Googleâs Nexus 7 tablet costs $199, the same as Amazonâs Kindle Fire and Barnes & Nobleâs Nook, but it features a much wider array of applications.
The Associated Press
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NEW YORK â" In the 1982 sci-fi movie âBlade Runner,â there are hints that the hero, played by Harrison Ford, is an artificial human â" an âandroidâ or âreplicant.â His job is to go out and kill other, rogue androids.
If heâs an android, heâs of the latest model, Nexus 7. Thatâs also the name Google Inc. has picked for the first tablet to bear the Google brand. Clearly, its mission is to go out and kill rogue tablets running Googleâs Android software.
Specifically, the Nexus 7 seems to have been designed to give anyone who bought a Kindle Fire from Amazon.com Inc. or a Nook Tablet from Barnes & Noble Inc. a lethal case of buyerâs remorse.
The Nexus 7 costs $199, the same that Amazon and Barnes & Noble charge for their tablets. But itâs better than theirs in significant ways, as it became clear to me after a couple of days of use. Google announced the tablet last week and is taking pre-orders for delivery in mid-July.
Why is Google targeting the Kindle Fire and the Nook Tablet? Because theyâve been relatively successful competitors to Apple Inc.âs iPad tablet, yet Google is getting no benefit from their success.
Google makes its Android operating software available for any device manufacturer to use. Amazon and Barnes & Noble took Android and modified it heavily. Namely, they took out the applications that point to Googleâs services and the advertising it sells. Instead, the apps point to the companiesâ own stores.
In other words, these tablets are rogue Androids.
Other tablets, such as Samsungâs Galaxy, use the âproper,â Googlish version of Android, but theyâve been more expensive than the Kindle Fire and Nook Tablet. Apparently, Google thought it was time to make a really good, proper Android tablet for $199.
Itâs succeeded. As far as I can tell from my few days of use so far, the Nexus 7 is a really good value. Itâs made by AsusTek Computer, a Taiwanese company that was originally planning to sell a similar tablet for $249.
The Nexus 7 is a plain black slab with a screen thatâs 7 inches on the diagonal â" the same size as the Nook and the Fire. The most noticeable feature it has over the competition is a low-resolution camera, facing the user. That means the Nexus 7 can be used for videoconferencing, but itâs nearly impossible to use for snapshots. It also has a microphone, which the Fire lacks.
The screen has a higher resolution than the Fire, and colors look more vivid. The whole tablet is slightly thinner and appreciably lighter than the Fire.
Other nifty but invisible hardware upgrades on the Nexus 7 include Bluetooth and GPS chips for use with headsets and navigation software. The tablet even has a chip for near-field communications, which means it can âtalkâ to some phones and store payment terminals when tapped against them.
But the most important difference between the Nexus 7 and its prey is the software. Not only is it running stock Android, but itâs also the first device to run the latest version of Android. Google, with its trademark combination of cute and cutthroat, calls it âJelly Bean.â
Stock Android gives Nexus 7 access to a much wider array of applications than its competitors, running into the hundreds of thousands. The diversity also applies to content: You can use a wider range of e-book stores and movie services on the Nexus 7. You can read Kindle books on the Nexus 7, for example, but you canât read Google books on the Kindle.
Google does its best, though, to steer users to its âPlayâ store for apps, movies, music and books. Buyers even get a $25 credit toward store purchases, partly defraying the cost of the tablet itself.
With a powerful processing chip and plentiful RAM, the Nexus 7 is fast and slick. You can switch directly from application to application, something that isnât possible with the Fire or Nook.
The chief issue buyers will likely bump into with the Nexus 7 is a lack of storage space. The $199 model has just 8 gigabytes of storage, and a quarter of that is overhead. It has just 5.9 gigabytes actually available. With downloads of a few applications, some songs and one movie, more than half was gone.
The Nexus 7 is a great entry in the cheap-and-small tablet category, even if itâs not perfect. But then again, who is?
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