Should i buy xoom wifi




















To buy or not to buy? Verizon and Motorola have officially confirmed that the Xoom will launch this Thursday, February Altogether, then—and considering the wave of Android tablets expected to launch later this year—is it wise to buy the Xoom now? Or would you be better off taking a wait-and-see approach?

The recently announced Samsung Galaxy Tab It's not clear how successful Samsung's marketing effort has been, despite earlier reports. Samsung did not state shipment numbers for the Galaxy Tab in its year-end financial statement , though it cited figures for just about every other marquee mobile device it sells. And this report states--by way of a correction--that Samsung will not confirm a year-end number for the Galaxy Tab.

The point? All things considered, the current design of the Galaxy Tab is probably not a great test case for the market beyond the iPad. So, what endows the Xoom with so much potential? This is a concerted effort by Google to make the Android tablet a success. Google has selected Motorola and Nvidia as partners to make sure the first Honeycomb tablet will hit the market with plenty of impact.

As a result, Motorola will be the exclusive purveyor of the initial Honeycomb tablet. And the Xoom's specs are certainly impressive. Honeycomb promises features such as an improved System Bar, better tabbed browsing, and an improved virtual keyboard--among numerous other tweaks and modifications.

Yes, it does have some flaws, but compared to the original this is a welcome upgrade. If Motorola can finally get around to pushing ICS to the Xoom 2, then it might actually turn a few heads.

As it stands, the Xoom 2 is a capable tablet that is held back by the limited storage and sluggish OS. Motorola has made it thinner, lighter and faster than the original Xoom, but it is running outdated Android software and has sluggish performance.

Sadly, the Xoom 2 does little to justify its expensive price tag. Considering that the 8. However, the iPad 2 is still the better device when it comes to performance and the quality of applications while users who want a 3G tablet and Android 4.

This is easily one of, if not the best, sub inch Android tablet on the market and had Motorola been able to bring this level of quality to its The display is pin sharp for gaming, viewing video or images, while the shape and weight make it an excellent e-book reader.

The screen is better and the processor more powerful. However, there's an element of treading water to the design as it doesn't improve upon more recent rivals much. An IR transmitter, inbuilt printing function, MotoCast and a few secure business options make for some interesting potential uses but for the average consumer these aren't overly compelling.

The extra MHz of chip speed has little measurable impact on performance. And with Tegra 3-based offerings out early next year, Motorola is going to have to price the Xoom 2 very competitively. Certainly we like that Motorola has pretty much thrown the kitchen sink at the thing in terms of features. Yes, there's the lack of 3G and expandable storage but the IR transmitter, stylus, range of connectivity and software extras add up to a very capable machine. So long as the software instability issues are ironed out, and particularly if the screens improve a little more, this could be a real contender.

We'll be back for a full review later this month when the tablets hit the market. It's well built and easy on the eye while packing in all the essentials in terms of connectivity and other physical features.

Hands on with the Motorola Xoom 2 Please share our article, every link counts! Amazon Fire HD 10 unknown, unknown. Prestigio Muze 4G unknown, unknown.



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