Galaxy Tab 10.1 Vs. iPad 2 Review
DeviceGuru writes "DeviceGuru's 10-inch tablet smackdown pits Samsung's Galaxy Tab 10.1 against Apple's iPad 2. At price parity the iPad 2 is probably a better bet for the average user since it's a more stable, near-perfect device with a rich assortment of apps for nearly every possible function you'd like to perform on a tablet, reasons the post. However, with the Samsung tablet's cost of goods rumored to be around $215 versus $260 for the iPad 2 for comparable models, Samsung could drop its 10-inch tablet's price to $425 and pose a serious challenge to Apple's device. But will they...?"
If you can go on Newegg you can already get a 7 inch dual-core tablet for $300. Or you could get the Transformer for $400. Pretty soon Archos will release their own 10 inch dual core versions for sub $400. Heck the Viewsonic G Tablet has been out since last year for $300. Competitors will drive down the price of these tablets until they've pushed margins so low we finally get sub $300 10 inch tablets. Until then however I think the iPad 2 is just better bang for the buck.
Here's my comparison:
Supports Entire Web: Galaxy Tab
Supports Custom Applications: Galaxy Tab
Allows User Customization: Galaxy Tab
So, based on those three metrics, the only three that are important, we have a clear winner: the only tablet that meets those three essentials.
End of story.
TFA: "if you want greater control over your tablet environment, more openness to non-Apple standards (such as Adobe Flash), or greater ability to adapt to new technologies and standards as the emerge, the Galaxy Tab 10.1 may be a better bet. "
will anyone care?
If you're the kind that likes to do a lot of handwaving about openness while boring all your friends and have a 'DIY attitude' (read: lots of free time), buy the Galaxy Tab. Everyone else, stay away until they either become significantly cheaper than the iPad or Android has caught up in marketshare and polish (which, conveniently, is always 6 months from now.)
If all else fails, immortality can always be assured by spectacular error.
I disagree the Android tablet has a greater ability to adapt. Most standards that would emerge would be well supported by a very robust application space, sooner than any Android tablet. You want a cloud file management app? Here's 20 on an iPad.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Every Android vs iPad review, summed up:
"The iPad is the best product, hands down, but if you don't mind dealing with a bunch of issues, the Android tablet is a strong contender."
It's like all reviewers need a horse race, and will bend over backwards to try to say nice things about the Android tablets. Do you think they'd do the same if the tables were reversed?
From early in the Gripes list:
Occasionally, view orientation momentarily switches back/forth between portrait and landscape modes for no apparent reason; only happens when it's on its stand, slightly reclined.
Then a little later on in the same list:
The device occasionally switches between landscape and portrait modes for no reason, when operated on stand (a setting can lock it, however).
I guess it was really annoying to list it twice!
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Disclaimer: I got my galaxy tab for free, so I have a little extra love for it.
I've been using the tablet for a couple months now and I'm pretty happy with it. Since the Android 3.1 update came out, it fixed a lot of the initial software issues I had with the device. My biggest annoyance is the lack of Netflix support. But overall, it's been great for web browsing and standard tablet activities.
Pros:
Cons:
In the deeper parts of the device I'm sure I could find complaints, but as a web browser/email client and occasionally playing games on it, my Galaxy Tab 10.1 has been a good experience (again, since 3.1 came out).
The 3.0 firmware that was originally on the Tab was really buggy. I had lots of rendering errors when visiting various websites (Google News was a big offender). but they fixed all my major issues since then.
Its not what it is, its something else.
Flash is a web extension, it's not an open standard. It's not part of any HTML specification. So the "whole of the web" is a totally misleading way of putting it.
If it was an open web standard it would be supported, but it's a proprietary closed source standard from Adobe.
I personally don't care about flash and I don't want the web being under the control of Adobe, Microsoft or anyone else.
I've had an iPad since the day it launched. And I do like the hardware and I prefer the screen ratio to the Android tablet widescreen - the page size is better for reading magazines and comics.
Then Woot had a sale on refurbed XOOMs and I bought one. Imagine, I can just plug it in with mini-USB and transfer files or SSH them over wifi. I can replace the soft keyboard with a better one. I can have mail on my 'desktop'. Basically, there's very little I can't control, especially with Tasker. The screen on the XOOM is not quite as good as the iPad's in sunlight, and of course the iPad has a far better game selection, but I don't think I can go back at this point. So since I think the Tab 10.1 is better hardware than the XOOM except for that stupid proprietary cable that'd be even better.
My biggest regret is that I could only delete iTunes from my computer and not skull@#$ it till it died, since that's what I feel like it was doing to me every time I was forced to use it.
Neglecting to mention those were paid for using $25 face value 1/2 oz golden eagles.
Yes I'm well aware its laughably bad comment spam, but its kinda funny how the numbers pretty much work out...
"Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
As someone who works in the open source world, I gotta say that's not only spot on, but applies to almost all open source software. You're trading ease of use for configurability and openness, at the cost of glitches and big, empty promises.
There's no -1 for "I don't get it."
What's going on?
What's going on is that almost all of the assumptions you've made prior to your question are ass-backwards. I'll address one of the ones you would least expect to be false:
stop paying the Windows tax and run FOSS Android instead
No major manufacturer uses the actual open source Android distribution. In fact, the only version of Android that officially supports Android is not open source. It's very much closed, and tablet makers pay Google for access to it.
[SWF is] a proprietary closed source standard from Adobe.
Used to be until two and a half years ago. In February 2009, Adobe published the SWF specification under a license that does not prohibit third-party SWF players. Flash Player remains proprietary software, but the spec license change has allowed for Gnash, Gordon, and Smokescreen.
Here's something I've never understood...
Samsung could drop its 10-inch tablet's price to $425 and pose a serious challenge to Apple's device. But will they...?
Why would anyone trade so much away for 10% of the price in a luxury market?
There's no way I'd drop most of my half of a mortgage payment on something that "kinda works sometimes" when I could just toss in the cost of a nice night out and get the top of the line...
Imagine if the decision was to buy the yugo for $9K or the BMW for $10K. You can have a grilled to perfection steak dinner for $5 or save a whopping 50 cents by having a three day old mcdonalds burger instead. Would I still be married if I told her to buy a $900 pair of sweatpants and teeshirt from walmart instead of a kilobuck wedding dress? Why throw down do much cash but not finish the job?
Now if it didn't really work, but it was 1/4 the price, Oh I'd find a way, even if it involved desoldering and remanufacturing. But almost but not quite the same cost? Forget it.
"Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
I've had my Xoom almost since it first came out and I, as you, have had a much improved experience following the 3.1 update. A friend of mine as well as my boss both have iPads that I have had much experience with and here's my 2 cents.
I prefer the Xoom for the following reasons:
The web browser makes more sense ergonomically on a tablet than Safari does on the iPad since it has tabs that are always viewable.
Higher resolution widescreen display.
I prefer the way multitasking works as I just hit a button on the taskbar and thumbnails of currently running programs display to pick from.
Always visible and consistent "back" button on the taskbar.
Widgets
Wi-fi hangs on to a signal better. My boss is constantly getting the "would you like to sign up for a cellular plan" pop-up on his iPad when the wi-fi falls down.
Google Music integration with the music player so all of my stuff is always at hand.
Scripting layer for Android so I can write and run python scripts right on the device.
Choice of keyboards including "Hacker's Keyboard" that gives me access to all keys including Esc, Ctrl, and Alt for vnc/ssh sessions.
Firefox web browser that stays in sync with my desktop browser including tabs/settings/passwords, etc.
Ubuntu chroot so I have an industrial strength cli environment right on the device.
About the only advantages I see for iPad is the interface is smoother and their are more tablet oriented apps. Some people claim that it is simpler to operate but I don't really think that is the case. I have yet to see any particular exclusive apps that would draw me away from Android and I can get past the relatively small difference in smooth. YMMV.
The soylentnews experiment has been a dismal failure.
hmm the choice is a better all around machine or saving a few dollars, I go with the better product that just works.
Seriously, tablets are for wankers with more money than braincells. No keyboard, cant' even stand up on their own, can't fit in your pocket, pathetically weak CPU that can't be used to create anything, and in the case of Apple, very poor compatibility with 3rd party hardware.
Buy a netbook or laptop instead. Even if you're just going to use it for wanking, at least it leaves both of your hands free.
If you're someone that wants to get into the device, and do plenty of your own modifications then sure get an android based tablet that fits into your desired price/feature range. You'll be glad you did and have lots of fun.
If you want to use a tablet and not fiddle with it then I'd recommend getting an iPad. It "just works" and there's plenty of great software.
add the touchscreen layer
You just answered your own question.
that's a great way of justifying getting a 27" iMac... you want to start developing iOS apps :)
As opposed to the usual reason, ie you've had a lobotomy?
The other day I was in Best Buy and saw a XOOM out for display. So I started up the web browser and navigated to the same test page I always use (http://www.theage.com.au) to see how well it compared to the iPad. Well I didn't get to see much, as not only did that test crash the browser, it crashed the XOOM itself. All I got was a message that basically said "Sorry .. we're crashing the device here. Thanks for playing". I have never seen that sort of behaviour before, so based on that 1 point data sample I was not impressed with the XOOM (not that I am in the market for a tablet anyway).
I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
[Get the iPad]...unless you’ve got a grudge against Apple for some reason, or are enamored with the idea of having a more configurable tablet
He just described ~80% of slashdotters there. So go get your Galaxy Tabs, folks.
Here
http://www.displaymate.com/Tablet_ShootOut_2.htm
If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
secret on the inside and I am not allowed to peek inside
Sure you are. Jailbreak it. If you have any desire to WANT to see the inside, it's easy to do.
Apple has built a tablet that is safe for normal users and perfectly open for technical users.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Running custom applications on an iPad 2 requires $649 for a Mac mini and $99 per year for a developer certificate.
Have you been to a technical conference lately? The requirement for a Mac to develop on seems to be a non-issue for more technical people that I have seen, who mostly have Mac laptops...
If you were foolish enough to not consider which laptop brand would allow you to enable development on an iPad/iPhone, well then you better think harder next time at the FULL capabilities of the system you are buying.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
The claim was "clear winner"
Why would that not obviously be defined by who is making the most profit? Since after all the point of any company making said devices s to make money...
Then of course, the "clear winner" is Apple.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
I'll take the Asus Transform or even the Acer Iconia A500 over the Samsung 10.1 any day of the week. The transform with it's optional docking keyboard is almost perfect.
I'm looking at the Toshiba Tablet. It has one feature I really like: "Battery Replaceable? Yes, and you can do it without and tools." A full sized USB port and an SB port don't hurt, either.
If you were foolish enough to not consider which laptop brand would allow you to enable development on an iPad/iPhone
Since when has it commonly been considered "foolish" to have bought a computer before the iPad existed?
Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance used to be a bit of a cult favorite. I think for me it was my Marshal McLuhan watershed.
From Alan Jacobs' superb distillation Why Bother with Marshall McLuhan?
Alan Jacobs single-handedly proves there is intelligent life in the humanities after all, even if he did wrap his fine meditation in three layers of compatibility cloak. His thesis is that McLuhan made an immense contribution by giving people permission to speak about media in a different way, without sounding like complete idiots (in comparison to what McLuhan got away with himself).
This lumps McLuhan in with Pirsig and Freud.
You're one of those. I'm on the opposite side of the fence. I regard the Apple-branded wedding dress as a Symbiote spider skin. Your GF would probably think that totally rocks as a wedding dress, if it comes in white. Don't forget your first anniversary, she might have a temper.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1177969
The modified/optimized version works great for me. Stop crying and learn to use Google.
I have an ASUS Eee Pad and an iPad 1 and both have pro's and con's but to be honest you can sum it up as follow:
If you want design over function go iOS
If you want function over design go Android
Because the device is so personal it comes down what you weigh more, design and looks or functions and control. There is no one device fits all group here, which is great as competition brings innovation both in products as well as price.
and Sammy will find buyers, but I'm much more interested in the Lenovo Thinkpad Tablet, which does everything quite differently:
- active digitizer pen, allows taking freehand+OCR notes on it. If I can discipline myself into using that correctly, should shave 1hr off my workday.
- a smorgasbord of standard ports: USB host (USB drives FTW !), Mini-USB, mini-HDMI, full SD, allows connecting the tablet to stuff w/o special "forgettable" cables, and saves on cables
- plenty of pro software pre-installed (QuickOffice, security, OCR, some kind of notetaking software...), shaves $50+ from the actual "usable configuration" price, on top of cable savings.
- optional Thinkpad keyboard with a variation of the trackpoint, lets my hands stay on home row
- serious-looking black slate
The Cloud - because you don't care if your apps and data are up in the air.
If your sales strategy is, "it may be awful, but at least it's cheap!", you might consider looking at how other companies following this strategy are doing. Do you want to be the company selling the cheap, awful devices, or the company selling the less cheap, wonderful devices? It puts me in mind of the 1980s car market change.
I have an iPad(iOS 5 -- I'm a developer.) and an ASUS Transformer to name just two of my tablets. My iPad is really just glorified personal media player -- and at that task it's overpriced. My ASUS on the other hand is closer to my MacBook Pro with the niceties of a tablet. For what I do and what I like, it's hands down better on almost every front
I MY FREAKING OPINION -- just like the article this is linked to:
The iPad is for someone that's heavily invested in iTunes and enjoys an overly simplified UI that holds one's hand and lets that user know exactly what they can and can not do. It's a device that throws individuality out the door in favor of conformity -- every iOS device looks pretty much the same with only a slight variation in the background and it's pretty sad that almost all of them have AngryBirds installed. iOS has become rather generic.
The iPad is a safe and limited tablet that will rarely evolve beyond what it is now. It's main purpose is to keep the user in Apple's eco-system and it does an excellent job at that task.
Android(Honeycomb) tablets on the other hand, are for those that want the consumption strengths of a tablet, but WAY more functionality like a traditional OS. They're devices for the tinkers, the individuals, power users. People that don't readily conform to one generic set standard and would like to personalize their experience outside of just having different apps available.
They're excellent devices for those that don't need their hand held and can make decisions on their own.
Lame? no
Redundant? no
I read the review and there was no mention of it. I have the money, I only have yet to find a good 10-inch tablet on which I can install Linux. No, not the Android-kernel, but, let's say Debian. And not in a chroot, not with soldering. Just from a USB, for example.
I don't know how many feel like me, but no business with me if I can't run my Linux distro of choice on it. Am I the only one?
I can almost guarantee that the cost of goods analysis is wrong. There is no way in today's tablet market that Samsung wouldn't mark down it's price below the iPad if it could afford to.
I'm quite content for the moment with my refurbished BN Color Nook running CM7 (http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1030227). It overclocks to 1200Mhz, has complete access to the Android Market and Amazon App Store. I use the Kindle App for books, as well as Netflix, WSJ, obligatory Angry Birds and many other mainstream apps. The display is beautiful and battery life is pretty good. My cost with nice RooCase, 8GB flash MicroSD, and the Nook, $205! Of course I would like more memory and a Dual-Core but I really don't need it and I don't have a spare $500 at the moment.
"I say we take off, nuke the site from orbit. It's the only way to be sure."
The problem with articles relying on price estimates based on teardowns is that those are only semi-accurate when their current. Once they're a year old, like the iPad 2's estimate is, it's almost certainly way too high. I wouldn't be surprised if the iPad 2 was actaully less expensive to build, at current prices, than the Galaxy Tab 10.1. Of course, Apple is less willing to accept a lower profit margin. They have less competition, since they're the only iOS tablet manufacturer.
I keep hearing the Appleoids tell me that the ipad/ipad2 provide the only 'real tablet experience' and all the other esoterica from the title about polish and apps. I've used ipods, ipads and android tablets. For the life of me I cant sort out this 'special experience' from one to the other. The android tabs and ipads run most the exact same apps from the exact same publishers. I have a $100 android tablet from a year ago thats frankly pretty slow these days but I got to learn all about tablets with it. I just bought a $150 android tablet with the same innards as the original ipad, but with a supposedly lesser screen. The screen looks and works just fine to me, and I see very little difference between it and the ipad 2 screens. Plus I'll let my 6 year old play games on these without fear of breakage. I saw a mother hand her ipad 2 to her kid the other day and the kid dropped it, screen down. Smash.
I watch netflix, listen to music, watch ripped movies, play all sorts of games, browse the web, do video chat, make free internet phone calls, etc. Nothing I've tried was slow or made me think of a $600 dual core ipad, or a similarly priced galaxy pad.
Funny but the same strategy has worked for decades with computer hardware, televisions, cars and so forth. You can always spend 3-4x for something than whatever provides the basic function. If you can identify and value the special functions or capabilities that the more expensive one brings to the table, and you need those, buy it.
Of course, I dont drink the Apple kool-aid nor do I want to spend a similar amount on an android tablet. It'll be outdated in a year or two when version 3.8 or 4.0 android or ios v6 comes out and they leave legacy hardware behind. I'll be able to buy another $150 tablet that runs the new os, has mostly the same innards as the new expensive tablets, has a workable screen, maybe is a little thicker or bigger or heavier. But I sure wont be impressing others with my new $600 tablet, my $80,000 car, or my 73" LED 3d television set. Thats important, right?
I did retire when I was 39 though. Mostly by not wasting money.
Screw you both!
" In fact, Apple’s more tightly constrained systems are generally credited with being more stable and less prone to hardware/software and OS/app incompatibilities and mishaps,"
So, he's saying that apples gear is more stable, etc, because its tightly constrained???
Bollocks!... Look at linux, that's pretty stable and works with all hardware, and yet its arguably the most open of PC operating systems. The reason Apple gear is more stable is because Apple makes it that way, rather than just make something that looks good, and ship it "cus the suckers will buy it anyhow", which seems to be the mentally of most of the tech industry.
At price parity the iPad 2 is probably a better bet for the average user since it's a more stable, near-perfect device with a rich assortment of apps for nearly every possible function you'd like to perform on a tablet, reasons the post.
Come on. I like how the OP tacked on "reasons the post" at the end to somehow claim objectivity. You did a great job of being objective OP.
That brings me to an interesting point, / . is just "the ramblings of socially-inept, technology-literate news-mongers".
I got an iPad (original) from my work about a year ago. I used it quite a bit at first, but eventually wound up using my laptop more often. When I saw the Galaxy Tab 10.1 I really thought I'd give the tablet thing another try. I picked one up at Best Buy now that they have the no-questions-asked return policy. I truly believe it's the first iPad contender. It has the power, the battery life, the form factor, etc. All in all it's a great device. Also, I truly liked Honeycomb. Then, a few days later, I read that Samsung had ported their touchwiz UI to the Galaxy Tab, and were going to be pushing it out in an update in August. I promptly returned the device, and bought an iPad 2. Until Google puts their foot down and stops these manufacturers from bastardizing the very capable OS they have developed it's never going to be able to stand on equal footing with a device built by a company like Apple who controls everything from hardware to software. I decided to check out a Droid X2 a couple weeks ago, and after about 10 minutes gave it back in disgust. The thing had so much crapware bundled on it that it reminded me of 90s era PCs. Unfortunately you can't remove any of it without voiding your warranty. Google HAS to do something about this. I like Android, and I think some of these devices have a real chance at making a dent in the market, but they will not get a dime of my money until I get the OS as it was intended and the manufacturer leaves any modifications up to me.
but you said it in kinda an obnoxous & condescending tone and I strongly suspect that you are a dick.
What percentage of people buying one of these devices already own a phone with the same OS?
To me, that would be a pretty major consideration. I have an Android phone. I am used to all its apps, paid or free. Buying an Android tablet would be a seamless transition. I'm sure it's similar with an Iphone-to-Ipad transition. Having to figure out different apps to do the same tasks between the two would get mighty annoying.
Is there anyone out there that has opposite devices and likes their choice?
Figures. They are squeezing as much money as possible to their customers by limiting free stuff and actually nice products.
check this out http://world.brightbridgewealthmanagement-mag.com
articles are bunk
Like anyone can even know that
With the original Galaxy Tab there is an annoying misfeature when when you use USB connected to your computer, you only get a trickle recharge of the battery. Does the 10.1 Tab also have this problem. I couldn't find a reference to it in any of the reviews.
...if you conform to a generic set of standards and need your hand held then you'll probably need one of those ones that you buy at Best Buy and has a built in tuner and all that.
Me, I use an old HP oscilloscope in XY mode with an external function generator to create the sweep sawtooth wave used for the scan signal and then I manually display over the wire broadcasts. Haven't quite gotten the audio to match up with the video yet, but I have so much more freedom on how I display the signal and it is clear that I am awesome and nonconformist and everything.
My god, do you own an actual microwave appliance, too? How do you control the frequency that you cook your hot dogs at? Well, I guess if you need someone to hold your hand and you aren't an individual and can't think for yourself then maybe it is better that you use one of those than doing it my way, which involves an abandoned railway car and a very high power military radio transmitter. That's just me, I'm an individual and I've seen Dead Poets Society like 12 times so it should be clear to everyone that I'm not a conformist. Not at all.
"near-perfect device"
Sorry, but as a 2nd gen tablet, it's nowhere near perfect. Hence the above statement already speaks bias. Perfection is subjective.
So explain why the keep filling the spots my crowbar fits on every new release?
Because they know you have a crowbar and so can get back in. The other homes with owners who just use the front door are safer from burglars, and you can always get back in anyway so why do you care?
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
So let me get this straight. Google is good and Apple is bad. Therefore any tablet computer that runs Android is good.
I guess everyone should be buying an Android tablet then.
Oh you say they aren't? Why could that be?
Probably because most people want things that work and don't require fiddling. They don't care about open software beliefs. They just want something that works. The idea that just lowering the price on the Galaxy will make it better is ludicrous. Just make the user experience better. Oh wait, Samsung can't, that's Google's job. And Google has yet to step up to the plate.
... the iPad is what I sincerely hope "normal" people will buy since with Android, the risk of getting another 10s of millions of trojan-infected zombie devices on the 'net, used and not maintained properly by clueless users, is just too high. Whether they'll get the best value for money from their personal perspective, I don't really care.
"I love my job, but I hate talking to people like you" (Freddie Mercury)
I read the title in my RSS feed, and still opened it. I knew it was going to end-up in a Fanboys vs. Haters and I still opened it. Well, better get back to work...
There's an app for that..
Between Ipad 1 and Ipad 2, how many tablet delivered eachAndroid manufacturer?
One advantage of the Ipad is that if I buy one today, I am pretty sure that apple will not delivere a new model in a significant amount of time, and that if I resell it it will not depreciated too much.
If I buy an Android Tablet, I am quite sure it will replaced pretty fast by a new version, and resell price will go down significantly
Do we always have to have car analogies?
You've obviously never heard of the way the Honda/Acura NSX completly outshone the Ferarri 348. Also, the F430 has one of the ugliest interiors I've seen in a such an expensive car - is that part of the complete package?
How much of that applies to Apple is another matter, but don't think for a moment that they are in an unassailable position. There is no such thing.
It's never too late to have a happy childhood.
I actually tried out both tablets in the store (Ipad2 versus Asus Transformer) and I have to admit I eventually sided with the Transformer. It has a much nicer looking front end interface and the web browser seemed to work better (which will likely be my primary use). I also liked the fact that I could get Linux going on the Asus EEE Pad as well and the overall hardware wasn't as tightly restricted. Maybe in the future if I'm bored of Android, I can go full out for Linux. My recommendation? If you like flexibility I would definitely get the Android 3.1 based tablets. If you want something simple then an Ipad2. In many ways this is like the difference between a Mac and a PC. I suspect in the following years the Android will probably win out via sheer flexibility as how the X86/Win machines have won out in the personal computing market.
fuck off. I have an iPad and it's hardly near perfect.
In fact, as a developer, it suits exactly zero of my needs. It was a gift from work, and I'm currently looking to sell it and get a Droid based tab.
"Video formats supported H.264, H.263, XviD, WMV7/8, VP8, MP43, VC-1 format: 3GP (MP4), WMV (asf), AVI"
"Audio formats supported MP3, OGG, AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, WAV, AMR, MID, IMY, WMA, Vorbis, RTTTL/RTX, OTA"
Virtually nobody is interested as long as stuff plays. This is what the Linux/Android crowd fail to understand, the vast majority of people buying a tablet couldn't care less if OGG is supported or not.
You have a girlfriend?
Well, hardware aside, there's also the fact that the iPad 2 is running that stinking hippo carcass rotting in the field that's called IOS. Someone please, for the love of god, put IOS out of it's misery. It's such an antiquated, creaky piece of shit. Apple really needs to catch up with modern user interfaces. Fisher Price UI went out of style years ago.
Dell Inspiron Duo, Mirus SchoolMate, etc., etc.. Learn2Google.
You get a real keyboard, real expansion ports, a replaceable battery, the ability to play Flash and use any web browser you want, the ability to buy your software and DLC from wherever you want, compatibility with every USB device out there, 4x (four times) more memory than an iPad 2, 10x (that's TEN TIMES) more storage than the $600 iPad (or 20x more than the $500 iPad), over one hundred times more applications and games, and so on. It's not even a contest.
Also, virtually every laptop / netbook these days (even $300 models) comes with a multi-touch pad, which is a much better input device than a touchscreen (no fingerprints and no hands covering part of the image).