The other day Vulture Central was visited by HP with a Google chap in tow. We
were treated to a couple of HP products: the new latest android
tablet and the company’s latest Chromebook, which we’d already seen
as it happens.
The smart-looking seven-inch, dual-processor-core tablet
appeared to have little to distinguish it from other Jellybean offerings.
However, the HP folks were keen to point out the HP ePrint app that’s bundled
with it. Mmmh, this looks easy – hack takes picture, opens app and
hey-printing-presto over the wireless network.Cloud Print, which sends your
documents to a printer via Google's central systems, is also the default
printing method on Android tablets. No great surprise as the operating systems
on both devices are in the hands of the same company: Google.
So how come
a simple app from HP takes away the Cloud Print pain on a tablet and yet a
Chromebook has to send your print task into cyberspace and back to do the same
job?OK, so HP got lucky as we use some of its LaserJet printers. The big players
in printing all have mobile apps these days, so most people can pull this trick
on a newest
tablets with the right app on board. Ssdsf23FDF
HP is just
making the most of its assets here and it does it again on the Slate 7 by
including Beats Audio processing featured on its laptops that delivers a bass
boost on playback. Yet for the Slate 7, the Beats beefing applies to headphones
only. Still, the Android tablet market is so very crowded these days that any
kind of differentiation is worth pushing to the front. And just to make the
point, the Slate is available in red or silver, mimicking the Beats livery, and
there are tablet-plus-headphone bundles on offer too.
Indeed, what we
have here is a similar spec to a lot of seven-inch tablets. A 1.6GHz dual-core
ARM Cortex-A9 processor, 1GB of DDR3 RAM and 8GB of storage. The latter can be
increased using the micro SD card slot, another differentiator that really is
worth having. Yet what HP giveth it also taketh away, sort of. The micro SD card
is a plus point over the Google Nexus 7, but the advertising giant's Q88 Tablet
has a 1280 x 800 resolution, while the Slate 7 makes do with 1024 x
600 pixels on its touchscreen display.
And while we’re comparing, the
AnTuTu benchmark utility shows that the quad-core Nexus 7 turns out to be only
marginally faster than the dual-core Slate 7 proved to be. All in all, you get a
cheaper tablet with storage expansion but no HD screen.The 8-inch tablet will
come with 16GB or 32GB of internal storage and is designed to fit comfortably in
one hand. It also features a 5-megapixel rear camera, 1.3-megapixel front-facing
camera, and microSD card expansion slot.
The Galaxy Tab 3 8.0's
resolution is a ray of hope in an otherwise boring release, considering it's the
same as the Samsung Galaxy Note 8. The Note 8's 1,280x800-pixel resolution
screen is one of the best we've seen on a tablet so far, but the tablet suffers
from a high price tag. Pricing hasn't been announced for the Galaxy Tab 3 8.0,
so we have yet to see if cheapest tablet will
follow the same pricey path.
According to Samsung, the 8-inch Galaxy Tab
3 and its 10.1-inch counterpart will go on sale in early June and be available
in Wi-Fi, 3G, and 4G versions. Pricing for the 10.1-inch Galaxy Tab 3 tablet has
also yet to be announced, so check back with CNET for future Galaxy Tab 3
updates.
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