Lightweight, compact and speedy, Samsung's Galaxy Tab 7.0 Plus is an Android 3.2 Honeycomb tablet with few minuses. Unfortunately, it costs twice as much as the Amazon Kindle Fire.
Samsung
Tab 7.0 Plus Tablet Is Petite With Punch
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One
of the toughest challenges I thought I'd have in reviewing
the Samsung Galaxy 7.0 Plus Android tablet is its
availability relative to Amazon's (NASDAQ:AMZN) Kindle Fire tablet.
Fortunately,
I started playing with the Plus last Friday and have left the Kindle
Fire, which arrived yesterday morning, relatively untouched. I do
want to compare them but not without giving the Plus proper lip
service.
Honestly,
the device deserves it. The Plus, with its 7-inch, WSVGA (1024 x
600) Plane-to-Line Switching (PLS) LCD weighs only 12.2 ounces
and has a metallic gray enclosure. It is the Android tablet Samsung
should have launched in 2010 to challenge Apple's (NASDAQ:AAPL) iPad
instead of the awkward, chunky Galaxy Tab 7.
While
the original 7-inch Tab only weighed 13.5 ounces, it was a full 0.5
inch thick. But that wasn't the bad part; the original 7 made
application access awkward because it ran Android 2.2 Froyo, which is
decidedly not fit for consuming applications on the larger tablet
form factor, with a 1GHz, single-core processor.
In
my tests of the WiFi-only model, applications run beautifully on the
Android 3.2 Honeycomb-powered Plus, which has a great, speedy little
1.2 GHz processor. The tablet UI also benefits from Samsung's
TouchWiz user interface, which is super-friendly to consumers who
enjoy customizable widgets.
The
Social Hub application widget, for example, elegantly lets users link
their email, Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn accounts with the tablet,
which renders messages and updates in one consolidated view with
headshots associated with contacts' profiles.
Netflix
and YouTube played well on the Plus, as did the magazine-reading
application Next Issue and Samsung's Media Hub for movies
and TV shows.
The
Plus has some of the more useful applications I've ever seen
preloaded on a Honeycomb tablet, including Google Maps with
Navigation turn-by-turn GPS directions, which lets users type or
speak their intended destinations into the Plus.
These
include the pen memo note-taking application that lets users write
notes on the tablet with their fingers and save them for later; a
photo editing application for pictures you snap with the tablet; and
Polaris Office, which lets users read and edit documents formatted
for PCs on tablets and smartphones.
One
of the bigger draws to this tablet is Peel's Smart Remote
application, which lets users manage their home entertainment content
and systems from the tablet.
There
is also a screensaver application and a dedicated screen-capture
button in the Honeycomb navigation bar, accessible via any of the
five home screens.
The
tablet has 1GB of RAM and is available in 16GB and 32GB options,
though both are expandable to 64GB with a microSD card, providing
more than enough storage.
Source: Clint Boulton - eWeek.com
Link: http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Desktops-and-Notebooks/Samsung-Tab-70-Plus-Tablet-is-Petite-With-Punch-184769/
Link: http://www.eweek.com/c/a/Desktops-and-Notebooks/Samsung-Tab-70-Plus-Tablet-is-Petite-With-Punch-184769/
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