a riverdance about it, however.
Might, though, Google now believe that it needs to offer its own strongly-marketed hardware to go with its Android software?
Former Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer offered a chilling observation on Friday. He said that Microsoft was the only true long-term competition for Apple in both software and hardware. He said of Cupertino: "No one else is trying to compete with them any more, really, seriously in hardware."
Does this additional invasion of my time and yours by Googlesuggest that the company feels it has to try a little harder in hardware? Google did not respond to request for comment.
New holding company Alphabet has run off to go and play with futuristic goals -- such as preventing us from ever driving again. The Googlearm is left to commune with commercial reality.
This, as Microsoft's launch of the intriguing Surface Bookshows, means that Google may have to compete with partners, rather than wait for them to come up with something that will intrigue the public.
The problem is that when your hardware has never intrigued the public in any kind of mass, spirited way, you're coming from further back than the Jacksonville Jaguars.
If Apple wants to cheer Google up, it might point to recent research from investment bank Piper Jaffray: 74 percent of teens want their next phone to be an iPhone.