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Nexus 7 Tablet Review
1. Nexus 7 Tablet Review
Nexus 7 Tablet Review
Nexus 7 Tablet
The Nexus 7 Tablet is one of the best Android tablets sold at a very competitive price. It is the
result of the attempt by Google to marry the company’s popular Andoid OS with the quality of
hardware it deserves. Google contacted Asus for their table and the pair reworked the exterior
and came up with something they were happy with,
The Nexus 7 Tablet comes with Tegra 3 chipset, a great screen, lightweight and functional.
What more could we want?
On the bright side, it’s easily the best tablet available for the price. A stellar screen, great
chipset, and a wide open ecosystem. Nexus tablets offer a very clean Android experience, with
no bloatware or restrictions. You have also access to the Play Store, the most robust of all
ecosystems and you can get the NOOK app as well as many Amazon apps from the Play Store
The screen is a 1,280 x 800 IPS panel, with a pixel density of 216ppi – not up with the iPad but
higher than any smaller tablet we’ve seen. It’s pretty sharp and readable, and it makes movie
watching very enjoyable with a good set of headphones, and games run fine. .The speaker on
the rear is listenable but not particularly loud or full-sounding, so headphones to hand are
desirable
Books can be read with large text and a nice page-turn animation, and they’re perfectly
readable, so you might consider this tablet as an alternative to the Kindle.
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2. Inside, Asus has installed one of the latest quad-core 1.3GHz Tegra 3 chips and 1GB of RAM,
so this is a blisteringly fast device. The Nexus 7 effortlessly ran every app we threw at it,
including the intensive Shadowgun and the oddly demanding Angry Birds Space, and
everything about the main OS feels smooth and responsive.
The battery life is hugely important and Asus has squeezed in a non-removable 4,325mAh
battery. Duting some teststhe Nexus 7 ran dry after 8hrs 48mins running a video on loop at half
brightness with Wi-Fi disabled. That isn’t anywhere near the best in its field, but it’s perfectly
acceptable for a travelling device.
Some missing points are the following:
.There is no camera on the rear and this , leaves you with only a pretty middling
1.2-megapixel front-facing camera.
There are no card slots to add memory; so you should pays attention not to buy a model
with too little memory (currently you can choose 8GB or 16GB or 32 GB)
The Jelly Bean Android, instead of the kind of reskins we’ve come to expect from HTC
and Samsung, s as clean as Android gets.
There are three main controls at the bottom of every screen (back, home and recent apps) and
an iOS-style row of favourite apps above that. The excellent Google Chrome browser is loaded
as standard even if manufacturers can stick to the old Android browser if they wish. Alongside
quick shortcuts for various types of media, there’s now also a useful expandable folder for your
favourite apps.
A Video Review of the Nexus 7 Tablet
You can watch below a video review on the Nexus 7 Tablet
Conclusions
The Nexus 7 is a powerful, well built tablet with a better screen than you’d expect for the price,
Asus and Google’s Nexus 7 sets the new gold standard for budget tablets.
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3. There is a strong demand for this tablet and often it is difficult to find it in shops, but you can
purchase it online from Amazon
Click here for the Nexus 7 offers at Amazon UK
Click here for the Nexus 7 offers at Amazon US
Click here for the Nexus 7 offers at Amazon IT
References
Nexus 7 Review by PC Pro
The Best Cheap Android Tablets by the AndroidAuthority
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