Google's Own Nexus Tablet Leaks Into the Wild
lukehopewell1 writes "Days out from Google's I/O conference, training documents have been issued to resellers all over the world detailing Google's new Nexus tablet. It's a 7-inch device with an optimized Tegra 3 chip inside and it's going to be the first device to run Jelly Bean, the new version of Android, that, among other notable features, will see Google manage device updates. The device will be priced at $US199 and is aimed as a direct competitor to Amazon's Kindle Fire."
Is this going to be a Motorola branded tablet, or a Google brand? And Jelly Bean - I haven't yet see everyone move from GingerBread to ICS, and already they are in JellyBean?
RTFA, they're not - the thing is to be manufactured by Asus.
So Google/Asus are competing with Motorola?
(Yes, I've read that this tablet is a competitor to Amazon's Kindle Fire.)
Doesn't it make sense for them to produce a reference device? At $200 they aren't being very aggressive on pricing so it shouldn't make their partners all that nervous.
Sad that even Google is afraid to take on the iPad in it's territory. Almost all the 10" Android tablets have seen dismal sales, HP Touchpad was sold in a firesale,
Playbook's having a tough time and Amazon and Google are forced to play in the sub $200 territory. All of these devices are oriented towards only consumption. Maybe Microsoft Surface will get traction by doubling as a device that you can actually do some light work on, but lets see what price it launches at.
Not competing as such, this is a 'Nexus' device of which Google has produced several phone models.
Hmm, seeing as nVidia doesn't have such a great track record with releasing source code in general (for which they deservedly received the Linus' finger) and a quick Google reveals that devs are still waiting for Tegra 2 source code, I wonder what drove them to choose the Tegra 3 for a "Nexus" branded device, which supposedly would mean a "developer friendly" device with all the features and hackability that the Nexus devices have come to be known for.
All kidding aside, will it be locked down, will I have to go through heroic measures to "obtain root" if I buy one, or will they actually let me do what I want with the device I purchased? If it's locked down, then it's just... (yawn...) another tablet. How ordinary.
If they do, hey, it's a real computer, in a tiny package with a touch-screen! Wonder how long the battery life will be...
By going with a 7" device that has a relatively low price point Google is offering up a device that that people will buy IN ADDITION to owning an iPad, not INSTEAD of an iPad. Why compete directly against the iPad with your first iteration of a tablet?
I have an Android tablet, and I don't use Apple products, but I have come to believe that the 16:9 format is not that good for a tablet. For one, it is too short vertically in landscape format to accommodate an on screen keyboard and have a generous amount of viewing space available. If one wants to type with one hand while holding the tablet in the other, the keys on the sides also seem a bit too far away (my experience is with a 10" screen). In portrait mode, the keyboard gets a bit too narrow. The screen also seems to be a bit too narrow when reading books in portrait.
On the other hand, I now find the 7" screen size to be much more handy, and probably the keys would not be too far away. Has anybody any idea about how easy or difficult it is to read books on such a screen?
Another thing that has me wondering is the price tag: how can Google afford to sell the tablet for $199 / $249 with a Tegra 3 board, while Samsung charges around $800 (in India, where I live) for the Galaxy S III?
Chat with other atheists http://secularchat.org
That retart sound delicious - that is a twice cooked tart, no?
I know what Google IO attendees will get this year as a present.
Does it have one? that could be the deal breaker (for me) if none present.
Define what you mean by real multitasking. As far as I can tell android has done real multitasking for quite a while.
They just couldn't help it. They had claim they're better than a Nexus 6
Oh, but they are getting into the hardware business. This isn't an example of it, but they are. After all, they bought (well, are in the process of buying) Motorola.
At least you hopefully haven't bought a Nokia Lumia 900 that was just Osborned last week when Microsoft announced all current Win 7 phones on the market will not run Wp8 when it is released in the fall.
This happened the same week that Elop let go his entire 'stealth' low-cost linux-for-emerging-markets-sans-Microsoft-License project. Gotta love the guy for consistency.
But wait, current Lumia 900 owners will be able to enjoy a new Start Screen that sort of looks like a Windows 8 phone, although technically it will be known as 7.8.
Personally I am pleased as punch with my Nokia N9 that looks like a Microsoft-enabled Lumia 900 but with better hardware specs, like 64gb RAM, front-facing camera that works with Google Talk, SIP, SSH/PGP, Firefox 13, flash, Swipe (OS and) keyboard, and also its own html5 browser. Contact integration (with Google using MailForExchange gateway) in the Notification area is awesome; weather is a nice touch. It is a keeper, and thank goodness it is also durable as Hell. SportsTracker w/ bluetooth is also very good.
The Maemo guys are also supporting my N900 with regular OS updates, and the keyboard is solid. I'm invested for awhile, just sitting on the sidelines trying to get work done, (scripting via SSH FTW!).
Elop could raise a lot of cash if he'd ever sell the N950 properly, but that would be inconsistent.
You can't be ahead of the curve, if you're stuck in a loop.
Not really related to the story or actually important in any way, but I notice that the next Android is named "Jellybean". I wonder what comes after that. I'm hoping for Koeksister.
Using a tablet hurts your brain that much?
I bet good money it does not have 65GB of RAM. My GN has only 1 GB and the SGS3 has 2GB and is a super phone.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nokia_N9#Processors_and_memory
Nokia N9 Unlocked GSM Phone with 64 GB Internal Memory--International Version (Black)
You can't be ahead of the curve, if you're stuck in a loop.
This is going to be very interesting when it gets officially introduced in Canada Q3 2014 for CAD 279.00
When the copyright term is "forever minus a day", live every day like it's the last.
That is storage not RAM.
Flash is not RAM.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nokia_N9
Has 1GB of ram and 64GB of storage.
Welcome to the age old ambiguity of the word 'memory'. The Nokia has 64GB of 'memory' yes, but it is not RAM and you say. Rather it is flash memory for long term storage. The Nokia N9 only has 1 GB of RAM (Random Access Memory) and up to 64GB of flash memory. It's a pretty important distinction. I think you owe h4rr4r some good money.
I stand corrected. Thanks.
You can't be ahead of the curve, if you're stuck in a loop.
I'm being serious. What benefit will you get from having source code for a graphics CPU on an Android tablet?
The only reason you need the drivers at all is to build a custom rom for the system, which I doubt Google is particularly eager to support. Not saying they want to stop you, I'm sure the system won't have a locked bootloader or anything stupid like that, but they don't have to waste time/money helping you either. Besides, you don't need the source for that, you just need a binary driver. Granted, last I checked nVidia hadn't released those for ICS, either...
Anyway, the type of "developer" you're thinking of is not the one Google is worried about. They want people making apps for the Play Store, not custom rom images.
Finally... Maybe, just maybe, they went with the nVidia chip because of the price/performance ratio?
Maxim: People cannot follow directions.
Increases in truth directly with the length of time spent explaining them
Cisco Nexus 7k
This is going to be annoying for people that work with Cisco products.
Go not unto/. for advice, for you will be told both yea and nay (but have nothing to do with the question)
1gb is still pretty solid, to go with the 64gb of storage
at least, that's how I feel on my HTC Amaze
Here you go
i would love to use a google tablet that is made by google and runs their own operating system. if not i would surely post em up on http://whymylifesucks.us
Disclaimer: I'm on my second iPad (1, 3) and I really like it for what it is, and about the only two things I wish it had were bluetooth mouse support for my RDP app and a touch-lock functionality that kept the screen active but locked the touch functionality so accidental touches wouldn't activate whatever the screen touch would do.
That being said, why not a bigger touch screen instead of focusing on smaller? IMHO, going smaller just further cuts functionality. Yes, more DPI enables you to do more things in a small space, but at a high ergonomic price (at least for those of us settling into presbyopia).
One of the problems with touch is that the resolution of my FINGER is kind of fixed -- making on-screen elements smaller via DPI increases or shrinking element sizes doesn't help the UI.
Making the screen larger seems to enhance what you can do with it (like magazines at actual size) or the kinds of apps and data you can work with via touch because you can see everything on the screen at once at a workable size. And it would allow the device to claim functionality areas that have been off limits to tablets generally because they are 10" or smaller.
I'm sure lots of people would complain that it wouldn't work because it doesn't fit in a purse, but so what? Going against the grain of the expectations is kind of the idea here, and what seems to hurt tablet development is some unwritten set of expectations over what a tablet is "supposed" to do or be.
This. As far as mobile OS's go, android's has been the "realest". Custom services written by app developers can run in the background, and if that isn't needed apps can be "frozen" or paused in the background while you do something else. It has been this way since Android 1.0 or before.
I believe other OS's have to use pre-built services (which may or may not do what you need) and can only freeze apps, not leave them truly running in the background.
I cannot recall the last time I have used the front facing one or know anyone who uses it, but getting my iPad2 back from the kids or even grandparents was more difficult than expected because of its ability to take photos and record video.
As for the form factor, I love the smaller size. You would be surprised how heavy an iPad gets after an hour
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
I'm running ICS on both my HP Touchpad and my 2 year old droid2...
I'm running the AOKP rom, but it's a derivative of CM with more goodies included...runs like a clock on both devices, and my droid2 is actually faster and more usable now than it was when I bought it...
For those of you with older phones, you should check XDA and rootzwiki to see if there are better roms available for you...
There is also the Nook which is really the only one in Canada. My Mom got one for retirement. It was pretty disappointing. It had a lot of potential, but it was glitchy, and not as intuitive or easy as the iPad offerings. I have never tried the Fire, but have heard the same thing, that outside of the US it is pointless. My Mom didn't have the technical know how, patience to figure out the Nook and I think it eventually got returned.
Even I who am used to working with technology really wanted to smash the thing. It was also pretty sluggish as well. The thing for me was either it was so sluggish, or so glitchy that just turning the thing on or off seemed be a pretty random affair with most efforts resulting in nothing happening. It also should have a better set of tools/apps pre-installed to make the thing more useful.
Anyway it needed some polish to be sure. That said I can forgive, as it was only just released a couple of months before that, so early adopter and all that jazz. Hopefully the additional competition in Canada will improve both devices (Fire can screw off for all I care, I hate these services that are US centric).
Please hand in your geek badge.
So what, Microsoft have been in the hardware business for ages and nobody seems to mind. They've gone hand in hand with Nokia in the phone market and nobody seems to mind. Now the've announced their own tablet and nobody seems to mind.
I'm still praying that some manufacturer will release a 4x3 notebook again one day.
Actually a lot of OEM's are quite upset about it... (Microsoft releasing a tablet.)
still makes and receives calls as well as it did on day one.