Google has been showing off its new Nexus 7 fondleslab running the
latest version of Android, including a 4G LTE version that's the
first hardware to allow 4G reception from a variety of competing
carriers.
"By the end of the year, consumers are going to buy more
tablets than PCs. That's an amazing statistic," said Sundar Pichai, who
oversees Android and Chrome for Google. "And by the first half of this
year almost one in two tablets sold will be Android."
At the press
conference to announce the launch, Pichai said that Android tablet
activations have risen from 10 million last year to 70 million today,
and in markets like Japan, Android slabs are outselling their Apple
rivals.
The latest Nexus 7, built by Asus, is 2mm thinner than
Google's first-generation seven-inch fondleslab, with nearly 6mm shaved
off the width and the weight reduced by 50 grams. The screen size is the
same as the earlier Nexus 7, but the resolution has now been upped to
1920x1200, bringing the pixels per inch from 216 to 323 – the highest
ppi of any tablet, Pichai claimed.
The fondleslab itself uses a quad-core 1.4GHz Snapdragon S4 processor
that nearly doubles the computing performance of the old Nexus 7, plus
an Adreno 320 400MHz GPU, giving a promised 4x performance boost. RAM
has been upped from 1GB to 2GB, and there's now a 5MP camera in the back
in addition to a 1.2MP forward-facing camera for videoconferencing.
The
Nexus 7 has Wi-Fi models in two sizes (16GB and 32GB) running 802.11
a/b/g/n. There's also an LTE version that works with Verizon, AT&T
and T-Mobile 4G services via a custom chip that Google has bought in
from an unnamed third-party supplier. That hardware means Google can
sell the mobile version easily across all US carriers.
"This is
the first time you've got a tablet that can handle the different
standards used by different mobile companies within a single unit," Hugo
Barra, VP of Android at Google told The Register. "We're a bit surprised that so few people have picked up on that."
There
are also the usual hardware bells and whistles you'd expect form a
fondleslab these days: GPS, near-field communications, Bluetooth 4.0,
compass, accelerometer, gyroscope and stereo speakers with "virtual
surround sound." The latter is actually pretty good, although if you're
holding the Nexus in landscape mode it's easy to block the speakers with
your hands.
Battery life is a claimed nine hours for video and
ten for web use and browsing, with Qi-compatible wireless charging if
you want to buy an extra charger. The unit ships with a USB charger in
the box, but it works with any micro-USB power cable.
Consumers
will pay $269 and $299 for the 16GB and 32GB Wi-Fi models, respectively,
and $349 for the LTE-equipped 32GB version. Sales are limited to the US
at present, but the UK, France, Germany, Spain, Japan, South Korea, and
Australia will be able to buy the Nexus 7 in the next few weeks.
The
Chocolate Factory is also making a play for the Nexus 7 as a device for
students. It has worked out deals with five academic publishers
(including Wiley, Pearson, McGraw-Hill and Macmillan) to allow students
to buy textbooks for the device, or rent them for a period of six months
with an "up to 80 per cent" discount on the purchase price.
Google
has handed out the hardware to the press to play with over the next two
weeks and initial impressions are good – overall. It certainly feels
noticeably lighter and slimmer than the older version, and the weight
savings do make a difference for handheld use.
source theregister
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