Google recently updated their Nexus product line. Discontinued were the lesser two of the three devices that Google announced back in June at I/O 2012. These are the Galaxy Nexus and the Nexus Q-- and it makes sense, as neither of these devices gained half as much attention as Google's new flagship tablet, the Nexus 7. We'll start with that.
The Nexus 7 is a 7-inch tablet, based in portrait mode, with a 1.2MP front-facing camera and one speaker on the back. It was announced in June with 8GB and 16GB of storage; now the same priced models have been bumped up to 16GB and 32GB. Additionally, a new 4G-connected version is now available in addition to the wifi-only model. Aside from these updates, not much was changed, as for the price the average consumer had considerably few complaints about the product. It runs on an NVIDEA Tegra III quad-core processor, with a twelve-core GPU. The Nexus 7 is manufactured by Asus, and sells from Google starting at $200.
Once again, Google's flagship phone, the Galaxy Nexus, has been replaced. The new phone from Google, the Nexus 4, has a 4.7" display (which, by the way, is almost an inch bigger than its name implies), sports an 8MP 1080p camera (which my current phone also has), with a 320ppi display. It's sold unlocked directly from Google. Its design is more creative than the Galaxy's by my recollection, featuring Corning Gorilla Glass II on both the front and the back of the phone. Whereas Samsung manufactured the Galaxy Nexus, LG will be manufacturing the Nexus 4 (most likely due to the competition that Samsung's been bringing to the table with its recent Galaxy S III and Note II). It sports a Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 Pro processor, and it's sold from Google starting at $300.
Finally, I'll tell you about the new 10-inch tablet member of the Nexus family, the Nexus 10. This tablet, manufactured by Samsung, sports a 300ppi display... is it just me, or is that higher than Apple's Retina display? In any case, the dual-core ARM Cortex A15 will be used to its fullest extent. It is a little strange that the high-end tablet, which sells for $400, has a dual-core processor, while the lower-end tablet and the phone both have quad-core processors, but the value is in the experience.
Oh yeah, and the Nexus Q... apparently never existed. Sorry.