by Lori Cunningham
In January, I reviewed the Galaxy Tab 7 inch tablet. I took it with me to the Consumer Electronics Show and found it very helpful in reviewing my over-scheduled calendar, full of manufacturer meetings to learn about their latest products. My also son loved the Galaxy Tab and played Angry Birds on it any every chance he could.
When I bought the iPad 2 in April, I quickly got used to and favored a 10 inch screen over a 7 inch screen. I loved having more landscape to read articles, e-mail’s, and documents.
Samsung recently came out with the Galaxy Tab 10.1 inch which is even larger than Apple’s 10 inch iPad. Now, you might think that’s not much of a difference, but it does expand your reading view. The Tab is similar in size to length of a 8 1/2 x11 paper; its size works well for reading.
I have been using the Galaxy Tab 10.1 inch for several months now and I really like it. It’s one of the first Android tablets with the new improved operating system, Honeycomb. Honeycomb offers enhanced multi-tasking, home screen customization, better redesigned widgets with more interactivity, tabbed browsing, and syncing with your Google Chrome bookmarks, among many other things.
Tab Features:
- New Honeycomb Android operating system
- 10.1 inch screen
- 20 ounces
- 1 GB RAM
- 1 GHz Dual processor – so it can process games and apps much faster
- Adobe Flash Player support
- Front 2.0 megapixel camera
- Rear 3.0 megapixel camera
- Built-in Flash
- Two versions 16GB or 32GB
- 4G capable
- Bluetooth 2.1 connectivity available
- USB 2.0 port for transferring data, video, pictures
- WiFi 802.11 a/b/g/n built-in
Galaxy Tab 10.1 versus iPad 2:
Pros:
- lighter in weight
- a brighter and better screen resolution
- You can touch anywhere on the screen to place the cursor. With the iPad you end up deleting words to place the cursor where you want
- Has a back button! (iPad does not)
- Most apps have a menu or a navigational map
- Built-in voice commands
- Integrates well with Google mail, Google calendar, and Google Docs
- Docks landscape – the iPad docs portrait (landscape provides a better viewing angle when showing picture slideshows)
- Can see and navigate to multiple windows – a screen pic of each open window
- Live wallpapers available – I have a map of the US that changes to your location
- HT9 built into Tab, great for word prediction, next word prediction, customisable for your preferences
- Has a remove trashcan on each screen when activated, to easily delete unwanted apps
- Shows what apps use the most battery
- Camera quality is lacking on both tablets, but the quality is better on the Tab
- can see Flash images (Apple does not allow this common interface to show on their devices)
Cons:
- same pricing as the iPad 2 for the WiFi version only
- Less apps available in the Android Market than in iTunes Store
- Must have a Google email account to begin using an Android tablet
- Not as many cases and accessories for it yet
- Cannot make folders so your apps are harder to find as your app library grows
- No physical button on the face to turn the Tab on. You find yourself turning the Tab all around looking for the “on” button
- It has a plastic backing which makes it lighter but makes it appear less sturdy than the iPad
- Neither of the tablets have a micro SD card slot
- Neither of the tablets have a USB port
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