Ten years ago today, Google released the 2nd-generation Nexus 7, just days after a surprise announcement. Back then, Android tablets still felt fresh and exciting. It seemed like anything was possible, and things could only improve from there. Well, we know what happened next. But the depressing state of the tablet market to come was in no way the fault of the Nexus 7. In fact, this is still one of the best Android tablets ever made, and it’s worth looking back and showing it the honor and respect it deserves.

  • Saneless@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Or just some terrible flaw that’s obnoxious

    I have some 8" Lenovo tablet I got years and years ago. It’s fine for videos and such and that’s where I use it most. It also has 2 forward facing speakers. Very decent, balanced sound. Low on space because android sucks under 64GB but it’s manageable

    Any “upgrades” to it over the years have had single speakers or some other annoying flaw so I haven’t upgraded

    I’ve tried Samsung ones but even their newer ones are slower than my 5 year old one. It’s so annoying

      • Saneless@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Ok, that makes it even more sad what they’re doing. Feature wise it was already worse in my experience, but actually worse for performance? Geez

        Guess I’ll just have to keep my Tab4 8 alive even longer

      • unix84@lemmy.sdf.org
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        1 year ago

        I had the T10 and it was horrible. The display was poor and pixelated and it took the entire first day to update software, which was required on first login.

        I seriously thought to return it, the update was taking so long. Eventually it let me log in.

        But then it lasted six months before the screen glitched out and stopped working.

      • ShortFuse@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        None of those are 8.x inches. They’re all 10" or greater. Once we’re talking 10+ inches, I’d just use a Surface Go. It seems nobody besides Apple wants to sell a tablet in that form factor that has decent speed.

        Even the Lenovo M9 is vastly superior to the M8 in terms of CPU. Good 8 inch tablets outside the iPad Mini don’t exist. I’d gladly pay $400 for something that’s good on Android. I’ve even thrown money away for a Dell Venue 5855.

        The only reason I stopped using my Tab S 8.4 was because you can only get so far trying to keep it alive with LineageOS.

      • Saneless@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        All Samsung? And maybe that’s the case, relatively, but going from Lenovo with pretty much stock android to a newer Samsung was a very noticeable downgrade

        • Mike Stevens 🇦🇺 S23U@lemdro.idM
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          1 year ago

          Sorry yes, those are all Samsung model names that I was listing.

          Well, I can’t speak for the Lenovo experience as I’ve never used one, and I’ll happily admit that any Samsung device needs a little tweaking to begin with, but I use my Tab S8 regularly for editing 60mb RAW photos off my full-frame camera and I can confidently say it performs very well.

          My daughter uses my Tab S6 Lite and it’s more than up to meeting her demands — which includes a lot of educational games and so on.

          My son uses my Tab S4 and he’s had no complaints either.

          I mean, there’s not much else a tablet is meant for, really!

          • Saneless@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            And now that I look it up, it’s a $500 tablet? This discussion was around the cheap media consumer ones that are $150 give or take. At $500 I would just get a $1000 laptop