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Samsung galaxy tab a 10.1 review1/2/2023 ![]() ![]() avi movie files to the Galaxy's preferred format, which was nice, considering most Android devices don't natively support. We had to download and install some drivers from Samsung's site before the Galaxy Tab would run Window 7, but once we did, files moved easily from the computer to the device. Even though it uses the same dual-core, 1-GHz Nvidia Tegra 2 chip as the Motorola Xoom, it feels snappier and more responsive to touch inputs. Nevertheless, this is simply the best Android Honeycomb tablet yet. Still, you can make a plastic device only so thin before it starts to flex and bend under stress, and there's a considerable amount of bendiness to the Galaxy Tab 10.1-that makes us worry somewhat about its long-term durability. The fit and finish is nice, the few buttons that exist (volume up and down, power on) feel solid and the screen is bright and beautiful-one of the nicest we've seen on an Android tablet. Its materials makeup tilts heavily in favor of plastic, which is not to say it's cheaply made. How Samsung achieved the weight savings is obvious once you hold the Galaxy Tab in your hands. On price, the Galaxy matches the iPad exactly-a 16 GB WiFi-only version costs $500, while a 32 GB version is $600 (no 3G or 4G versions of the Galaxy Tab 10.1 are available at launch). That's quite a feat, given that the Galaxy's screen is slightly larger at 10.1 inches to the iPad's 9.7 inches. 34-inches thick and 1.33 pounds, and now here comes the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1, an Android Honeycomb tablet that matches the iPad 2's thinness and beats it on weight at only 1.25 pounds. ![]() Wow, tablets sure did get thin and light quickly! First the iPad 2 was introduced at a mere. ![]()
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