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Google's Nexus 7 is a fantastic $200 tablet


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Like Microsoft, Google shows its own partners how one builds a tablet.

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The 7-inch Android tablet is one of the scrappiest models in the gadget landscape. From one manufacturer to the next, one year to the next, these tablets have failed to find an audience or win any vocal supporters. Yet sales for the 10-inch iPad continue to vault higher with each quarter. All the while, companies keep trying to make 7-inchers work, hammering away at the form factor, making the same mistakes (underpowered internals, chunky bodies, poor performance), expecting different results.

The form saw its first measured success with the Kindle Fire, which cracked a few million unit sales in a single month during 2011's holiday season. But the Fire's reception then, and sales performance since, doesn't suggest a raft of blissfully happy customers. While Amazon's tablet has a couple of enthusiastic fans here at Ars, the guess in our review that it would "end up often as a gift from early tablet adopters to late ones" seemed to come true. You wouldn't buy one for yourself, perhaps, but it was a good enough present for the technologically apathetic: Mom, Dad, Grandma, or Technologically Illiterate Sibling.

Enter stage right—well, more like stage from above, the God of Tablets bombing down in a skydiving suit wearing Google Glass—the Nexus 7. Google adopted the internals of Asus's Memo 370 shown at CES in January, revamped the body, and bequeathed the device with Android 4.1 Jelly Bean. All while maintaining a $199 base price point.

The specs, design, and cost all make the Nexus 7 seem like the Holy Grail of tablets. As we'll show later, it can even keep pace with the (significantly more expensive) iPads in many respects. It's great. Suspiciously great. Suddenly we have everything we want (well, close to it), for less money than we probably would have paid for it. Selling hardware cheap—in hopes that more money can be made elsewhere—is not a new game. But the Nexus 7 suggests Google is going to play that game harder and better than we've seen in a long time.

More than anything, the Nexus 7 is Google's comment on the state of the Android tablet. The company has delivered both a backhand and a helping hand to its long-suffering hardware partners (or at least to Asus, which partnered with Google on this model).

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calguyhunk

Once I saw the full review of this one from Google I/O, my only complaints were that

1. It doesn't have a Micro SD card slot :o

2. No SIM slot.

3. and no rear camera.

Those 3 would have put this totally over the edge, especially 'cuz they were never gonna get their hands on the ultra scarce Super AMOLED screens ;)

But having said that, $200 for this is just way better than anything we've gotten in that price range thus far. The price gouging by the major manufacturers is astonishing. Tablets half as powerful, feature packed & user friendly have thus far cost 6-700 dollars :nono:

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