Re: Received 7 defective Nexus 7's and Google is now refusing RMA
And a tablet isn't doing its job when if you hold it by the left side of the body, the screen clicks from poor adhesive, it visibly moves, and the LCD ripples because of the pressure from simply holding it as any tablet owner would.
You're fighting a losing battle here.
Much as I would love to have a perfect build, my tablet is still doing the job I ask of it even if the screen DOES click a little due to poor adhesive, it visibly moves, and the LCD occasionally ripples because of the pressure from simply holding it.
I can play all the games I want. The screen is freaking awesome. It's a quad-core processor. It's holding up just fine. The battery life is excellent. And it's half the price of any other tablet with a build quality anywhere near this.
We have different definitions of "doing its job", obviously, because I haven't run into a single thing my Nexus 7 cannot do due to the minor screen lift. In fact, if it hadn't been mentioned on this forum so much, I honestly would never have noticed it. Once I get that baby in a decent case, which I've been putting off far too long, I'll never give it another thought.
Now if I had the kind of light bleed pictured in other threads where there is a "stage light" effect, or if my screen was all dull and washed out, or if I had a massive oil stain some people seem to have, or some of the other rarer manufacturing issues - sure, it's not doing its job.
But if its job is to wow me as to what is possible for 250 clams? Mission Accomplished - every single day.
But you have the absolute right to return yours if the screen lift bothers you. Just understand that, after a certain number of "bad" ones, you may want to stop and think about whether a "budget built tablet" is really the choice you want to make.
There's a whole raft of Android tablets out there, ranging from the $100 super el-cheapo builds right up to the $600 iPad. The Nexus represents an odd spot on that curve, because the hardware specs are right up there on the top end (despite the lack of a rear camera and expandable memory), and the price is very near the low end. Something's gotta suffer there, and it's going to be margin and/or build quality.
Google sacrificed their margin and made some serious compromises on build quality to make a high-end-spec tablet for low-end-spec money. I got exactly what I paid for. No more, no less.
