Google unveiled its
first tablet computer Nexus 7 at the developer’s conference in
“We wanted to design a
best-of Google experience optimized around the content available at Google
Play,” said Hugo Barra, Google’s director of product management.
Google Nexus 7 Tablet |
Nexus 7 comes with quad-core processor and a 12-core general processing unit for running games, movies, apps and all other content smoothly. The tablet will have 8GB of memory for the $199 version and 16 GB of memory for the $249 model. It will have a battery life of about 9-10 hours.
Google’s new tablets will be
available for order in Australia ,
Canada , Britain , and the United States at the Google Play
store and would begin shipping in mid-July.
Users of the new Nexus
tablets can access more than 600,000 apps, games, music, movies and books on
Google Play. Nexus 7 will come with a $25 coupon for Google Play content.
The news comes just a week
after Microsoft launched its self-branded tablet called ‘Surface tablets.’
Review of “Nexus 7”
Google aims to popularize its
New Device "Nexus 7" in the same way that Amazon's Kindle made
e-readers mass-market. But the company's ambition is wider than that - it sees
inexpensive computers running the living room and the lives of millions of
users. And it wants to be the company that makes the software used on all of
them.
It aims to take a different,
cheaper route, leaving the very premium end of the market available for
manufacturers such as Samsung, who use Google's Android software, to compete
with Apple's all-conquering, innovative device. Google has added TV, magazines
and movie purchasing to the Play Store, its rival to iTunes, so that it can
challenge Apple effectively. Indeed, Google described its new tablet as
"built for Google Play".
Underlying the firm's
ambitions to dominate the future of computing is Android. This time last year,
there were already 100 million devices running Android. Today there are 400
million, with 1 million new ones added each day. That may be 12 per second, but
Google knows that not many of those are tablets.
So Google has identified two
ways to tackle Apple - the first is to improve how all Android devices run by
offering a software upgrade called Jelly Bean for phones and tablets. The aim
is that people who use an Android phone will enjoy the experience so much that
they will want to complete the "ecosystem" with an Android tablet.
Google has tried, under the codename Project Butter, to make the software
smoother and, to borrow a word from Apple, consistently "delightful".
It's an apparently subtle change that should make a big difference to how
people feel their phone or tablet works. The brain, Google points out, can
detect a lag of even 10 milliseconds in how a touchscreen works.
The second strand is more
conspicuous: a new product called Q (for America only so far) offers media
streaming, while elsewhere there are new features for phones and tablets. These
improve the way the voice search or the camera works, predict the next word you
want to type, or allow you to dictate to your phone.
Other features automate
existing features - for example, phones are able to learn when you commute and
will automatically suggest a better route or tell you when your next bus
leaves. If you've searched the internet for a flight, you can now be kept
updated on its status, and if you're travelling Google can make translation
more accessible.
All of this points towards
Google putting its set of products together in a cleverer way - but they still
need the army of software developers that has so far congregated around Apple.
At the San Francisco conference, Google made it
clear they know that: "There's never been a better time to be a developer
- now you can take an idea and build businesses."
If that convinces people,
then Google will be able to do for the mass market what Apple has already done
for the elite of iPad and iPhone users.
Google's Nexus 7 tablet
feels like the device that might just usurp the Kindle. It does everything that
Amazon's device has done so successfully since it launched in 2007, but with
Google you can now also watch videos, browse beautifully rendered magazines and
the web, and of course check your email.
A Kindle costs from just
pounds 89, but those extra functions are likely to persuade a huge number of
people to part with pounds 159.
Indeed, it's the design of
the product that makes Google's mass-market ambitions clear. Just as the iPad
is not worried by Kindle sales, so it is unlikely to be worried by the Nexus 7.
This is a device that feels coolly utilitarian, rather than luxurious.
But Google is not the web
search engine for a minority of users; it has always aimed to be ubiquitous.
And with Nexus 7, it wants to make the ubiquitous tablet. The 7in screen does
everything it needs to with a resolution of 1280px x 700px, and at 340g it
weighs enough to feel substantial without being burdensome.
There are nudges toward the
future, however: press the button to get to a standard Google search page and,
rather than a blank screen you get details about flights or films you've
recently searched for. That ties web search in with everyday life, and it makes
the web increasingly central to a wider range of functions.
Google claims the device
"just feels right" - they're not making grand claims, but they're
aiming far beyond the small minority of global web users who are iPad fans.
This is a pretty good first shot at that target.
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