Q. I am looking at getting an android tablet but i would like to spend $300 or less. There are a lot on eBay and i was wondering what some good ones are. I have been looking at the galaxy tabs and i really like them but they are $300 or more. I am looking for one with a 7 inch screen not the big 10 inch ones.
Thanks for any advice!
Thanks for any advice!
A. Hi friend,
I think the new one 7inch GT-Pad android 2.3 OS tablet PC is good one. run smoothly and capacitive multi-touch. Flash 10.2 will let you see the movie youtube online. it will bring you more better user exprience.
http://www.wholesaleonepiece.com/gtpad-android-23-tablet-pc-7-inch-tcc8803-cortex-a8-capacitive-multitouch-screen-lyf521_p2490.html
I think the new one 7inch GT-Pad android 2.3 OS tablet PC is good one. run smoothly and capacitive multi-touch. Flash 10.2 will let you see the movie youtube online. it will bring you more better user exprience.
http://www.wholesaleonepiece.com/gtpad-android-23-tablet-pc-7-inch-tcc8803-cortex-a8-capacitive-multitouch-screen-lyf521_p2490.html
Difference between the Apple Ipad and the Android Tablet?
Q. I saw the episode of Extreme Couponing where she was using an Ipad during shopping. I think she used a program called Numbers on it but I'm not sure. The Android Tablet is much cheaper than the Ipad. What's the differences between the two? Also, can the Android Tablet connect to wifi?
A. The difference between the two is that they have a different operating system, although they are very similar, there are some android tablets that can connect to wifi but not all of them do.
Can an android tablet be booted from a usb port?
Q. I was wondering if I can run one of those light weight linux distro installed on a usb flash drive on one of those android tablets.
1) Is there a cheap tablet PC (under $200) that can be booted from a usb port?
3) Can I find a lightweight linux distro that has all the drivers for that tablet?
Thanks for replying.
1) Is there a cheap tablet PC (under $200) that can be booted from a usb port?
3) Can I find a lightweight linux distro that has all the drivers for that tablet?
Thanks for replying.
A. First of all, Android is Linux. It's a custom Linux kernel with a special software layer on top. And the customizations to the kernel and the software layer sitting on top of it are pretty important for it to run on the rather specialized smartphone architecture.
Second, a kernel has to be compiled to run on a certain architecture. So you'd have to find a version of Linux compiled for an ARM processor. That's not much of a problem. Several distributions, including Ubuntu, have ARM kernels. But then you'd have to have kernel modules for the drivers of the smartphone hardware, which... isn't nearly as likely. And you'd probably need a specially-designed interface, since Gnome or KDE really wouldn't work on a 4-inch touchscreen. And all of that would also have to be specially compiled for the kernel. And that's before we start with the application software. And by the time you got all of that working... you'd essentially have Android.
And even if you could do all of that, you'd have to have some way of booting from the USB, which you can't since smartphone firmware boots the kernel directly, without any sort of bootloader like you have on a personal computer.
If you want Android to be more Linux-y -- whatever that means, since the Linux experience differs greatly based on the graphical interface (assuming you use one) -- you can install a terminal emulator and even the bash shell. If you play around with it a bit, you might be able to install some command-line Linux software. But even then, it wouldn't be terribly useful, given the limited ability to enter text on a smartphone.
Second, a kernel has to be compiled to run on a certain architecture. So you'd have to find a version of Linux compiled for an ARM processor. That's not much of a problem. Several distributions, including Ubuntu, have ARM kernels. But then you'd have to have kernel modules for the drivers of the smartphone hardware, which... isn't nearly as likely. And you'd probably need a specially-designed interface, since Gnome or KDE really wouldn't work on a 4-inch touchscreen. And all of that would also have to be specially compiled for the kernel. And that's before we start with the application software. And by the time you got all of that working... you'd essentially have Android.
And even if you could do all of that, you'd have to have some way of booting from the USB, which you can't since smartphone firmware boots the kernel directly, without any sort of bootloader like you have on a personal computer.
If you want Android to be more Linux-y -- whatever that means, since the Linux experience differs greatly based on the graphical interface (assuming you use one) -- you can install a terminal emulator and even the bash shell. If you play around with it a bit, you might be able to install some command-line Linux software. But even then, it wouldn't be terribly useful, given the limited ability to enter text on a smartphone.
What is the difference between android tablet pc and windows tablet pc?
Q. What is the difference between android tablet pc and windows tablet pc?Which is better and cheaper?How safe they are to get virus or spyware,maleware stuff?Do they require antivirus softwares?
A. The difference is they run different operating systems.
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