Tag Archives | Google Android

“Why Should Somebody Buy This Instead of an iPad?”

It’s been fifteen months since the first iPad shipped. Nearly every sizable company that makes anything that looks even sort of like a computer or a phone has rushed into the market that Apple created. Many of these companies haven’t yet shipped the tablets they’ve announced. Still, a critical mass of major iPad alternatives are now here–tablets such as Motorola’s Xoom, RIM’s PlayBook, and Samsung’s Galaxy Tab 10.1.

And yet no Apple competitor has started selling anything that clearly answers a fundamental question: “Why should somebody buy this instead of an iPad?” Sure, it’s easy to point at specific things that other devices do better (or at least differently) than the iPad, and some of the people reading this article can explain why they chose another tablet and don’t regret the move. (If you’re one of them, please do!) Still, sales figures for tablets show that when consumers compare the iPad to other choices, an overwhelming percentage conclude that the iPad is the best option.

As a reviewer of gizmos, I think that the iPad 2 is easily the best tablet on the market–and that most of the competition so far is too half-baked to be credible. As a lover of competition, though, I’m itching to see other tablets arrive that deserve to do well, too. So that question–“Why would somebody buy this instead of an iPad?”–is stuck in my head. I’ve been trying to figure out how an Apple rival can come up with a tablet that pretty much answers that question for itself. And I’ve come up with thirteen ways it could happen.

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Yahoo Tries Its Hand at App Discovery

The iOS and Android application marketplaces may both stock hundreds of thousands of programs–a reasonable percentage of which are pretty darn impressive–but it can be surprisingly  tough to find the good stuff. Neither Apple’s App Store nor Google’s Android Market does a fantastic job of steering you towards every program you might find useful and/or entertaining, giving third parties such as Chomp an opportunity to full the void.

Now a very large third party is entering the fray: Yahoo. It’s launched an app search engine for iOS and Android designed for desktop browsers, plus an app called AppSpot, available in iOS and Android versions, that recommends apps and lets you search for them. I’m glad it’s doing it–this is a logical challenge for a search engine to take up–but the results so far are mildly pleasant at best.

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Am I the Only One Who Likes Physical Android Buttons?

Boy Genius Report has posted some thorough alleged specs for Google’s next unannounced Nexus phone, possibly dubbed the Nexus 4G. Many of the specs are what you’d expect from a flagship Google phone, such as a dual-core processor, 1 GB of RAM, 1080p video capture and LTE connectivity.

But what’s most intriguing about this rumor is the possibility that Google will completely do away with hardware buttons on the next version of Android, called “Ice Cream Sandwich” or Android 4.0. The home, menu, back and search buttons will presumably become part of the software.

It wouldn’t be an unexpected change. Android 3.0 Honeycomb, the software version optimized for tablets, already lacks physical buttons, and Google has made clear its intentions to merge smartphones and tablets onto a single software version with Ice Cream Sandwich. But it’s harder to picture how Android tablets’ button-free concept would work on Android phones.

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Sony Ericsson Xperia Play Review: Like Being a Kid Again

Let’s get something out of the way: I cannot justify buying Sony Ericsson’s Xperia Play. For as much as I love video games, I’m 28. And that seems a bit old to be carrying around a smartphone with its own set of game controls.

But that didn’t stop me from cracking a huge grin when I slid out the Xperia Play’s set of buttons and touch pads for the first time. This Android handset is the mythical “Playstation Phone.” If only it existed 10 or 15 years ago.

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7-Inch Honeycomb Tablets May Be Bad News

When Google announced Android Ice Cream at the Google I/O developer conference earlier this month, it was a bittersweet moment for folks who want the perfect 7-inch tablet. Ice Cream Sandwich will finally optimize Android for a wide range of screen sizes, but the announcement implicitly condemned any 7-inch Android device that dared implement Honeycomb, the current version of Android.

So I’m not entirely surprised to hear a rumor from DigiTimes that Acer is pushing back its 7-inch Acer Iconia Tab A100 until August or September. Sources tell DigiTimes that many Android applications are incompatible with the 7-inch display in Honeycomb, and Acer is unwilling to revert to older versions of Android, which aren’t optimized for tablets.

Google is reportedly busy “resolving other issues,” the sources said. I’m reminded of when Samsung was working on the Galaxy Tab with Android 2.2, and Google’s director of mobile products, Hugo Barra, warned against the idea of putting a smartphone OS on a tablet.

It’s unclear whether Acer is tweaking Honeycomb on its own or simply waiting for Ice Cream now. At least one tablet maker, ViewSonic, is reportedly pushing ahead with its own 7-inch Honeycomb tablet, the ViewPad 7x. ViewSonic will show off its tablet later this month, according to Pocket-Lint, so we may see whether the smaller screen can handle Honeycomb at all.

But if DigiTimes’ report is accurate, it reaffirms the idea that if you want a 7-inch Android tablet, Ice Cream Sandwich is worth waiting for. Unfortunately, Google hasn’t said when this version of Android will launch, so the 7-inch tablet of my dreams remains unrealized.

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Landscape Tablet Users: You’re Holding it Wrong?

Tim Bray, Google’s Android developer advocate, has stirred the pot by unequivocally declaring that portrait orientation makes for a better tablet experience than landscape orientation.

He notes that outside of tablets, tall and narrow is the natural way to convey information. Books arrange themselves into dual walls of text, newspapers are arranged in columns and windows on the computer screen tend to be tall and thin, or at least sliced into vertical panes. “So hold your damn tablet the right way up. That’s the way the information wants to be, anyhow,” Bray writes.

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The State of Android Honeycomb Updates: Better, But Not Stellar

Joanna Stern at This is My Next has been getting the scoop on Android 3.1 updates for several Honeycomb tablets. The situation’s a lot better than it is on Android phones, whose updates are often set back by phone makers and carriers, but it’s not quite ideal.

Here’s the rundown on updates for existing Android Honeycomb tablets, from Stern’s report and elsewhere:

  • The Verizon version of Motorola’s Xoom got the 3.1 update last week, after Google announced it at Google I/O. The Wi-Fi version, however, will be updated over the “next several weeks.”
  • Asus and Acer both expect updates in early June for the Iconia Tab A500 and Eee Pad Transformer, respectively.
  • LG and T-Mobile won’t give a time frame other than “coming soon” for the G-Slate.
  • Samsung’s Galaxy Tab 10.1 Limited Edition, which was handed out to attendees at Google I/O, will get Android 3.1 in “in the coming weeks.”

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