Friday, October 25, 2013

How to Locate Your Android Phone/Tablet Using Google

This guide will tell you how to:

1. Configure your Android Device for locating. 2. Locate your Android Device on Google maps. 3. Lock your Android Device. 4. Reset the PIN on your Android Device.

1 Configure your Android Device:

2 Go to the android market and install the Google Apps Device Policy Application.

3 Go to Settings> Accounts> and Add a new account (This will be your Google Apps Account).

4 While adding the Google Apps account you may or may not be redirected to the Google Apps Device Policy App.

5 Once you finish adding the Google Apps Account in the Accounts Section, go to the Google Apps Device Policy App and configure the app to link with the newly added account.

6 Viewing the device on the Internet:

7 Log in to your Google Apps Account on the web.

8 Once logged in, copy this URL (https://www.google.com/apps/mydevices/b/0) into another tab in the browser you are currently using.

9 You will be redirected to a page with your device and Information pertaining to it.

10 Use the Service:

11 You will be given options to -

12 Manage (Reset PIN, Ring Device, Lock Device etc.)

13 Locate using Google maps

14 View your device information -

15 Model: XXXX

16 Hardware Id: 012XXXX043XXXX5

17 Android Version: 2.X.X

18 Last Sync: 14 Dec, 20XX 05:X2 AM

19 Registered: 13 Dec, 20XX 03:X2 PM

20 Status: Active

•Make sure the Google Apps Device Policy application is installed on your phone via the android market (The corporate email sync will not function without this). •Multiple devices can be located using the My Devices feature in Google for Business and Education customers.

•Your company's system administrator can see your device information when the device is linked to the Google Apps Account.

You'll Need

A Google Apps Account (more information in sources below). Google Apps Device Policy App installed on your Android Device Your Google Apps Account to be linked with the Google Apps Device Policy App.

How to Get the Right Tablet the First Time

So you want to get a touch tablet, right? If so, this is probably the best article you could be reading because there are not many guides for choosing the best known tablet out there. This guide is a little bit different. You actually can choose between your price range, and get the right tablet, the first time! Hence the title.

1 Have an idea what its primary purpose will be. What kind of tablet do you want to invest or spend on? This can be a variety of answers. And don't be afraid to spend a little more then you bargain for; in the end, you will most likely enjoy your tablet. •Want to do work and play at the same time? Choose the iPad. •Need to design artwork, Photoshop? Choose the Wacom brand. •Want to use a stylus with your tablet? Just go to the electronics store. •Want to just play (games, books, shopping)? Choose the iPad.

2 Choose a price range that's right for you. Never buy a tablet for over $1,000 if you just intend to spend less than a couple of hours on it.

3 Consider the storage you think you will need. How much storage do you plan on using? In most cases, when the storage (example: 16GB) goes up then the price goes up about $150 every time it doubles. If you're planning on having a low storage, a 16GB (gigabyte) storage is fine. If you plan on using a whole lot of storage, such as playing games or just using it for a while, try 32GB to 64GB. Having anymore than that would just cost more money, and you're probably not going to use it all.

Tips •Don't buy a tablet for over $1,000. There are many tablets that can fit your budget for your need foe less than that. •Don't get a storage capacity of more than 64GB. Why? Because it takes a while to fill that up.

How to Use an Android Tablet

Android tablets are easy-to-use devices that can be used for multiple purposes like: checking e-mails, playing games, watching videos, listening to music. It can also be used as a camera or camcorder. However, an Android tablet is a bit different from an Android mobile phone. Not only are the hardware specifications different, the user-interface is different too.



1 Set up your Android. While the OS is very easy to use, you'll need a Google account to download apps via the Google Play Store.

2 Understand the functionality of the three-basic touch-capacitive keys. These basic control keys are used for controlling applications and other basic commands: •The home button: This is used to jump to the home screen of your Android device. If pressed in between another activity (game, or application), the OS puts the activity in the background. Using this button will, usually, not shut down any application or game; instead, it will run in the background. •The back button: This is used to go to the previous page or activity. •Multi-tasking button: Android tablets running Ice Cream Sandwich (4.0) and higher will have a multi-tasking button (parallelogram-shaped button). Tapping this button will give a list of all applications running in the background. Swapping a running application to the left or right (in the multi-task screen) will close the application. This is particularly useful to clear RAM and speed up the device. •Older Android tablets may have an Menu (or settings) button (represented by three parallel horizontal lines). This button gives the user access to additional options for particular apps. This button is not found on devices running Ice Cream Sandwich or Jelly Bean out of the box.

3 Check the version of Android your tablet is running on. Different tablets run on different versions of the Android OS. The Android version can be found in the About Phone section of the settings panel. •Most tablets run on Android Ice Cream Sandwich (4.0) or higher.[1] The latest version of Android is Jelly Bean (4.2.2). Generally, the higher the version of Android, better will be the device performance. •Some older tablets run on Android Honeycomb (3.x). Honeycomb was a tablet-specific version which wasn't available for mobile phones running on Android. •The OS version gives a brief idea of the features packed in a tablet. For example: Tablets (and phones) running on Jelly Bean version have Google Now[2] (voice-assistant service by Google) in-built.

4
The Play Store application icon on an Android deviceThe Play Store application icon on an Android device Download applications. Google Play Store has a vast collection of tools, applications and games that will make your Android experience much better. •Download an office app that will help you view and/ or edit documents. Most Android tablets come with an in-built document viewer. If you want to download a free office editor for Android, try downloading the Kingsoft Office application. •Try using your Android device to take notes, add calendar events and get directions.[3] It can be used for various other activities too. •Try installing wikiHow's Android application that contains our huge collection of how-to articles!

5 Customize your Android. Google's open source[4] Android OS gives you the power to customize your device. •Make custom Android smart actions. Setting up smart actions will carry out specific activities when specific conditions are met. Smart actions can be customized to suit your needs. Note: Smart actions may not be available on all devices. However, you can download similar apps from the Google Play Store. •Adjust Screen Timeout. The screen timeout time can be a drain on the battery, especially if it is too long. Setting up a screen timeout is the one of the best ways to save power while your phone is on. •Create your own wallpapers, widgets, etc.

6 Speed up your device. Speeding up your device can be done in a number of ways[5]: • An OTA (Over The Air) software update option, found under Settings > About phone > Software Update > Update Update your version/ firmware. Device manufacturers roll out updates occasionally to fix bugs, reduce lags, and improve performance. Be on the look out for updates for your device. •Download a task-killer and anti-virus applications. Some devices come with an in-built task manager while most don't. Task manager will allow you to close the apps that are running in the background (and use up RAM). Anti-virus application will keep you safe from any external threats. •Remove unneeded widgets from the home screen. Widgets are useful to quickly access important apps or get information. However, unneeded widgets use up a lot of processing power and will slow down your tablet.

7 Configure Sync options. Syncing is an efficient way to transfer data like pictures, videos, contacts, messages, emails, and more, between many devices (including your PC). To configure synchronization options for apps or accounts, go to Settings -> Accounts & sync.[6] •Sync your Gmail emails, contacts, calender with Windows Outlook or other accounts.[7] •Set up Gmail in Microsoft Outlook. Set the server type to IMAP. Set the incoming mail server to imap.gmail.com and outgoing mail server to smtp.gmail.com. Enter log-in information (Gmail username and password). Under "More Settings", open the Advanced tab. Set incoming server to 933 with SSL encryption and your outgoing server to 587 with TLS encryption.[8] •Set up Gmail in Mozilla Thunderbird. Mozilla Thunderbird is a cross-platform open-source email client. To set up Gmail in Thunderbird, first, enable IMAP in your Google account settings. Open Thunderbird and go to Tools -> Account Settings. Add a new mail account; and input your name, email-address and password. Thunderbird will automatically try to configure your Gmail account for Thunderbird.[9]

8 Back-up your data. Back up your data to your computer, mobile phone or an external storage. You can also try backing up on the Google Cloud.

Tips •Set up a maze lock (if your device supports it), for additional security. To set this up, go to Settings --> Location & Security. •Switching off your device completely will clear temporary data and the device will run faster. •Try downloading a file manager that will allow you to access external storage easily.

Warnings •Installing Custom ROMs might give you additional features, but they will void your warranty and could affect the device's performance. If this is not done correctly, it could cause irreversible damage to your device. •The path for setting up the steps might vary, depending on your manufacturer and Android version.

Thursday, October 24, 2013

As Tablet Wars Heat Up, Apple's New iPads Get Serious Upgrades

BY Amy Gahran | October 22, 2013|
Not that Apple would ever admit it, but the new line of iPads launched today are responding to some key challenges that have emerged as the tablet market has grown more crowded and fierce.

New research from Gartner shows that tablet shipments are expected to jump 53 percent this year, compared to 2012. Apple can no longer take for granted its initial dominance in this fast-growing and increasingly diverse market. Consumers want choices -- which may explain why in September Android tablets collectively overtook iPads as the most popular type of tablet.

Today Apple unveiled the new iPad Air: a thinner, lighter full-size tablet. Apple also announced upgrades to the iPad Mini.

Here's a look at some of the new features and what they mean for consumers.

Weight: One of the main criticisms of full-size (10-inch) tablets has been their weight. So lighter is probably the biggest benefit of the iPad Air. This device weighs just one pound, down from 1.4 pounds for the iPad 2. For a device that you’d likely hold in your hands for significant chunks of time (reading books, watching videos, video calling, etc.) the decreased weight would make it less tiring to hold your iPad longer -- something users are likely to value.

Meanwhile, most other 10-inch tablets still weigh in at around 1.3 to 1.4 pounds. The newly released Microsoft Surface 2 weighs in at more than 2 pounds, not even including its much-touted snap-on keyboard accessory. Microsoft doesn’t even list weight under the specs for the Surface 2, it’s probably not something they’d want to highlight.

Related: Tablet Wars: Nokia Lumia 2520 vs. Microsoft Surface 2

Performance: In tablets, performance has been a weak spot. Tablet users often complain about how these devices are generally slower to render images, open files, etc. compared to desktop or laptop computers.

All new Apple mobile products launched today, including the iPad Air, offer faster performance thanks to Apple’s new A7 64-bit processor -- which debuted earlier this year with the iPhone 5S, and has been getting positive reviews. They also all feature MIMO Wi-Fi, which offers faster data throughput (up to 300 mbps), and a Retina display (now also on the new iPad Mini). These hardware features should make the new Apple mobile devices feel noticeably snappier and more responsive than many competing devices.

Cost: This has gotten to be a key market pressure for tablets. Apple has always been able to sell their products at a substantial price premium, but they appear to be less ambitious in terms of pricing for the iPad Air.

The iPad Air should be available in retail stores November 1. Prices for the iPad Air start at $499 for Wi-Fi only ($629 Wi-Fi + cellular, including LTE on some carriers), making it the highest-end iPad offering. If that’s too pricey, Apple is continuing to sell the full-size iPad 2, and it has dropped its price as it now starts at $399 for Wi-Fi and $529 for Wi-Fi + 3G.

This means the iPad Air isn’t hugely more expensive than Google’s Nexus 10 tablet (Wi-Fi only, starts at $399), and it’s also less pricey than the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1- 2014 Edition, which starts at $529 for Wi-Fi only. So, quietly, Apple's mobile products are easing off on the premium pricing.

Related: Why iPads Are the New Retail Design Must Have

For the first couple of years after the debut of the first iPad, Apple contended that the 10-inch tablets were what consumers wanted. So the company didn’t debut the 7-inch iPad Mini until last year, well after several other 7-inch tablets had hit the market (including the unexpectedly popular, though lower-performing, Kindle Fire tablets from Amazon). But new research from Gartner shows that smaller tablets are highly popular: 47 percent of consumers surveyed own a tablet that’s 8 inches or less.

One of the main attractions of smaller tablets, aside from how they’re more portable, is the smaller price tag. The new iPad Mini with a 7.9-inch Retina display, which will be available later in November, starts at $399 for Wi-Fi ($529 for Wi-Fi plus cellular, including LTE on some carriers).

Apple also will continue to sell the original iPad Mini (no Retina display), and it has dropped the starting price to $299 (down from $329). This puts an iPad Mini in at roughly comparable price range to the new 7-inch Kindle Fire HDX, which starts at $229 -- but for that extra $70, iPad Mini users get markedly superior features, performance and battery life.

Read more: http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/229570#ixzz2ieAo9LOZ

Why Android Is Winning The Tablet Wars

Android tablets took the lead from Apple AAPL +0.98%‘s iOS tablets in Q1 of 2013 (source). This is a huge change from three years ago, when Apple invented the modern tablet.

Global electronic tablet market share by OS and Vendor; data via IDC and Strategy Analytics.

What is happening and where is this going? I see four driving forces:

1.Tablets are more than a media consumption device now 2.Android has matured 3.The rise of Samsung 4.Democratization of tablets

Tablet computing is well beyond the control of Apple’s iTunes content delivery system. In the early days of the iPod and the iPhone (ancestors of the iPad), you could hardly use the product without periodic plug-ins to iTunes to get content and configure the device. After that Apple’s App Store held hegemony on the apps that give tablets value.

Data via CivicScience.com; See end notes on category definitions.

Those days are over the biggest usage mode for tablets is communications: e-mail, web, social media, etc., where Apple has no advantage in content access. Work usage is also important, and the productivity apps for Apple and Android are fairly comparable.

The second biggest use is media and entertainment. Apple had a big advantage at the start here, but the playing field here has been leveled to a large extent. eBooks and music are equally available on Android, a wide selection of video is available from Google GOOG +2.42% Play, Netflix NFLX +2.39%, and Amazon, and there are numerous Android tablet games, although probably fewer options than iOS.

Android itself has come a long way, most recently on tablets. Android 3.0 “Honeycomb” two years ago was weak and buggy, however the current 4.2 “Jelly Bean” release is full-featured and slick. Market research suggests that Android users love their OS just as much as iOS users love theirs (more). Combined with a nice hardward platform like the Nexus7, Android delivers a very competitive tablet.

And, Samsung is a force of nature. At CES in 2011 they had a Galaxy product targeting every Apple mobile product from the iTouch to the iPad. They experiment with many size and design variations: they were early with the now-dominant 7 inch tablet and pioneered the surprisingly successful “phablet” concept (~5″ devices that are big phones or small tablets). Consumer research showed that Samsung’s brand did not match Apple’s, and they responded with a brand marketing blitz that makes them the biggest U.S. spender in mobile electronics, including LeBron James in a Superbowl ad. Samsung is now arguably a stronger brand than Android; the two together are formidable.

If Tablets Are Replacing Computers, Why Doesn't the iPad Have a Keyboard?

By Will Oremus

Apple unveiled its new iPad Air on Tuesday, and as expected, it’s impressively light and sleek. But it’s missing something that a lot of Apple-watchers had hoped it would have: an attachable keyboard.

There were rumors ahead of Tuesday’s event that Apple was looking into iPad keyboard covers along the lines of Microsoft’s Touch Cover, which doubles as a touch-sensitive keyboard and touchpad for Microsoft’s Surface tablets. But the covers didn’t materialize. Instead Apple simply rolled out a new batch of smart covers, which is something of a misnomer: The only thing smart about smart covers is that they put your computer to sleep when you close them and wake it up when you open them. There’s no keyboard, no touchpad, no accessory port. Sure, you can add a separate wireless keyboard to your tablet, or buy a third-party keyboard case. But these tend to be ugly and bulky to carry around, which rather defeats the purpose of getting an iPad Air. Without a real keyboard, a tablet can’t plausibly claim to replace anyone’s laptop for work purposes. So why didn’t Apple build one? As I wrote in my (admittedly harsh) first take on the Microsoft Surface 2, the fact is that almost no one today uses tablets for work. People use computers for work, smartphones for communication, and tablets for entertainment when they’re on an airplane, on the toilet, or relaxing on the couch. Some may also use tablets in mobile work environments, like a doctor’s office or an Apple store, but rarely if ever for Word processing, or while sitting at a desk. Microsoft is trying to change that. And, to be fair, it’s on the leading edge of what many industry watchers are convinced will be an inexorable trend toward convergence of tablets and laptops.

But trying to change people’s habits is a risky business model. It might make sense for Microsoft, which came late to the game and is struggling to carve out a niche. For Apple, whose iPads dominate the market, it’s much safer to keep optimizing those devices for the purposes to which they’re best-suited: movies, email, games and the like. To Apple, even a beautiful, ultra-slim touch keyboard probably seems like a distraction from the ultimate goal of building the perfect mobile entertainment machine.

The big question is whether Apple is sacrificing long-term market leadership for short-term profit. Those who believe convergence is just a matter of time might view Microsoft as the plucky insurgent in the market, slowly but surely disrupting the established business model upon which Apple relies. In that scenario, Apple’s iPad sales—not to mention the sales of those fancy new computers it just announced—will continue to plateau and eventually decline unless or until it gives in and follows Microsoft’s lead. How’s that for a tech-industry turnabout?

It’s also conceivable that Tim Cook is right, and that the tablet-laptop convergence has been overhyped. As he told investors last year:

Anything can be forced to converge. The problem is that the products are about tradeoffs. You begin to make tradeoffs to the point where what you have left at the end of the day doesn’t please anyone.

So Microsoft is banking on people replacing laptops with tablets, and Apple is banking on people continuing to buy both.

Here’s an idea: They’re both right. Tablets will replace computers, but only for people who can’t afford computers. As the global masses continue to come online, they’ll increasingly use Surface-style hybrids for both work and entertainment. (Whether Microsoft can actually capture that market is a question for another story.) But the world’s wealthy will reject the tradeoffs that those devices require. Instead, they’ll continue for the foreseeable future to own at least three devices: a desktop or laptop for work, a tablet for mobile applications, and either a smartphone or smart watch for instant communication. And they’ll continue to largely prefer Apple’s finely honed products to those of its less tightly focused competitors.

The downside for Apple in that arrangement is that its iPads will never conquer the world. Indeed, as the Statista chart below shows, iPad sales growth has tapered sharply in the past year, and the iPad Air may not change that. But this fits with the approach that Apple took earlier this year when it declined to produce a really cheap iPhone. The upside is that Cupertino gets to keep its grip on the high end of the global marketplace, with all the fat profit margins that entails. And if Apple can’t make its next fortune selling tablets to people who can’t afford multiple devices, maybe it can make it selling smart watches to people who can.

Tablet wars heat up as Apple rolls off new iPads

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Google Nexus 7 (2013)

Google Nexus 7 (2013)

The new Nexus 7 has usurped the iPad mini's long-held reign as the thinnest sub-10-inch tablet around. At 7.9 x 4.5 x 0.34 inches and 10.24 ounces, the new Nexus 7 is narrower, thinner and lighter than Apple's 8-inch tablet (7.87 x 5.3 x 0.28 inches, 11.04 ounces).

The new Nexus 7 is slightly taller, but narrower and thinner than the original Nexus 7 (7.8 x 4.7 x 0.41 inches), and almost two ounces lighter. It also cuts a slimmer profile than the Amazon Kindle Fire HD (7.6 x 5.4 x 0.4 inches, 13.9 ounces).

Google Nexus 7 (2013)Like most other 7-inch tablets, the Nexus 7 is designed to be held in portrait mode, and its thinner dimensions make it easier to do so with just one hand. As before, this ASUS-made tablet has a soft-touch plastic back, but the dimples from the original Nexus 7 are gone, which isn't a great loss.

MORE: Best Apps 2013

In this orientation, the Nexus 7's 1.2-MP front camera is on the top bezel, but offset a little to the right. On top is a 3.5mm headphone jack, and the power button and volume rocker sit on the upper right side. The backward-sloping sides of the tablet hide these buttons from view, but were fairly easy to press. On the bottom is a microUSB port for charging the device.

As before, there's no microSD card slot for adding storage, so you'll have to make due with the 26.11GB of available space on the 32GB model. The $229 version comes with 16GB of storage. Display

Google Nexus 7 (2013)The new Nexus 7 is the first 7-inch tablet to sport a 1920 x 1200 display, and the difference shows. The highest resolution to this point on a 7-inch tablet has been 1280 x 800, such as on the MeMO Pad HD 7 and the Kindle Fire HD.

Donald Sutherland's white beard and eye wrinkles were sharp and defined as we watched a 1080p trailer for "The Hunger Games." While these details were also fairly sharp on the MeMO Pad HD 7, we noticed that they weren't as crisp, and there was a lot more visual noise in the gray wall behind Sutherland than on the Nexus 7. Google Nexus 7 (2013)When looking at a 1920 x 1200 image of a black cat on the new Nexus 7 and the MeMO Pad, there was much greater definition in its face on the Nexus 7, and the Nexus 7 did a better job of showing the nuances where the light bounced off the cat's black fur. Also, there was virtually no pixelation in the white whiskers, whereas they appeared more pixelated on the MeMO Pad.

The IPS panel made everything viewable even from oblique angles, and the Gorilla Glass helps protect the Nexus 7 against accidental falls. It's also very bright: At 531 lux, the Nexus 7's display was nearly 200 points higher than the tablet average (360 lux), and outshone the iPad mini (457 lux) and the Kindle Fire HD (436 lux).

MORE: Best Tablets 2013

Audio

For its second 7-inch tablet, Google added a second speaker, and it makes a world of difference. Where the original single-speaker Nexus sounded a bit tinny, the stereo speakers on the new Nexus 7 belted out loud and crisp audio. The guitar in The Lumineers "Charlie Boy" strummed out plaintively, and high and midtones were well-balanced. Still, you can't get decent bass on something so thin. Low ends, such as the bass line on Jay Z's "On to the Next One," were barely audible.

Like the Kindle Fire HD 7, the Nexus 7's speakers are on the long ends, so things sound best when you're holding the tablet in landscape mode. Don't grip it too tight, though, or you'll risk covering the speakers. Android 4.3

Google Nexus 7 (2013)The Nexus 7 is the first device to run Android 4.3, the latest version of Google's tablet and phone-based operating system. Instead of being a wholesale change, this new version of the OS tweaks a few things here and there. You're still presented with the same lock screen as Jelly Bean 4.2, which means you can unlock the Nexus 7 to the home screen or directly to Google Now, but not the camera or app of your choice.

While Multi user support was available on Android 4.2, this feature now includes the ability to set specific limitations for each profile. So, for example, when we created a restricted profile for little Bobby, we could specify which apps he could access. By default, all are turned off. Some apps, such as Email and Gmail, are not supported in this mode. Google Nexus 7 (2013)This is a good step toward enabling parental controls, but the Kindle Fire HD is better. Using Amazon's FreeTime feature, you can not only set what apps a child can use, but also specify the amount of time he or she can use the tablet, and what kind of content they can view.

Android 4.3 also has a new modular DRM framework, enabling developers to integrate digital rights management into their streaming protocols. The first app to take advantage of this is Netflix, whose app now supports streaming 1080p content.

Keyboard

Google Nexus 7 (2013)Although it's running Android 4.3, Nexus 7's keyboard layout remains unchanged. In portrait and landscape mode, users get a full QWERTY keyboard with gray letters on a black background. What's different now is that the keyboard supports Swype-style Gesture Typing. We appreciate that floating previews appear above where you're swiping. We also like the current-word completion capability and next-word suggestions.

Go into the Language & Input control panel, though, and you can enable the new Emoji keyboard, of which there are hundreds to choose from. It's not a critical improvement, but it's nice to have.

MORE: 5 Best Keyboard Apps for Android

Performance

Packing a 1.5-GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 Pro processor, 2GB of RAM and a 400-MHz Adreno 320 GPU, the new Nexus 7 simply blew away the competition in our benchmark tests. On Quadrant, which measures overall performance, the new Nexus 7's score of 4,949 was about 1,500 points higher than average (3,449), as well as the MeMO Pad HD 7 (3,414). The Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 8.0 came close, at 4,603.

The Nexus 7 really shone when it came to graphics performance. On 3DMark11 Ice Storm, the new Nexus 7 racked up a score of 11,580, nearly triple the category average of 4,140, as well as the original Nexus 7 (3,408), the ASUS MeMO Pad HD 7 (3,117) and even more expensive tablets like the Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 8.0 (3,069).

Google Nexus 7 (2013)What does all that extra horsepower mean? It took just 7 seconds to launch "Riptide GP 2" on the Nexus 7. By comparison, the MeMO Pad HD 7 took an excruciating 44 seconds. Within the game itself, scenes were much faster to load on the Nexus 7, too.

MORE: Top iPad Alternatives

One of the benefits of Android 4.3 is support for OpenGL ES 3.0 graphics, which will allow for greater detail and effects within games. At launch, the "Riptide GP 2" Jet Ski racing game was the only one available that supported this technology. On the Nexus 7, water seemed much more realistic and immersive than on the MeMO Pad HD 7, and appeared to flow much more naturally around our racer. Camera

Google Nexus 7 (2013)Where the original Nexus 7 only had a front-facing camera, the new Nexus 7 has a rear 5-MP shooter to go along with the front 1.2-MP camera. Outdoor shots taken with the rear camera were generally very good. The tablet was able to pick up fairly fine detail in pink and purple flowers, and didn't blow out white petals too much. Inside a dim cathedral, the Nexus 7's camera struggled a bit, as we saw a good deal of visual noise in the gray columns. A 1080p video we shot of a passing cable car looked colorful, crisp and smooth, and the Nexus 7's microphone clearly recorded the conductor ringing the bell.

The camera app itself has a new set of controls that are more minimalist, but make it harder to change settings. In the middle of the screen is a large reticle with two brackets that turn green when the camera is focused on an object. To the right is a large circle that turns blue when shooting stills and red when filming video. Above that is a smaller circle that opens a settings menu on the lower third of the middle of the screen. The three initial icons are to change the exposure compensation, open more settings, or change which camera is being used. Selecting more settings lets you change the resolution, white balance and scene mode.

MORE: 10 Best Android Apps You're Not Using

Google Nexus 7 (2013)We find this new layout more difficult to use for two reasons. First, placing them in the middle of the screen makes it harder to change settings using your thumb. Second, you can't back out of menus incrementally, so if you're in a sub-sub menu, you have to start all over from the beginning if you want to change something else. We still love the Photo Sphere feature, which takes Panorama mode to a whole new level. You can take a hemispherical image in a few easy steps. A grid appears on screen, with little dots arrayed around you. Simply move the camera until a dot is centered in the frame, and hold the Nexus 7 steady until it takes a photo. Repeat this process until you've got photos for every section, and then the tablet stitches them together to create a 360-degree panorama. While the Sphere images we took weren't seamless, we were very impressed with how quickly the Nexus 7 stitched them together--usually no more than 15 to 20 seconds.

Apps

Google Nexus 7 (2013)One of the limitations of any Android tablet is the relative paucity of tablet-optimized apps compared to the 375,000 dedicated apps for the iPad and iPad mini. When we opened the redesigned Google Play store, six tabs at the top (Apps, Games, Movies & TV, Music, Books, Magazines) directed us to specific content categories. Beneath that was a row called "Best of the Best," highlighting all-time music albums. Scrolling down farther is a row of recommended content, followed by movies, games, books, TV shows and so on.

Within the apps section, the first row shows three apps in portrait mode, and five in landscape. Each panel shows the app icon, its name and a star rating and price.

MORE: 10 Best Android Apps You're Not Using

On our Nexus 7, the first five apps shown in Play Pics (Apps we Love) were Zeebox, Huffpost, Umano (a news reader), Space Colony and Flipboard. Both Flipboard and Huffpost looked great on the Nexus 7. Other apps such as Pandora--which is the third most popular free app--still need some work. On Pandora, there are vast expanses of white space, and Facebook's news feed in landscape mode stretches across the entire screen, real estate that would better be served by showing your friends' status.

Battery Life

On the LAPTOP Battery Test (Web surfing via Wi-Fi), the 3950 mAh battery in the Nexus 7 lasted 8 hours and 26 minutes. That's about 1:20 longer than the category average, and an hour longer than the original Nexus 7 and the Kindle Fire HD (7:26 and 7:30). The Galaxy Tab 3 8.0 lasted a few minutes longer, at 8:39, and the iPad Mini lasted 8:16 over LTE.

Wireless

ASUS packed a bunch of wireless radios into the new Nexus 7, including dual-band Wi-Fi (2.4G/5G) 802.11 a/b/g/n, NFC and Bluetooth 4.0 LE. Bluetooth 4.0 LE will allow the tablet to connect to Bluetooth Smart devices; for example, low-power gadgets such as heart rate monitors. However, we can't see many people taking their tablet out for a run.

Configurations

Google will offer three versions of the Nexus 7. Our review unit, which has 32GB of storage, costs $269. The starting model costs $229, and has 16GB of storage. A 4G LTE version, which will be offered through AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon for $349.

Verdict

Google Nexus 7 (2013)The market for 7-inch Android tablets is flooded with dozens of inexpensive devices that cost less than $200. Some of these slates are very good, too, such as the $149 ASUS MeMo Pad 7. But the new Google Nexus 7 tablet is well worth the slight splurge. Not only is it the thinnest and lightest slate with this screen size, it's the most powerful, too, and boasts a high-definition screen and stereo speakers. We just wish Google included a microSD Card slot. In terms of the small tablet competition, the Amazon Kindle Fire HD offers better parental controls, but the new Nexus 7 has it beat on screen resolution, performance and battery life. The $100 more expensive Apple iPad mini benefits from a much larger selection of tablet apps, and some may prefer its larger 8-inch screen size. However, its 1024 x 768 resolution looks positively dated compared to the new Nexus. Those looking for more features, such as the ability to control their TV, will like the $299 Galaxy Tab 3 8.0. Overall, though, the Nexus 7 is now the best 7-inch tablet and offers the most value of any slate under 10 inches.

Apple tablet slims down with iPad Air as competition grows

Apple has launched a smaller and lighter iPad – the iPad Air – which the supplier claims is a leap ahead in tablet computing. As Microsoft pushes into the tablet space and low-cost Android devices become more popular, Apple is reasserting itself in the sector. iPadAir-290px.jpg The iPad Air weighs 1lb and is 20% thinner and 28% lighter than its predecessor. iPad Air has a 9.7in retina display and uses the Apple-designed A7 chip – also used in the iPhone 5S – with 64-bit desktop-class architecture. “iPad created an entirely new mobile computing experience, and the new iPad Air is another big leap ahead,” said Philip Schiller, senior vice-president of worldwide marketing at Apple. Apple also announced a new iPad mini with a 7.9in retina display. Gartner analyst Mikako Kitagawa recently said tablets are rapidly replacing PCs, but Android-based devices are gaining market share. "Consumers' shift from PCs to tablets for daily content consumption continued to decrease the installed base of PCs both in mature as well as in emerging markets. A greater availability of inexpensive Android tablets attracted first-time consumers in emerging markets, and as supplementary devices in mature markets," he said. According to Reuters, Gartner analyst Carolina Milanesi said Apple sees Microsoft’s Windows-based tablet as a bigger threat than Android: "The iPad Air will compete with Surface Pro, not some rinky-dink Android tablet." Windows-based tablets appeal to CIOs. Matthew Oakeley, global IT head of Schroders, told Computer Weekly in an interview that he does not think the iPad will ever be a true corporate device. “I bet a lot of people bought iPads for work but don’t use them for work," he said. "The real problem is that, if you run a Microsoft Windows estate, you want something that can talk to it. The Surface looks like a prototype to something and I think I could eventually prefer it to an iPad. If Microsoft can deliver on it, I think it will have been very clever," he added.

Zinio

by David Needle October 26 2011 “Extra! Extra! Read all about it!” While the days of newsboys hawking newspapers are long gone, Zinio says you can “read all about it” if you own an Android tablet. Zinio announced this week that its Zinio Explore newsstand is now available for Android tablet users at the Android Market. Zinio Explore is offered alongside the “Shop” and “Read” sections designed to provide easy access to relevant topical stories across every major magazine genre, from sports to entertainment and business to lifestyle. Zinio said articles are updated daily, as new issues hit newsstands, and include such popular titles as Harvard Business Review, The Economist, Outside, T3, Marie Claire, Maxim, Rolling Stone and National Geographic. “With Zinio, just like browsing a newsstand, readers can pick a magazine and read a quick article,” Rich Maggiotto, President and CEO of Zinnio, said in a release. “But unlike a real-world newsstand, or any other digital newsstand, Zinio offers 5,000 magazines, covering every subject. Our readers can enjoy domestic titles, as well as hard-to-find content from around the world — we’re providing the first truly global newsstand.” According to Zinio, its users download millions of magazine issues a month in 33 languages and 20 currencies. The company lays claim to being the leader in digital and mobile content consumption, connection, and distribution. The service lets users search stories and topics that they are passionate about, share with friends, save and curate content, shop for products, and store their favorite magazines in Zinio across all of their favorite devices. San Francisco-based Zinio was founded in 2001 and privately held,