Google Contacts ‘Besties’ Label Hints At New Relationship Options (Update: New Name)

google-contacts-‘besties’-label-hints-at-new-relationship-options-(update:-new-name)
Google Contacts ‘Besties’ Label Hints At New Relationship Options (Update: New Name)
Google Contacts app logo (1)

Adamya Sharma / Android Authority

TL;DR

  • “Besties” in Contacts may soon give you a new way to identify your closest friends.
  • While we find multiple references throughout the app, right now nothing’s functional.
  • Subsequent strings point to this feature actually being called Pixel Besties.

Update, January 29, 2024 (2:17 PM ET): We previously reported on the so-called Besties or Pixel Besties feature in the Contacts app. We have now found evidence that Google may have changed the name Pixel Besties to simply VIPs. You can see the new name in the screenshots below.


Original article, August 1, 2024 (12:15 PM ET): Relationships are much more than about who you know. The surface-level details — things like name, phone number, and where they live — don’t matter nearly as much as how this person has come to be in your life. Is this a work colleague? A relative? As we expect our smartphones and the apps that run on them to automate more and more tasks, the details of these relationships can really start to matter — an email being drafted to an academic advisor should probably care more about grammar and formality than one going out to your bestie. How’s a phone supposed to tell all these people apart?

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An APK teardown helps predict features that may arrive on a service in the future based on work-in-progress code. However, it is possible that such predicted features may not make it to a public release.

Google already gives you a few ways to define relationships. In Contacts right now, you’ll find a menu that lets you choose from a bunch of relationship types: parent, child, spouse, generic “relative,” and a few more. But you’ve got to dig quite a bit to even get to that field, and we wonder how many users bother going through their contacts and populating all this info.

We’ve also got the ability to put a label on relationships in Google Assistant, letting you tell your phone “call mom,” when she’s in your Contacts list under her actual name. A couple years back, we saw Google start connecting these two, as it integrated this Assistant data into Contacts. So where does that leave us now?

Looking through Google Contacts version 4.37.39, we’re able to access a few screens that deal with people you’ve identified as your “Besties.” 9to5Google was able to trigger a besties widget in Contacts about a month ago, which just looked like a rebranded version of the favorite contacts widgets. We’re now able to get the app to show a bestie reference on individual contact cards, and access a link to “Besties Onboarding.”

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Problem is, right now, that just crashes the app. But even in failure we can find room to learn, and looking at the crash dump we find reference to a mysterious com.google.android.apps.pixel.relationships package. That’s not the first time we’ve come across reference to that in Contacts, and its presence here makes us wonder if Google is planning to introduce some new, overarching way of keeping track of relationships in the near future.

The feature within the Google Contacts app could be called “Pixel Besties,” as spotted in subsequent strings. Check these out below.

Code

Pixel Besties  View your recent communications and memories with your favorite people

The Pixel Besties feature could seemingly make it easier to view your communication history with the people who matter the most to you. In addition to the code, we’ve managed to uncover a screenshot that gives us more info about the feature. Check it out below.

Pixel Besties screenshot

AssembleDebug / Android Authority

The image suggests that this functionality will give you a quicker, more convenient way to check all communications and updates with a desired contact. We hope to learn more about this feature in the future as the functionality gets built.

Finally, just a note, Google: “bestie” is superlative. You literally cannot have more than one best friend.

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