Recommended Posts

Yeah, outside of iOS tablets, you're looking at Android tablets (from a popularity standpoint). The Nexus 7/10 are the best, but I'd wait to buy one - as new ones are on the horizon (at least the Nexus 7 successor). The screen is one of the major selling points of the Nexus 10 - it has a very high resolution display. Also, the Nexus 7 is powered by a Tegra 3 (quad-core), while the Nexus 10 is powered by a Exynos 5 (dual-core). Nexus 10 is slightly more powerful, as it has to push more pixels. The Nexus 10 has a rear facing camera, while on the Nexus 7 you only get a front facing camera.

  • 3 weeks later...

Nexus 10. If that specifically isn't going to work for some reason, the Transformer Infinity could be good, if you need something that works like a laptop or need extra battery life. If you think pen input would be really useful (for some people it is), then the Galaxy Note 10.1. If you're reading PDFs, some people have reported that the aspect ratio of the Nexus 10 makes it a bit hard, so the iPad aspect ratio is better. If you're just doing that, there are some $250 iPad clones with the same display as the iPad 3 or later, and which come with stock 4.1... that'd only be best in a specific scenario though.

I originally got an acer A500, and it sucks balls. Heavy, slow, unsupported everything... So I got an iPad and it ruled. I also picked up a Nexus 7. Despite it not ruling the app world, Its by far the best tablet device I use in terms of 'just working'

It came locked and it was almost as google supported unlocking the bootloader. Very quick and simple. ROMs are always the latest and smoothest with extra features for the nexus devices that others can't use/take advantage of. Not saying you even have to bother with roms as the stock OS is perfectly acceptable. The feel of a 7 inch tablet is a lot nicer too as its easier to hold & lighter. Taking the page out of apples book it has no expandability however I had no problem getting USB-OTG I to work with a super simple play app.

I use an SGSIIX as a daily driver for a phone, and I went away on vacation and only took the nexus with. Upon returning, now 3 weeks later, I still find my SGSIIX incredibly slow and laggy in comparison to how snappy the nexus was.

My suggestion is you are going to use this as a secondary consumption device, so screw expandability, screw additional ports, screw extra weight and bad battery life. Get something plain and simple. This was my mistake at first. I wanted HDMI out that I never use, I wanted a USB host port when USB-OTG is easier and just as functional. If you are looking android, the Nexus line will give you the best experience. Samsung makes good stuff too. From my trials, the Acer one will give you the worst.

The W700 is significantly more expensive. And I'd be concerned about an i3 getting hot enough to be uncomfortable to hold.

Surface. Awesome UI, Windows-famous device compatibility, full MS Office (the real deal), premium build quality, full size USB port, and microSD slot. Doesn't get better than that.

The Surface RT has a terrible screen, the Surface Pro has terrible battery life.

The W700 is significantly more expensive. And I'd be concerned about an i3 getting hot enough to be uncomfortable to hold.

The Surface RT has a terrible screen, the Surface Pro has terrible battery life.

W700 based on i3_2375M is much cheaper than Surface pro(around 400 Euros cheaper) since it was 600 Euros, and no it does not get too hot, for things You can do while holding it, it is warmish. You can feel it is warmer than Your hands, but that is it. This version does not come with that clunky dock, which was the main negative point of reviewers all around for Iconia, instead it comes with a keyboard attached leathery sleeve, which is rather nice.

ceHI62KNN08g.jpg

I really, really like the Xperia Tablet Z. One of the first tablets with a Snapdragon (S4 Pro). It's blazing fast (probably fastest available), the thinnest and lightest 10" tablet, has a great 1920x1200 display and it's completely waterproof!

  • Like 2

The problem with Android is the apps or the lack of good Tablet optimised apps. It's less evident on the Nexus 7 because of the resolution, it's like a big phone. But on the Nexus 10, it's in your face.

Carefull, the Nexus 10 do not have any memory card to boost storage. And i'm not quite sure the GPU is powerfull enough to push all those pixels.

RTs screen is very good, battery life is good (and on par with the Nexus), price is just right. Far inferior, is that a joke? Only leg up? I disagree.

  • Larger/widescreen display (16:9) orientation
  • Best cloud/social integration
  • Better browser
  • USB/Windows Driver DB
  • Business integration/Office/Sharepoint
  • Best UX/Touch = Fun
  • Great build quality
  • Expandable storage
  • Metro Apps
  • Better multi-tasking
  • Snap-views
  • Windows Explorer/Networking

How so?

I think the only leg up it has on the iPad and Nexus tablets is expandable storage. Otherwise in terms of resolution, battery life, app selection, price, etc... it's far inferior.

Last I checked, Android's app selection for tablets is even worse than Windows 8.

Last I checked, Android's app selection for tablets is even worse than Windows 8.

Yeah for specific tablet apps, Android kind of sucks. You can still scale non-native apps though. It's tolerable on the Nexus 7.

Regardless, iOS has everybody destroyed in that department.

Well in terms of resolution, it does have a terrible screen.

Yes, it has a low-ish pixel density, but Cleartype makes it look fantastic. It only starts looking bad if I hold it 6 inches from my face, at arm's length it looks very sharp, maybe not "Retina" sharp but it's far from bad.

I have been using Nexus 7 & I am really pleased with the offerings. I wish it had a rear camera but I am not missing it much. It brings pure android experience & the updates keep running in at a smooth interval.

~4300mAH battery does a decent job of running the device for nearly 2 days with active usage. The screen does not wash out when held at an angle & runs a decent 210+ ppi. I wish it had a gig more of ram but it performs decently at 1GB offering.

My real complain is with out of the box support for certain movie file formats. But I overcame that by installing MX Player.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • BS, I've yet to run into a typical pc user that uses it at all, let alone half the population.
    • Codec Tweak Tool 6.7.7 by Razvan Serea This tool is a Swiss army knife for managing codecs and codec settings. Codec Tweak Tool will scan for broken filters and remove them. If the tool detects something that is broken, it will then prompt you with the details and you will be given the option to remove the broken item. Generate a detailed log of all installed codecs and filters, enable/disable more than 250 popular codecs and filters (if they are installed), manage preferred source filters, and reset settings. With this tool you can do things like: Scan the registry to detect and remove broken references to codecs and filters. Enable/disable more than 200 popular codecs and filters (if they are installed). Manage preferred source filters (a.k.a. splitters). Detect broken codecs and DirectShow filters. Fix problems with the standard DirectShow filters of Windows. A fix for a specific sound problem. Generate a text file with detailed information about all installed codecs and DirectShow filters, along with other relevant system information. Reset settings to recommended values for many popular codecs and DirectShow filters. Configure audio output settings for several popular audio decoders. Several configuration options for a few DirectShow filters that don't have an easily accessible interface for those options. Easy access to the configuration interfaces of various codecs and DirectShow filters Backup the settings of several codecs and DirectShow filters. Replace your current settings with those from a previous backup. Manage DirectShow filters - Enable or disable DirectShow filters. Manage ACM/VFW codecs - Enable or disable ACM/VFW codecs. Enable or disable DirectX Media Objects. Configure your preferred DirectShow source filters (a.k.a. splitters) for several common file extensions. Enable or disable the generation of thumbnails for several common video file formats in Windows Explorer. Download: Codec Tweak Tool 6.7.7 | 1.5 MB (Freeware) View: Codec Tweak Tool Website | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • The site is pretty sparse on features / tech specs. Can I plug it into a PC/hone/Switch via USB-C and use it as an external display? If so, what's the virtual resolution of the screen, the refresh rate, PPI of the image etc? Is the text crisp enough to use for coding at say 12pt? Is it good enough for playing dark games, like say Path of Exile 2? How about fast games like car racing games? Just how do they expect anyone to order this thing without giving out all this info?
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      Vincian earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • First Post
      Jocimo earned a badge
      First Post
    • Week One Done
      suprememobiles48 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Windows Guy earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      Prasann earned a badge
      One Month Later
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      546
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      158
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      86
    4. 4
      neufuse
      65
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      65
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!