Final Words

The Kindle Fire was great because it married decent software with decent hardware, at a reasonable price. Previous attempts at ~7-inch tablets made sacrifices in one or more of those areas. Amazon knew what it was doing and the Kindle Fire apparently sold quite well. The Nexus 7 executes the same formula, but with better components. The OS is miles better than what you get with the Kindle Fire, and as a Nexus device built by ASUS it's likely to be the first in line for major Android OS updates so long as Tegra 3 is up to snuff. The hardware is better as well. OMAP 4 was good for its time, but Tegra 3 is just faster. While the usefulness of those extra cores is debatable, clock speeds are higher and the added cores definitely don't hurt performance.

Finally the price point remains unchanged, at $199 the Nexus 7 is a tablet for those who are on the fence about owning a tablet. If you're able to carry around and use the iPad in lieu of a notebook, its $499 price tag is easily justifiable. If, however, the iPad is just an augment to your computing life then spending $499 becomes a tougher pill to swallow. The Nexus 7 brings that commitment level down considerably. For years Android tablet makers have gone after the iPad with comparable hardware, at a comparable price. While there have been some successes, the market for $499+ Android tablets will likely be cannibalized by Windows RT tablets come late this year. The Nexus 7 takes Android into a space that it's quite comfortable with. Subsidized $199 Android phones sell all of the time, and the Nexus 7 delivers a mini-tablet experience at that same price point.

The screen isn't big enough for everyone, but if you're fine with (or better yet, really want) a 7-inch tablet, the Nexus 7 is great. It's well built, has good hardware and is priced perfectly. The only downside is really the limited (and not expandable) internal storage. The lack of expandable storage keeps the Nexus 7 from winning a higher level accolade, but the rest of the package is enough to earn our bronze Editor's Choice award.

The Nexus 7 isn't just a great Android tablet, it's a great tablet.

Battery Life
Comments Locked

118 Comments

View All Comments

  • ericore - Friday, July 27, 2012 - link

    Assuming the price is 299 for the entry 16 GB version of Nexus 10, I will only buy it under the following conditions:

    -storage option
    -2GB Ram
    -Preloaded with Ubuntu (duel boot)
    -Option to load other distros in its place

    Linux complements Android very well and fills a lot of the gaps.
    It would be a smart move on Google's part.
    It would be my move.
  • richough3 - Friday, July 27, 2012 - link

    I would be tempted to buy this but the lack of decent speakers on a tablet like this is one of the deal killers for me. The other one is the lack of an SD card slot. Sure, it's up to preference, but the way I see it is more and more ISPs are moving to tiered services, so to do everything across the cloud will cost more.
  • Chesher - Friday, July 27, 2012 - link

    Nexus 7 has bluetooth - Kindle Fire does not.

    So, I can use Google Play with my bluetooth speakers with my Nexus 7.

    Just wanted to mention this - because this is a big deal.
  • tssynergy - Saturday, July 28, 2012 - link

    Moore's law is in full effect in the tablet world. Given the recent technological progress in components and the slew of new hardware about to hit the streets, I think the differences in the actual devices will become narrow to the point of being insignificant (excluding Windows RT/8, primary computing tablets for now). The key differentiation, in my opinion, lays in the various ecosystems. iTunes vs. Amazon vs. Google Play is where the battle will be won or lost. Sustainable competitive advantage on hardware will be short lived to non existent.
  • ssddaydream - Sunday, July 29, 2012 - link

    While I agree for the larger portion of the market, I think the enthusiast market cannot be ignored. There will always be those who want the absolute best hardware and will just load up AOSP/AOKP. I think the enthusiast market will find a way to bring multi-platform support to their device.
  • Diogenes5 - Sunday, July 29, 2012 - link

    Anyone that thinks Windows 8 Tablets will be competitive at all are fooling themselves. People use Windows devices because they have to, not because they want to. i5/i7-based designs don't offer the kind of battery life and form factor needed for what people have come to expect in the storage space and Tegra 3/ARM based windows 8 tablets offer nothing more hardware wise than current tablets.

    That leaves only the GUI and OS as the differentiating factor between Windows Tablets and Current Tablets. Do people really think that Windows 8 will offer anything near the experience of current android and iOS tablets? Everyone using the RC (including me) is underwhelmed. This is the same Microsoft that produced tablet laptop's for years that nobody bought. Thanks but no thanks, Windows 8 will be a laughingstock just like windows phone.
  • maximumGPU - Monday, July 30, 2012 - link

    Another troll..
    all you provide are your opinions and you think they're a reflection of the majority.

    "People use Windows devices because they have to.." plenty of other OS out there if you don't like windows. And guess what? a lot of people do like it.

    "Do people really think that Windows 8 will offer anything near the experience of current android and iOS tablets?" Euh yeah it will, how about proper compatibility and seamless transition between your pc and your tablet for a start?
    I'm a New Ipad owner, and i find the OS very limiting. Awaiting a windows tablet.

    "Everyone using the RC (including me) is underwhelmed.." have you used it in a tablet environment? thought so.

    "Thanks but no thanks, Windows 8 will be a laughingstock just like windows phone". Of course, you'd know that already.
  • shaolin95 - Sunday, July 29, 2012 - link

    I was very happy when I saw this tablet first until I read about not SD card options...totally killed it for me...very lame.
  • bertiebond - Monday, July 30, 2012 - link

    but the samsung tab 7.0 (p1000) i use has 3G, has micro SD slot.

    7inch is perfect size for on the go, emergency phone in a pinch, read comics, books, films.

    Nexus, much better hardware specs all round, but critically crippled for what you actually want to use it for.
    Shame really. Samsung sucks with OS upgrades, you have to root it just to get ICS, nevermind jellybean!
  • seanleeforever - Tuesday, July 31, 2012 - link

    " In every sense outside of portability, a 10-inch display is much nicer to look at than a 7-inch one in my opinion. There's less zooming in you need to do on web pages or magazines. Text in general is just easier to read and perhaps I'm getting too old, but there's something nice about everything being comfortably bigger.
    Read more at http://www.anandtech.com/show/6073/the-google-nexu...
    "

    really, anand, really?
    would you say the 17 inch notebook is much nicer to look at than 12 inch one?

    my company laptop is a pain in the ass 17 inch dream color elitebook, but i find myself using 12 inch thinpad x unless i absolutely have to do use the company laptop. it is not always the bigger the better.

    with that said, i have both ipad 3 and nexus 7, and my experience has been entirely different from yours. the ipad3 is way to heavy as a tablet, and if i have to use a dedicate carrying device, i find myself using 12 inch laptop most of time. the nexus 7, however, is so light (which you should really focus more in the review IMHO) and allow you to use to use it like a tablet. it also magically fit in all my pants and as someone who travels 70% of time, this is a god send.

    apple is making a big mistake not to release the mini ipad, and now the market is taken.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now