Acer Iconia Tab A700 Review

This week we’ve gotten the opportunity to take an up close and personal peek at the Acer Iconia Tab A700, an Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich tablet with a high definition display and the NVIDIA Tegra 3 quad-core processor under the hood. This Acer device looks and feels rather similar to its predecessor, the Iconia Tab A500, but its components set it in a class all its own. This tablet has a 10.1-inch display with 1920 x 1200 pixels across it, this making it a 224ppi dense display-toting beast of a machine.

Hardware

While the display’s high definition resolution is obviously the real hero here, you’ll be glad to know that we’re now officially in an age where making a tablet that’s as thin and nice looking as the iPad isn’t so much of a hassle as it used to be. This version of the Iconia Tab is right around the same weight and shape as the A500, but here it’s got a bit more style.

The speckled back panel and the lovely detail in the glass panel up front as well as it’s surrounding plastic are all very well tuned. This tablet feels really nice to hold, as it were.

This tablet has several ports, each of them just about as far away from the others as they possibly could be. There’s a microHDMI, a microUSB, headphone jack, and a microSD card slot as well as a volume up/down button and a screen lock. The screen lock is a switch that holds your tablet in either landscape or portrait mode, and should you feel like heading down the road of the hacker, we’re sure you could find more than a few useful things to do with it in addition to its basic intent.

The power button sits at the top of the left of the device in the same place it did on the A500, and if one were to compare this tablet only to that older generation, one would applaud the efforts of Acer in pushing themselves to the next level. Compared to the iPad, you’ve got a surprisingly similar feeling machine, with just about the same weight and, at a distance at least, a really similar look.

Of course the power of any tablet doesn’t rest on its single specifications alone, and Apple’s iPad certainly relies on its software to beat the crowd. So how does Acer do with their new look at Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich?

Software

Inside this machine is Acer’s selection of applications including several pre-installed games, cloud-access apps, and music apps. Google’s collection of apps are here as well, this including Google Music (not often included right out of the box) as well as the common ICS additions like Google+.

The real heroes here are the additions made to Android 4.0 ICS by Acer. There’s a brand new lovely customizable lock-screen as well as a “Ring” that will allow you several new abilities including the screenshot, the ability to flip through web browser favorites in cards, and changing the volume on-screen. This Ring could very well be the reason you purchase this device – Acer has done a great job of pushing the limits of such a collection of functionalities for the discerning Android user.

You’ve also got the built-in ability to work with a printer to print whatever you’ve got on-screen to hard copy. We suggest to take a look at which devices will function with this connectivity, but from what we’ve seen, most modern wireless printers will indeed work. Acer has connected this device to the rest of its device suite with a simple registration app – this being a good example of why you’ll certainly want to be thinking about picking one Acer machine up if you’ve picked up the other as their device family continues to become more interconnected.

The NVIDIA Tegra 3 quad-core processor inside this beast will allow you connectivity with the NVIDIA TegraZone, a place where exclusive Tegra-only applications live, and you’ll find that they look quite fabulous. Have a peek at some benchmarks taken by this device to see how well you’ll be rolling:

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Camera

This device’s camera is not all that different from the camera on the original A500, that also being a 5-megapixel shooter. You’ve got a 2-megapixel camera on the front as well, this as good as it was on the A500 as well for video chat. The back-facing camera does not have a flash and is able to auto-focus, but only after you’ve tapped the shutter button. Have a peek at a few pieces of media resulting from this setup:

Battery

This device is part of a new wave of battery-conscious devices that, with the NVIDIA Tegra 3 quad-core processor with 4-PLUS-1 technology, is able to sleep so deeply that you’ve rarely got a situation where the device runs out of battery after having been left alone for an extended period. Instead where you’ll find battery drain is in the other normal places like mapping and streaming video. Even then you’ll have a fabulously long amount of play-time on your hands.

The Acer Iconia Tab A700′s battery will last you though several days at least if you use it intermittently, or it can last you as few as 8 hours if you’re rocking streaming video non-stop. Either way, it’s impressive.

Portfolio Case

We were also sent the new Acer Iconia Tab Series Portfolio Case – one of the strangest cases we’ve seen on the market thus far. It’s strange in that it relies on a high-powered adhesive to stick to the tablet rather than clamping on with plastic claws as any of a million other cases would. You put your tablet down on one side, pull back the adhesive covering on the other, and push that second side closed onto the back of your tablet.

The adhesive sticks as hard as you could possibly want it to, but is also somehow removable when you want as well. It’s certainly not something you’re going to be able to use multiple times, as the adhesive will certainly get weak after a couple of stickings, but this solution certainly is unique, that’s for sure. The case then also is made of some high-quality rubbery plastics with magnets inside to hold it closed and in stand mode. Interesting stuff!

Wrap-Up

This tablet will cost you $449.99 at any of a variety of outlets, this ringing in just at or below the rest of the market offering similar solutions. You’ve got the most advanced options in an Android tablet included here, and Acer’s unique vision for Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich will not leave you wanting for multi-tasking and for standing out in the software crowd. We recommend picking up the Iconia Tab A700 especially if you’ve already got Acer notebooks or towers in your home – their software connects quite fluidly and makes your whole personal cloud experience all the richer.

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Acer Iconia Tab A700 Review is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


What the Girl From That Google Chrome Ad Might Say to Her Ex [Video]

Remember that Google Chrome ad where some guy named Mark is goes all-out to try to get a second chance with his ex, Jen? It’s sweet enough to give you diabetes. But every story has two sides, and Jen’s response—in this parody from UCB Comedy—paints a very different picture. More »

T-Mobile customers consider Galaxy S III vs Galaxy Note

With the Samsung Galaxy Note coming up relatively quickly for T-Mobile and the Samsung Galaxy S III already in stores across the nation, it should be clear that any Samsung fan has a choice to make between the two. Which one will bring you greater fortune, and which will be the ideal Samsung device for you? This journey begins with a simple question of screen size, of course.

The Samsung Galaxy Note has a massive 5.3-inch HD Super AMOLED display while the Galaxy S III has a lovely 4.8-inch Super AMOLED display. The Galaxy Note has a pixel density of 285ppi while the Galaxy S III has 306ppi, this meaning that they’re pretty darn close when it comes to sharpness. The big difference between the two, then, is just that .5-inch difference diagonally. Consider your pocket size and your need for massiveness.

The Galaxy Note is made specifically to work with its build-in S-Pen while the Galaxy S III is more focused on being a device for everyone in the smartphone market. Both devices are made of premium quality materials that are, in the end, hard and powerful plastics with metal insides. The Galaxy S III works with its AllShare sharing abilities just as well as the Galaxy Note does, as both are working with Qualcomm processors, but the Note has an Snapdragon S3 chip while the Galaxy S III has the S4.

Expect the latter to go faster and work harder for you in the end – not in any giant way since they’ve both got next-level power throughout their builds in many ways, but the S4 will bring on a new level of excellence when you get nit-picky. Have a peek at the hands-on comparison we’ve got from this year’s CTIA from before the release of the USA versions of the GSIII:

Both of these devices are going to bring you a full high-level smart device experience, and Samsung is wholly dedicated to both devices for the future of their company. The Galaxy S III is clearly the hero of the day, but the Galaxy Note remains a relatively unique device, so you can count of Samsung to keep pushing it for the future.

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Have a peek at our reviews of the versions of these devices that are on the market now for more comparisons:


T-Mobile customers consider Galaxy S III vs Galaxy Note is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Gmail iOS App Finally Supports Notification Center and Persistent Login [Apps]

Google just updated the Gmail iOS app, adding improvements that might encourage people to, you know, actually use it. The most important upgrade is support for Notification Center, which means you can now configure the app to show you alerts with message previews. For everyone who’s annoyed by needing to login into Gmail every single time you open it because your session has expired, the updated Gmail now has persistent login. Unfortunately, Gmail for iOS is still basically just a webapp, which means that offline access is still barely there. Little by little, though, it seems Gmail is heading in the right direction. [iTunes via The Verge] More »

Samsung Galaxy Note for T-Mobile pops up in claimed press shots, we try to feign surprise

Samsung Galaxy Note for TMobile pops up in claimed press shots, we try to feign surprise

There’s been demo units, FCC filings and the obligatory blurry photos, so it was only a matter of time before leaked press imagery completed our picture of a Galaxy Note for T-Mobile USA. As long as they’re not cosmetic makeovers by wishful T-Mobile fans, the CellPhoneSignal images portray… well, a Galaxy Note. No exotic colors, no obvious clues supporting talk that it ships with a preloaded Android 4.0 upgrade. Most of the hardware changes, then, should be all about adapting the HSPA+ 3G to support T-Mobile’s airwaves. Unconfirmed talk has the Galaxy Note reaching Magenta on July 11th; that’s nine months after the original version popped up, but we’re sure some will be thankful just to have more choices than AT&T for that phablet fix.

Samsung Galaxy Note for T-Mobile pops up in claimed press shots, we try to feign surprise originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 25 Jun 2012 13:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple, Microsoft, now Google: I/O 2012 closes the mobility triptych

First Apple, then Microsoft, and now it’s Google‘s turn: three weeks of back-to-back mobile strategy with each of the big three companies laying out their stalls for smartphones and tablets. It’s arguably never been such an interesting time in mobility, but nor has there ever been so much at stake. Ecosystems, openness and long-term support have all divided opinion, as we’ve seen what the devices of tomorrow (but not necessarily today) will be running, and while Google is coming last to the table it also has the opportunity to outshine everything its rivals have demonstrated. That’s far from being a given, however.

Apple kicked things off in early June with its WWDC 2012 keynote, making no mention of new mobile hardware – the new iPad is still only halfway through its expected lifecycle, and the iPhone is, if the rumors are to be believed, still a few months away – but detailing iOS 6 which, for many, will be much like a new device when it hits their phones and tablets this fall. The company is known for its incredibly polished software experience, and with iOS 6 rolling out to iPhone 3GS, iPhone 4, iPhone 4S, iPad 2 and new iPad owners (with a few omissions depending on the age of your hardware) it’s a comprehensive blanket upgrade that focuses attention on what both Microsoft and Google do for existing owners.

That point was hammered home the following week, when Microsoft grabbed the spotlight for two events: the debut of Surface, its Windows 8/RT tablet, and Windows Phone 8. The twin launches echo the duality of strategy in Microsoft’s approach to mobile. Phones get Windows Phone, tablets get Windows; in contrast, Apple pushes iOS 6 for both iPhone and iPad. The shared core is a step toward tying up the disparate strands of Microsoft’s phone and tablet lines, though it comes at a cost: Microsoft throwing Windows Phone 7/7.5 early-adopters under the bus with the admission that they won’t ever get a Windows Phone 8 upgrade.

“Are platform updates a privilege or a right?”

The reasons behind that are complex, and tempered somewhat with the existence of Windows Phone 7.8 that will bring many of the UI enhancements to the existing smartphones. Nonetheless, Microsoft’s decision to again break with the past as it claws away at the smartphone OS market has prompted no small amount of discussion around whether platform updates are a privilege or a right.

Such a discussion has already weighed heavy around the neck of Google and its Android partners, with flagship devices like the AT&T Galaxy S II only now getting updates to the latest version of the OS (with Google apparently mere days away from announcing its successor, no less). Like Apple, Google has taken the one-OS-for-mobile approach, but it has only been halfway successful; Android phones are flying off shelves, but Android tablets have failed to locate their tipping point.

So, what can we expect from Google at I/O this week? And, perhaps more importantly, what does the company need to do to end the June mobility triptych on a high rather than a dud note?

Jelly Bean, the next version of Android is a given. That should bring a spring to the step of Galaxy Nexus owners, tipped to be first in line for the new update (and who have felt somewhat overshadowed in recent months with the high-profile launches of HTC’s One X and Samsung’s Galaxy S III). Ice Cream Sandwich marked a significant evolution of Android in terms of usability and aesthetics, though few users have actually seen both given the paucity of phones that have seen a 4.0 upgrade and the smaller-again subsection of those that haven’t been reskinned by the OEM involved.

“Hardware is not the problem: a shortage of compelling apps is”

Jelly Bean will no doubt tick some of the boxes Apple’s recent iOS releases have opened up, such as a virtual personal assistant system (believed to be codenamed “Majel”) to take on Siri, but it’s what it can do for bigger screens that’s key. Google needs a comprehensive tablet strategy and it needs one fast; two generations of Android (3.0 and 4.0) have failed to make a dint in the iPad’s marketshare. Hardware is arguably not the problem – though as Microsoft demonstrated with Surface last week, a little high-quality magnesium goes a long way – but a significant shortage of compelling applications is.

Google I/O is, of course, the ideal time to address that. Having copious developers on hand is a given, but Google is also expected to unveil a Nexus-branded tablet – a 7-incher made by ASUS, if the rumor machine is to be believed – that should promote the pure Android experience at a price tag ($199; again, according to leaks) that will encourage those developers to finally pick up a test mule to work on.

Windows 8 threatens to split developer attention even further, however, and Google can’t count solely on Android’s broad footprint in phones to carry it. Both Apple and Microsoft have multi-platform strategies with their own credible strengths, and that’s an area where Google is playing catch up. Time hasn’t run out for Android tablets, but the window of opportunity is narrowing fast.

SlashGear will be bringing you all the news from Google I/O 2012 this week.


Apple, Microsoft, now Google: I/O 2012 closes the mobility triptych is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


SlashGear Morning Wrap-Up: June 25, 2012

This morning we’re getting prepped for a week that’s going to be full to the brim with no less than the latest and the greatest in Google development news, as Google I/O 2012 starts on Wednesday! Look for a spattering of news bits surrounding the events starting with no less than a leak of the tablet we’ll likely see popping up for all – Nexus style. Meanwhile Microsoft will be going big with Microsoft Connected Car plans for the near future with Kinect, Windows Phone 8, and the cloud.

AT&T’s Samsung Galaxy S II has its Ice Cream Sandwich update sent out this week. BlackBerry 10 has been leaked with the BlackBerry L-Series and QUERTY N-Series. The folks at T-Mobile and Verizon are shaking hands this week over a big-time spectrum swap.

You’ll want to check out the column: Surface Detail: Microsoft’s Tablets Are Too Big To Fail.

It appears that the Microsoft Surface project was born of timid manufacturers – go big or go home! The iPhone is looking more and more like an NFC-toting beast for its next release. Sony is trying again for the Google TV with their NSZ-GS7 this July!

And don’t forget to see our Alienware M17x R4 with Ivy Bridge Review to see what the most massive gaming laptop in the land is all about.


SlashGear Morning Wrap-Up: June 25, 2012 is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


HTC Droid Incredible 4G LTE may hit Verizon on July 5th

HTC Droid Incredible 4G LTE may hit Verizon on July 5th

The bad news: if you’ve been hoping to grab a Droid Incredible 4G LTE so you can show it off to your friends at your local July 4th extravaganza, you’re out of luck. The good news: you might be able to cheer up from your post-holiday depression the very next day. According to internal employee docs captured by Droid-Life, we should expect Verizon’s first Sense 4 device to arrive at stores on July 5th for $200 with a two-year contract. As always, pricing and availability are never set in stone; after all, internal employee docs gave us false hope that the Motorola Droid 4 would show up several weeks before it actually launched, but that was likely a result of Verizon pulling the launch at the last minute. Provided Big Red doesn’t change its mind (or other snafus throw a wrench into the process), we won’t be disappointed this time around.

HTC Droid Incredible 4G LTE may hit Verizon on July 5th originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 25 Jun 2012 11:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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This May Be Google’s New Nexus 7 Tablet [Rumor]

According to an allegedly leaked training document, this is Google’s new tablet, a 7-inch Tegra 3 device running Android Jelly Bean. The document says that Nexus 7—as it is named—would hit the streets in July for $200. More »

Google TV from Sony Arrives in Store July 2012

Sony Europe today announced the availability and pricing of the NSZ-GS7, Internet Player with Google TV, originally introduced in January at CES. Powered by the Google TV platform, the Internet Player will be available to buy in store from July, priced at £200/€200. Pre-orders begin in July online at www.sony-europe.com.
In 2010, Sony pioneered the internet-TV convergence as one of the first manufacturers to launch products powered by Google TV. With the new Internet Player with Google TV, Sony …