Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
May Need A New Tablet
27 Answers
Suggestions wanted...
I am quickly falling out of love with my Nexus 7. The 2012 model was great. But the 2013,that I've only had since July,is driving me over the edge. I posted about problems with the touch screen back in December.
http:// www.the answerb ank.co. uk/Tech nology/ Questio n146579 9.html
It's steadily gotten worse in spite of me following some of the suggestions that *may*solve the problem...including soft reset,and uninstalling some recent apps.
So maybe a new one is on the cards...preferably with a larger screen than my current 7" one.
I am quickly falling out of love with my Nexus 7. The 2012 model was great. But the 2013,that I've only had since July,is driving me over the edge. I posted about problems with the touch screen back in December.
http://
It's steadily gotten worse in spite of me following some of the suggestions that *may*solve the problem...including soft reset,and uninstalling some recent apps.
So maybe a new one is on the cards...preferably with a larger screen than my current 7" one.
Answers
Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.We have a variety of tablets (it's like a branch of Dixons) - Kindles (but then you're tied into Amazon apps), an ancient Nexuus, a Lenovo, iPad (mine - it is lovely but over priced) and an Asus, no problem with any of them and all different sized screens. We did have a windows based tablet but none of us could use it.
Once you start to get a larger screen (and more memory) the price start to go up a lot. So tablets are not a cheap item.
The Which best buy at the moment is the Samsung Galaxy Tab S2 9.7 (with a 9.7 inch screen) but that is £370.
The cheapest in the top 10 (with large screens) is the Lenovo Tab2 A10 with a 10" screen that costs £180.
There is a couple of Kindles that get good reviews but then you are locked in to Amazon.
There are some tablets with slightly larger screen than your Nexus such as the Samsung Galaxy Tab S 8.4 (with an 8.4" screen) but even that is £250.
The Which best buy at the moment is the Samsung Galaxy Tab S2 9.7 (with a 9.7 inch screen) but that is £370.
The cheapest in the top 10 (with large screens) is the Lenovo Tab2 A10 with a 10" screen that costs £180.
There is a couple of Kindles that get good reviews but then you are locked in to Amazon.
There are some tablets with slightly larger screen than your Nexus such as the Samsung Galaxy Tab S 8.4 (with an 8.4" screen) but even that is £250.
http:// www.sam sung.co m/uk/co nsumer/ mobile- devices /tablet s/galax y-tab-s /SM-T71 0NZKEBT U
Simply looked up the Which recommendation and the retailer showed the 32G item was only 3G of RAM. Disbelieving I checked at the manufacturer's site where it was confirmed.
Simply looked up the Which recommendation and the retailer showed the 32G item was only 3G of RAM. Disbelieving I checked at the manufacturer's site where it was confirmed.
But it's not the owner's personal storage, I've just discovered this cynical con, it's their bloated OS. Any reasonable individual interprets memory as RAM and they know it. They can't hide their blatant lie behind a pretence that ROM counts as "storage memory". (Almost as bad as mobile companies claiming unlimited data and then limiting it.) They all get away with "murder" these days. And the law allows it and the public excuses it.
It is impossible for you to write to Read Only Memory. If you are saving more Gb of data than you have RAM to store it in then either you've added a card that your mobile will use or someone has something wrong. The problem is that the item claims to have a large amount of memory which in the spec it admits it doesn't have.