Google
revealed its long-rumored device today — a 7-inch Nexus tablet running Android's newest operating system
flavor, 4.1 Jelly Bean. The
pint-sized slate — which the company showed off at its annual Google I/O
keynote event — is manufactured by Asus, known for making other Android tablets
including the Transformer and the
Transformer Prime. The device has a 1280 x 800-pixel high-definition display,
made with reading and watching videos in mind. It has a speedy Nvidia Tegra 3
quad-core processor under the hood, front-facing camera for video chat, 9 hours
of video playback — compared to the iPad's 10-hour playback life — and 300
hours of standby battery time. The tablet weighs 340 grams, which is about as
much as a paperback book. Check out our hands-on
gallery with the Nexus 7 for all
the eye candy. It features tighter integration with Google Play, with content being front
and center, similar to how the Amazon
Kindle Fire functions. Due to
this, Google Play now has a new 3D magazine app with tablet-optimized articles
that render well on the Nexus 7's screen. Nexus 7 will also be the first device
that ships with Chrome as its native browser — Chrome,
despite being Google's browser, hasn't been available on Android until a beta
version of it was introduced for Ice Cream Sandwich devices. Google has also
overhauled Google Maps with additional information and review
features which can predict which restaurants you'll likely enjoy. Offline maps
will also be a hotly sought-after feature, and now that Apple and Microsoft are
touting similar features, it's an important bullet point to have. Pre-orders
for the teensy Google Nexus 7 tablet begins today. You can order the new tablet
from the Google Play store with
two price tiers — $199 for the 8GB model and 16GB version — making it a true
Kindle Fire competitor. It will start shipping in mid July. The Kindle Fire
lands at a similar price point, but with its apps governed largely by what
Amazon declares suitable for its shop, the Nexus 7 will have everything the
Fire has, and then some. Despite some similar hardware specs — screen size,
screen resolution, etc — the Nexus will offer a faster processor and a much
more genuine Android experience from a software standpoint. Google is clearly
making a play for potential iPad customers with this sleek, streamlined
device, and with a price tag of less than half of the base model Apple tablet,
the company may have a real shot at success. $499 gets you a 16GB iPad with a
9.7-inch Retina display, but if ultra-sharp screen resolution and playing in
the Apple universe aren't a big deal, the 7-inch Nexus slate will be much
easier on your pocketbook. Of course, it's unclear how Microsoft's Surface device will shake up the consumer
tablet market. With a physical keyboard and Windows
8-esque software design, it seems like Android and iOS devotees
will already have their minds made up between the iPad and the Nexus 7.
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