Saturday, June 30, 2012

Nexus 7

  • The $200 tablet market is heating up as Google introduces its own Android Nexus 7 tablet. Is now the right time to buy one of these bargain tablets? In this edition of Ask Maggie, I try to help one reader determine which tablet is best for her.
  • (CNET News)
  • The big star of the Google I/O conference was the Nexus 7 tablet announced at the keynote speech Wednesday, and one of them arrived at our office Friday.
  • (Los Angeles Times)
  • Update, 3:50 p.m. PT: After a glitch earlier today, the GameStop page in question is once again accessible on the site.
  • (CNET News)
  • A Nexus 7 shown at the Google Developers Conference on June 27 in San Francisco, California. The tablet will go on sale next month for $199 and will run on the latest Android Jelly Bean OS. Photo by Mathew Sumner/Getty Images.
  • (Slate)
  • Inside the Nexus 7 you'll find a quad-core Tegra 3 CPU clocked to 1.15GHz on four cores (or 1.3 GHz when running on just one), 1GB of RAM, and 8GB or 16GB of onboard storage (that extra storage will cost you an additional $50).
  • (Washington Post)
  • Less than 10 days after Microsoft (MSFT) released its Surface tablet, Google (GOOG) unveiled its Nexus 7 tablet Wednesday at its I/O developers conference, delving into the hardware business for the first time.
  • (Yahoo Finance)
  • Last year Amazon released its media consumption tablet the Kindle fire for only 200 dollars. Now Google has -- important nexus seven tablet. With the latest version of Android Quad Core CPU. A 1280 by 800 resolution screen.
  • (CNET News)
  • Amidst much speculation, Google announced its Nexus 7 tablet computer at the ongoing Google I/O 2012. Powered by the latest generation of Android software 4.1 Jelly Bean, the tablet is being made for Google by Asus.
  • (Hindustan Times)
  • It's relentless. Just when my psyche was beginning to recover from the Nexus 7 bombshell, here comes the Nexus 10.
  • (Beta News)
  • The Google Nexus 7 is a lightweight HD display tablet, with a quad-core processor and a front-facing camera, which Patrick Brady, the Director of Android Partner Engineering for Google, thinks can beat the Amazon Kindle Fire.
  • (ibtimes.co.uk)

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