- Jul 27, 2002
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is.. somewhat of a mixed bag. Admittedly my expectation was high - but I think I can be spared a blame considering the rave reviews Nexus 7 received. Then again, I have no tablet experience other than original iPad prior to Nexus 7, so some of the expectation could have been lowered had I researched a bit more on existing Android Tablets. Also my opinion is based on extremely limited experience of Nexus 7 - I literally got it 2 days ago.
Another obvious factor is the price - Nexus is half the price of iPad at the time of its debut. However, 2 years is a LONG time in this industry as we know it. And we know where iPad 3 stands compared to the origianl iPad. So let's get the pricing out of the way for now.
1. First of all, colors. I have not been happy with NVIDIA GPU's color reproduction on desktop for a long time (along with unsuccessful attempts at correction, including registry hacks), but I did not foresee that I would encounter the same on Tegra. D: The excessive red and overall garish or bleached tone, depending on brightness, makes Nexus 7's screen look dull and aged compared to that of iPad 1. (Forget iPad 3 and Retina Display). The 2-year old iPad has more vibrant, warm and accurate color than Nexus 7 which is brand-new, boasts higher-resolution, and has a higher density panel.
Some might consider this isn't a big deal, and and to be frank I myself don't think color accuracy on tablet is as important as on desktop. But it was one of the very first impression upon booting the Nexus 7, and I couldn't help but disappointed.
2. Nexus 7's Wi-fi performance is, at least in my home, worse than that of iPad 1. Using 802.1g, iPad rarely loses connection and comfortably be able to stream 720p material. On the other hand, Nexus frequently loses signal or complain about low bandwidth, and often drops the quality of stream, only to hang eventually. I have walked around every corner of my house with them and concluded it couldn't be the signal issue from the router. So I am somewhat baffled by this 2-year old iPad providing better multimedia experience over brand-new tablet of the day. (also of note is that iPad has support for 802.1n which Nexus 7 doesn't, despite the 2-year gap)
Whether this is an OS issue or a hardware issue is hard to tell without further investigation but for now I am kind of worried it's a hardware thing, and if that's the case I won't be very happy.
3. Nexus 7's performance outside multitasking/task-switching is very underwhelming for its faster CPU and GPU. The problem is likely multi-factored. Not-so-hot Wi-Fi, memory/disk controller/drivers, and Android not-so-mature handling of backgroudn tasks, etc. Video plaback glitches, hickups while gaming, and mysterious hangs/crashes. This simply doesn't make sense if you compare the hardware specs (Heck the iPad's got mere 256 MB of memory), so on this matter I am thinking of immaturity of specialty applications, which will gradually be ironed out.
Now onto the advantages of Nexus 7,
1. Nexus 7's faster CPU and more memory completely squash iPad when it comes to application launch time, task-switching. On iPad, I can barely keep 2~3 tabs open without refreshing, using a low-footprint browser like Opera Mini. With Nexus, Chrome completely dominates iPad's Safari, thanks to its sheer speed and vastly large memory. Not only can I go back and forth to multiple tabs without waiting for refresh but also can I jump around multipledifferent apps without delay. For iPad, things take a while to get going, not to mention frequent lags.
2. While I haven't tried many apps, many of the generic apps I have tried behave better with Nexus 7. Such as PDF viewing, zooming in/out of text/photos, or other basic/popular stuff are way more responsive and lag-free on Nexus 7 than on iPad 1.
3. Last but not least, Nexus 7 gives me much more freedom, starting with small things like accessaries to compatibility and inter-operation among different platforms. (most obvious one being Windows) You stay with Apple, you will probably need to stay with it forever. (and pay Apple tax) I wanted to get away from it before I invest too much on it, and at just about the right time Google and Amazon both jumped in the tablet market with compelling products. And I did contemplated over the vast library of multimedia contents of Amazon offered by Kindle Fire HD, but quickly recognized the similarity between it and iTunes, so the decision was an easy one between Nexus 7 and Kindle Fire HD.
So if you've read this wall of text by me, the you realize that I do not have a specific agenda. I just wanted to grumble a bit upon unboxing the Nexus 7. It turned out my expectation was too high, and the Nexus 7 wasn't what I hoped it to be. But will it drive me back to the next iPad? Highly unlikely.
If anyone else has had different experiences, feel free to share. Also if someone could shed light on abysmal Wi-Fi performance I experience on Nexus 7 (hopefully with workarounds), I would appreciate that very much.
Another obvious factor is the price - Nexus is half the price of iPad at the time of its debut. However, 2 years is a LONG time in this industry as we know it. And we know where iPad 3 stands compared to the origianl iPad. So let's get the pricing out of the way for now.
1. First of all, colors. I have not been happy with NVIDIA GPU's color reproduction on desktop for a long time (along with unsuccessful attempts at correction, including registry hacks), but I did not foresee that I would encounter the same on Tegra. D: The excessive red and overall garish or bleached tone, depending on brightness, makes Nexus 7's screen look dull and aged compared to that of iPad 1. (Forget iPad 3 and Retina Display). The 2-year old iPad has more vibrant, warm and accurate color than Nexus 7 which is brand-new, boasts higher-resolution, and has a higher density panel.
Some might consider this isn't a big deal, and and to be frank I myself don't think color accuracy on tablet is as important as on desktop. But it was one of the very first impression upon booting the Nexus 7, and I couldn't help but disappointed.
2. Nexus 7's Wi-fi performance is, at least in my home, worse than that of iPad 1. Using 802.1g, iPad rarely loses connection and comfortably be able to stream 720p material. On the other hand, Nexus frequently loses signal or complain about low bandwidth, and often drops the quality of stream, only to hang eventually. I have walked around every corner of my house with them and concluded it couldn't be the signal issue from the router. So I am somewhat baffled by this 2-year old iPad providing better multimedia experience over brand-new tablet of the day. (also of note is that iPad has support for 802.1n which Nexus 7 doesn't, despite the 2-year gap)
Whether this is an OS issue or a hardware issue is hard to tell without further investigation but for now I am kind of worried it's a hardware thing, and if that's the case I won't be very happy.
3. Nexus 7's performance outside multitasking/task-switching is very underwhelming for its faster CPU and GPU. The problem is likely multi-factored. Not-so-hot Wi-Fi, memory/disk controller/drivers, and Android not-so-mature handling of backgroudn tasks, etc. Video plaback glitches, hickups while gaming, and mysterious hangs/crashes. This simply doesn't make sense if you compare the hardware specs (Heck the iPad's got mere 256 MB of memory), so on this matter I am thinking of immaturity of specialty applications, which will gradually be ironed out.
Now onto the advantages of Nexus 7,
1. Nexus 7's faster CPU and more memory completely squash iPad when it comes to application launch time, task-switching. On iPad, I can barely keep 2~3 tabs open without refreshing, using a low-footprint browser like Opera Mini. With Nexus, Chrome completely dominates iPad's Safari, thanks to its sheer speed and vastly large memory. Not only can I go back and forth to multiple tabs without waiting for refresh but also can I jump around multipledifferent apps without delay. For iPad, things take a while to get going, not to mention frequent lags.
2. While I haven't tried many apps, many of the generic apps I have tried behave better with Nexus 7. Such as PDF viewing, zooming in/out of text/photos, or other basic/popular stuff are way more responsive and lag-free on Nexus 7 than on iPad 1.
3. Last but not least, Nexus 7 gives me much more freedom, starting with small things like accessaries to compatibility and inter-operation among different platforms. (most obvious one being Windows) You stay with Apple, you will probably need to stay with it forever. (and pay Apple tax) I wanted to get away from it before I invest too much on it, and at just about the right time Google and Amazon both jumped in the tablet market with compelling products. And I did contemplated over the vast library of multimedia contents of Amazon offered by Kindle Fire HD, but quickly recognized the similarity between it and iTunes, so the decision was an easy one between Nexus 7 and Kindle Fire HD.
So if you've read this wall of text by me, the you realize that I do not have a specific agenda. I just wanted to grumble a bit upon unboxing the Nexus 7. It turned out my expectation was too high, and the Nexus 7 wasn't what I hoped it to be. But will it drive me back to the next iPad? Highly unlikely.
If anyone else has had different experiences, feel free to share. Also if someone could shed light on abysmal Wi-Fi performance I experience on Nexus 7 (hopefully with workarounds), I would appreciate that very much.
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