Hey guys after my previous article Top 10 Best Smartphone of 2011, I decided to make a new article Top 10 Tablets of 2011. So if you want to buy new tablet this year then you should have a look at this.
Barnes & Noble just unveiled its all-new Nook Color, An Android tablet fronted by a 7-inch color touchscreen. B&N is billing it as a hybrid of e-reader and tablet device, and has beefed up its software with a full-on tablet-style UI, along with Facebook and Twitter integration. There's built-in WiFi (802.11b/g/n) and 8GB of storage, but no 3G at this point. a microSD slot, with a 0.48-inch thick body and a 15.6 ounce overall weight. Battery life takes a notable hit, of course, with a rating of 8 hours of reading with the WiFi off.
9. Mtotrola Xoom
Motorola XOOM Android Tablet which runs Android 3.0 Honeycomb designed for Tablets. It’s the world’s first Tablet to be powered by Android 3. It has a 10.1 inch display, Dual Core 1 Ghz CPU NVIDIA Tegra 2 processor, 1GB RAM, 32 GB inbuilt memory with microSD Card slot, 10 hr video playback battery life, 5 MP Rear camera with Flash and 720p HD video capture, 2MP video calling camera, Wifi(n) Bluetooth 2.1, 3G , 4G.
8. BlackBerry Playbook.
The words "play" and "book" are a bit of an odd choice for RIM's latest attempt at consumer relevance, a tablet that, at its core, runs one of the most hardcore and industry-friendly operating systems known to man. It's something of a serious tablet when compared to the competition running software from Apple and Google and, while it certainly has games, its biggest strengths are rather more boring. Exciting stuff? No, but useful features for sure, and regardless of whether you find those intriguing or boring this is RIM's seven-inch, Flash-having but 3G-lacking tablet clad in an unassuming but extremely sophisticated exterior. It's what's running behind the glass that disappoints.
7. HTC Flyer.
HTC Flyer is a portable 7-inch tablet with a digital pen that can do more for you than you can imagine. From creating masterpieces with a stroke of a paintbrush, to taking multimedia notes or even signing digital documents, HTC Flyer puts you in control of any situation. With streaming movies at a touch of your finger, HTC Flyer turns any moment into something special.
6. Acer Iconia Tab A500.
Welcome to the next big fat item on our list of the Honeycomb wave. This is the ACER Iconia Tab A500 Android 3.0 Honeycomb tablet. What you’ve got here is a 10.24 x 6.97 x 0.52-inch (260 x 177 x 13.3-mm,) 25.75-oz (730-g) heavy 10.1-inch display sized Android 3.0 Honeycomb tablet. It’s got an aluminum back, plastic panels on the left and right, and a removable panel on top for the SIM and the SDcard. On the front of this device is a 2-megapixel camera whilst the back totes a 5-megapixel camera with LED flash and auto-focus. And what’s inside powering all this sweet stuff? Our good pal NVIDIA! You’ll be working an Tegra 250 Dual cortex A9 1GHz processor, a fabulous customer indeed – as you’ll be seeing in Performance below.
5. HP Touchad.
The TouchPad is the first tablet that could be truly something more than everything else. The TouchPad gets it. The big ideas, like Synergy (HP's webOS cloud service) and the Card interface, make sense. You would almost think that webOS had been designed for tablets from the very beginning. It feels more native to tablets than any other software on any other tablet. It has a 9.7-inch (1024x768) screen, Dual-core 1.2GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon processor, 1GB RAM, 1.3-megapixel front camera.
4. Asus Eee Pad Transformer.
it's a powerful Android tablet while on the move, and a functional Android-powered netbook when you're sitting at a desk. The back of the tablet and the keyboard is covered in a honeycomb-style texture, which makes it quite grippy to hold in your hand. The Asus Eee Pad Transformer comes packing the same Tegra 250 chip as the other big hitters in the Android 3.0 world. Backed up by 1GB RAM, and 16GB and 32GB storage flavours, it's as well-specified as any other tablet we've seen. It also comes with a 10.1-inch capacitive IPS display at a decent HD resolution of 1280x800, a 5MP rear-firing camera and a 1.3MP front-facing camera.
3. Sony Tablet S.
The Tablet S runs on Android Honeycomb 3.2. The Tablet S sports a stylish and sophisticated look. It takes cues from gaming segment with some exclusive content and a design that sets it apart from other tablets. The backside shows a 5MP camera and it also has a 0.3MP front facing camera. The front is glossy with a 9.4-inch TFT capacitive touchscreen display featuring 800 x 1280 pixels resolution. Navigation is just about fine, with specs like Nvidia Tegra 2, dual-core Cortex processor and 1GB RAM, which are pretty similar to most of the tablets in its class.
2. Samsing Galaxy Tab 10.1
The new 10.1-inch tablet will most likely run Honeycomb 3.1. Its features are 1GHz dual core processors, 3G compatibility (HSPA+, 21Mbps support) and Wi-Fi Samsung’s updated Touchwiz UX, A mini apps tray to speed up multitasking, Readers Hub, Music Hub for eBooks and music on the go, 3MP rear AF camera with LED flash and 720p video recording capability, 2MP front camera, Bluetooth v2.1 + EDR for the Tab 10.1 and v3.0 for the 8.Tab 9, GPS with A-GPS, Adobe Flash support, 1080p HD@30fps video playback, DivX and Xvid support, Dual surround-sound speakers, QuickOffice HD Editor, MicroSD card support etc.
1. Apple iPad 2.
The Apple iPad is best tablet in all tablets that i have used. The iPad 2 is both all about -- and not about -- the hardware. From an industrial design standpoint, the iPad 2 just seriously raised the bar on sleek, sexy computer hardware. If you're an owner of the original model, you know it was no slouch in the design department, but its latest iteration takes it to a whole other place. The first thing you'll probably notice about the iPad 2 is that it's thin -- unbelievably thin. At its thickest point, the tablet is just 0.34-inches (compared with the first iPad's half an inch of girth). The device is slightly shorter than the previous model (at 9.5-inches tall), but also slightly less wide (just 7.3-inches versus the iPad's 7.47-inches). Apple has replaced last year's A4 CPU with a new, 1GHz dual core chip it's calling the A5 (surprise surprise). According to Geekbench, there's now 512MB of RAM in the iPad, bringing it up to iPhone 4 standards. That still seems on the low side to us -- a device in this class should probably be sporting 1GB, though we had no memory issues. The screen is identical to the previous model, a 1024 x 768, 9.7-inch IPS display. It still looks good, though we really would have liked to see a bump in resolution -- if not up to the Retina Display's doubled numbers, then something substantial.
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