Google may
be rubbish at keeping secrets - almost everything about the Nexus 7 was leaked
before Google unveiled it, and the product page even went live before the
keynote began - but it appears to be getting very good at designing tablets:
the Nexus 7 is a pretty nifty bit of kit. Time to reach for the credit card?
Let's find out.
Google Nexus 7 processor
Inside the Google Nexus 7 is a quad-core Tegra 3 processor
packing a 12-core GPU and 1GB of on-board RAM. This, combined with some clever
under-the-hood streamlining, means a buttery-smooth performance (pun intended,
see below).
What does this mean
in real terms? Google was at pains to stress the AWESOME GAMING POWER of a
12-core GPU. The built-in HDMI means you'll be able to connect it to your telly
too
The Nexus 7 operating system is Android Jelly Bean
As you'd expect, Google's tablet runs Google's latest operating system: Android 4.1, aka Jelly Bean. It also benefits from the very polished "Project Butter"
user interface technology, which is much smoother than previous Androids or
Amazon's forked version of the OS, and it's the first Android tablet to ship
with Chrome as its default browser.
There's also a big
camera improvement, a whole host of browser tweaks and some clever voice
recognition upgrades... in short, a lot of worthwhile reasons to check out the
first Android Jelly Bean device.
Google Nexus 7 dimensions and specs
The Nexus 7 is 198.5 x 120 x 10.45mm. It's considerably lighter than an
iPad, and lighter even than a Kindle Fire: at just 340g, the Nexus 7 is the
weight of a fairly slim book.
The Nexus 7 display
is a seven-inch, 1280x800 IPS display, and you can choose between 8GB and 16GB
versions.
There's integrated
Wi-Fi but no 3G or 4G, a front-facing camera and a 4,325mAh battery that Google
says is good for 8 hours of "active use".
There's also no
microSD card slot, so you're limited massively if you're one of those that
loves HD movies.
The Nexus 7 tablet
includes a microphone, Bluetooth, NFC for Android Beam, an accelerometer,
magnetometer, GPS and gyroscope, and the built-in Wi-Fi supports 802.11b, g and
n.
Google Nexus 7: media marvel
While the Nexus 7 does apps, of course, the whole thrust of Google's
keynote was media consumption: look at the books! Look at the games! Look at
the videos! That's the marketing message here and it's clear that this is a
massive weapon in Google's attempt to topple the Kindle Fire.
And of course, no
keynote is complete without a sly dig at Google's biggest competitor at the
moment:
"With the
Music Manager, you can easily import your entire iTunes music library* into
Google Play", Google says. That asterisk means that it doesn't do DRM, and
you're limited to 20,000 songs.
Google Nexus 7 release date and price
For once, we don't have to wait forever to get our hands on some
exciting new tech: the Nexus 7 launches in the US, UK and Australia this July.
That's, like, days away!
The UK price for
the Nexus 7 will be £159 for the 8GB model, and the 16GB one will cost £199.
That gives you not just the tablet but £15 of Google Play credit to spend too,
and it means that even the priciest model is half an iPad.
Google will also
offer a soft cover (but not a Surface-style keyboard one, at least not just
now) and an extra charger should you need one.
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