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
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  • taltamir - Wednesday, August 1, 2012 - link

    Nobody, not a single reviewer, mentioned that you can't turn the N7 sideways and get a landscape view in the OS itself or the google play book reader and nook apps. Supposedly video works on landscape by default and apps CAN theoretically change the view but just don't.
  • taltamir - Wednesday, August 1, 2012 - link

    I have finally found how to enable rotation. Drag from the top downwards and there is a button there to unlock rotation.
    Rereading the threads (and since then some coverage), its only the home screen which has auto rotate disabled.
  • Anonymous1a - Thursday, August 2, 2012 - link

    In the article, they say that Tegra 3 is, perhaps, the second best chip in the market. Which is the best, then?

    Also, how does the A5x compare with the Tegra 3?
  • shriganesh - Thursday, August 2, 2012 - link

    Hey Anand! Great job for the video review! I often get bored while reading loong tech articles.... But ur video review was refreshingly nice! Keep up the great work by providing readers with many options!
  • robertj298 - Thursday, August 16, 2012 - link

    All the reviews look good but I've read a lot of reports of various quality control problems on a lot of the units Maybe you do get what you pay for.
  • yeehi - Thursday, August 30, 2012 - link

    You showed a nice image here:

    http://images.anandtech.com/doci/6073/2012-07-26%2...
  • yeehi - Thursday, August 30, 2012 - link

    You had a good image here:

    http://images.anandtech.com/doci/6073/2012-07-26%2...

    What software did you use to get the data?
  • mehrauli - Wednesday, November 14, 2012 - link

    Rumers are 32G nexus7 model uses faster flash is it true? could you compare 16G with 32G Nusux 7 and let us know which one is faster?

    thanks

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