Thursday, February 17, 2011

Tablets of 2011: What to Look For


Last year promised to be the year of the tablet, and at least for Apple, it was indeed. The nearly ubiquitous iPad managed not only to outsell every other tablet on the market by a wide margin, it also exceeded Mac sales in the last quarter with a record 7.33 million units moved. But even if Apple is not likely to lose its throne anytime soon, competition is finally making itself present. If Android's gains in the smartphone market serve any indication it should be an interesting year for tablets as well.
Rivals such as Motorola and LG are coming on strong with the first Android "Honeycomb" tablets, while Research In Motion is launching the PlayBook using a completely reworked operating system based on QNX Neutrino. HP will start to see the fruits of its Palm acquisition when it launches the TouchPad, the first webOS-based tablet, this summer.

We've compiled a comparative table with what we consider are the hottest tablets either currently available or announced so far. Note that we've only included those models that are expected to be released in the next few months and the reason for that is two-fold: their specs are official or at least somewhat reliable, and because we've seen a lot of teaser products that in the end don't even make it to market -- which happened a lot last year.

We'll update this guide as new tablets that catch our attention are announced and approaching their release, but if you are in the market for a tablet now this should definitely serve as a starting point for narrowing down your purchase.

Apple iPadMotorola XOOMBlackBerry PlayBookDell
Streak 7
LG G-SlateNotion Ink AdamEee Slate EP121HP TouchPad
Processor1GHz Apple A41GHz Nvidia Tegra 21GHz ARM Cortex A91GHz Nvidia Tegra 21GHz Nvidia Tegra 21GHz Nvidia Tegra 2Intel Core i5 470UM1.2GHz Qualcomm MSM8660
Display9.7-inch10.1-inch7-inch7-inch8.9-inch10.1-inch12.1-inch9.7-inch
Resolution1024 x 7681280 x 8001024 x 600800 x 4801280 × 7201024 x 6001280 x 8001024 x 768
RAM256MB1GB1GB1GB1GB2GB1GB
Front cameraNone2MP3MP1.3MP2MP3.2MP2MP1.3MP
Rear cameraNone5MP5MP5MP5MP3.2MPNoneNone
Storage16GB, 32GB, 64GB32GB16GB, 32GB16GB32GB8GB32GB16GB, 32GB
USBNoYesYesNoYesYesYesYes
HDMINoYesYesNoYesYesYesNo
Wireless ConnectivityWi-Fi, Bluetooth, 3GWi-Fi, Bluetooth, 3G/4GWi-Fi, Bluetooth, 3G/4GWi-Fi, Bluetooth, 3G/4GWi-Fi, Bluetooth, 3GWi-Fi, Bluetooth, 3GWi-Fi, BluetoothWi-Fi, Bluetooth, 3G/4G
GPSYes (3G only)YesNoneYesYesYesNoYes
Operating SystemiOS 4.2.1Android 3.0 HoneycombBlackBerry Tablet OSAndroid 2.2 FroyoAndroid 3.0 HoneycombAndroid 2.3 GingerbreadWindows 7 HPwebOS 3.0
Flash SupportNoYesYesYesYesYesYesYes
App MarketplaceiTunesAndroid MarketApp WorldAndroid MarketAndroid MarketComing SoonNonewebOS
App Store
Weight680-730g730g400g450g730g1,160g740g
Price$500-$830$800TBA$450TBA$375-$550$999TBA
AvailabilityNowFebruary 24Q1 (4G in Summer)NowQ1NowNowSummer


Lastly, it will be interesting to see the BlackBerry PlayBook and HP's webOS-based TouchPad compete in the tablet market. From what we've seen so far both will bring fresh and beautiful UIs to the game, and webOS in particular is considered to have a very robust multitask implementation, but neither company has had much luck with third-party developers.

There will be quite a few more tablet releases down the road. Those who decide to wait and see how the market plays out can expect devices from HTC, Lenovo, MSI, Samsung, Toshiba, Vizio and many other lesser-known manufacturers. The HTC Flyer, Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 and Toshiba's unnamed tablet will probably garner significant attention, not to mention the potential arrival of a number of CES prototypes like the Acer Iconia, Asus Eee Slider, and Lenovo LePad.

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