natehoy
Well-known member
- Sep 2, 2011
- 2,667
- 71
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Here is the problem with android... to many crappy models are flooding the market. You have a few good android tablets that the android lovers know about. But then u got the models that are being sold on team buy and for under 100 dollars in a department Store.
I don't see this as a disadvantage at all.
My father in law has a Pandigital Global. 5 minutes of hackery that my ten year old daughter could manage and it's now a full-on Gingerbread tablet running Firefox as its default web browser and the full Google experience (Gmail, Drive, etc). Cost him $120 and he's got a web browser he can sit in his motor home and use on his AT&T MiFi access point when he doesn't want or need to schlep out the laptop. It's got everything he needs and nothing he doesn't, and he paid $120 for it.
I picked up a Pandigital Novel for $20 that the guy who sold it to me had originally laid out less than $100 for. It only runs Android Eclair, and that after 10 minutes of hackery, but it's more than capable of running math and word games for my daughter and servign as a passable e-reader for library books from Overdrive. And if she drops it and shatters it to little teensy bits, I'm out $20 and ten minutes of reading instructions on a forum to hack it. Boo hoo.
I've got a Nexus 7. For $250, I get something that more than meets my needs to watch TV in the evening, surf the web, check Facebook, read books, and many other things.
Apple makes great products. But they don't currently make a tablet in a price range that I'd consider for the uses I intend to put it to. The beauty of the current Android marketspace is that I can find exactly what I want at a cost I'm willing to pay. I don't have to buy a device that's utter overkill.
When the iPad 7" comes out, if I'm in the market for a high-end 7" tablet, it'll most certainly be among my list of candidates. But Android has already drawn me out of the iTunes infrastructure, so that's a factor in my decision (as it will be for folks who are still heavily invested in the iTunes infrastructure - for them it will be a point in Apple's favor).
Competition = fun.