Plateforme Level Extreme
Abonnement
Profil corporatif
Produits & Services
Support
Légal
English
Choosing a pad
Message
De
05/09/2011 13:06:31
 
Information générale
Forum:
Android
Catégorie:
Autre
Titre:
Divers
Thread ID:
01522645
Message ID:
01522745
Vues:
68
>Ability to add USB device. This is a big advantage of Android over iPad from a developer's standpoint.

Yupp.

>10" is a little unwieldy. I think a 7" tablet would be a better size. I suspected this prior to purchasing the GalaxyTab 10.1, and I even considered getting the older GalaxyTab 7.1, but I really wanted to get a device with Android Honeycomb OS.

The 7' is wonderful if you have to travel: put it in a vest pocket and whip it out as soon as you are seated -
PDF, Word docs and some HTML to be read as book. On real internet sites the viewing are sometimes is too small -
wonder how I will feel when trying the new 7.7 with 1280*800.... Perhaps the 8.9 is agood compromise.


>Tablets have no physical keyboard, so typing sucks (unless you dock it with a keyboard).

Raise you ;-) Typing sucks even more if you have to type in a non-english language [öäüß].
Also when you have to type english on a device set to non-english locale, and helpful hints in german pop up.
But much of that is probably delayed birthing pain for new device only.

>Tablets can't sit up like a netbook, so you have to hold them upright to be useful (or buy one of those fancy cases).

Which is a point for the 7' as it handles like a pocket book.

>Like every other device out there, using it in direct sunlight is, to say the last, challenging.

Why ? I think it is a very stylish mirror, showing the geeky side of you ;-)

>Summary:
>I think this device is something that gets left around the house on a kitchen counter or on a sofa table and is used for casual internet browsing, reading news, and casual game playing. It's a "family" device that's super quick to pick up and put back down. In this respect it's a fantastic device.

Full ACK. And it makes travel a real and sometimes billable joy - reading specs on it.
Was also astonished about the change in reading pattern with it -
much more [couch] surfin' for info than when doing it in front of the desk.
Even set up a router cascade and allowed wireless in a new corner of my net
when I previously cabled every device. [probably paranoid about security, but we have enemies too]

>For doing anything "real" give me a regular laptop any day (of course).

Not so sure about that: real keyboard for certain, but why not an USB or BT ?
On many desks the KB was "freed" of the cable, which I personally consider overblown,
as my eyesight forces me in front of the screen IAC.

regards

thomas
Précédent
Suivant
Répondre
Fil
Voir

Click here to load this message in the networking platform