Q. I know there is a lot of them but which is the best? (IT HAS TO BE WIFI ONLY)
A. For the 10.1 inch tablets, the best ones are (best first):
1. Motorola Xoom, WiFi-only version
2. Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1: WiFi-only version
3. ASUS Eee Pad Transformer
Keep in mind that a new round of tablets are going to be released late summer/fall that will likely blow these away in terms of performance. Most of the current Honeycomb tablets sport a dual-core NVIDIA Tegra2 processor which was meant to have about a six-month product lifecycle. The new NVIDIA Kal-El, and the Texas Instruments OMAP5 processors will be quad-core, offering about a 5x performance boost. If you can hold off until the holiday season, you'll find a way better tablet.
1. Motorola Xoom, WiFi-only version
2. Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1: WiFi-only version
3. ASUS Eee Pad Transformer
Keep in mind that a new round of tablets are going to be released late summer/fall that will likely blow these away in terms of performance. Most of the current Honeycomb tablets sport a dual-core NVIDIA Tegra2 processor which was meant to have about a six-month product lifecycle. The new NVIDIA Kal-El, and the Texas Instruments OMAP5 processors will be quad-core, offering about a 5x performance boost. If you can hold off until the holiday season, you'll find a way better tablet.
what is the difference in the android operating systems?
Q. im looking to buy an android tablet and ive looked at several ones but im not understanding what the difference is in say the honeycomb operating System or the froyo one? please help before i buy one!!
A. I've used two Android tablets, one with Honeycomb 3.0 and the other with 3.1, and there is very little difference between them. I understand there are 3.2 ones available now, and soon 4.0 will be released.
Honeycomb was designed specifically for tablets: it takes advantage of the larger real estate on the screen. Froyo tablets seem a little bit "cramped", since Froyo was designed for phones and their limited screen sizes.
Honeycomb was designed specifically for tablets: it takes advantage of the larger real estate on the screen. Froyo tablets seem a little bit "cramped", since Froyo was designed for phones and their limited screen sizes.
Which is better android honeycomb or ics for tablets?
Q. Which is better android Honeycomb(android 3.0) or ICS(android 4.0) for TABLETS?
A. ICS
How to stop my tablet from being recognized as a mobile device?
Q. I recently perchased the Toshiba thrive tablet and when I try to use websites like grooveshark.com, it recognizes the tablet as a mobile device and makes you pay for using the site. I would like the tablet to run websites as if it were a computer. I read that you can do this, but I looked through all of the settings and the option is not there. How can I accomplish this? My tablet is running Android Honeycomb 3.1. Thanks!
A. Settings > Advanced > User agent string > select "Desktop"
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