Testseek.es han recogido 270 las revisiones expertas de el Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.0 inch GT-P1000 / P1010 y el grado medio es el 75%. Enrolle abajo y vea todas las revisiones para Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.0 inch GT-P1000 / P1010.
October 2010
(75%)
270 Críticas
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A los editores les gusta
El diseñ
Minimalista y bonito
Lo compacto que es. Muy buen tamaño y peso
Calidad de materiales aún siendo de plástico
Pantalla con certificación Gorilla glass
El consumo del equipo muy es baj
La frase “Todo en uno” nunca tuvo mejor sentido
Android
A los editores no les gusta
Muchas aplicaciones (no nativas) todavía no se adaptan al tablet
El navegador puede mejorarse aún más
El precio es demasiado elevado libre
No es accesible la batería por parte del usuario
Carencia de puerto micro USB o HDMi de serie sin necesidad de a
Still the best non-iPad tablet. Plans include Wi-Fi hotspots. Not much bloatware.
High up-front price. Blocks non-Android Market apps. AT&T's own apps are subpar.
AT&T must love selling iPads, because the carrier hasn't given consumers much reason to choose its Galaxy Tab over the four competing carrier models. Buy it now...
Publicación: 2010-12-21, Autor: Thomas , crítica de: recombu.com
Contrary to what Steve Jobs has said, you don't have to sand your fingers down to use the Samsung Galaxy Tab. The 7inch screen works fine. So it's not as big at the iPad's 9.7inch display, but it doesn't feel as cramped as certain people would have you th
So the Samsung Galaxy Tab can make calls and take pictures things that the iPad can't do. All well and good, but we found that the quality of voice calls was average at best and the pictures taken on the 3megapixel camera to be not that great.
No bloatware. Inexpensive low-data plan. Carrier gets great subscriber ratings.
Expensive service plan for moderate data users. Questionable upgrade path with the 'Honeycomb' Android upgrade coming in 2011.
U.S. Cellular lives up to its friendly rep with a squeaky-clean version of the best Android tablet, but it charges pretty high rates for moderate-to-heavy data users. Buy it now...
Resumen: Over the holidays, friends and family assaulted the Maximum Tech editors with tablet questions. We mostly fielded softballs: “Is the iPad really deserving of all its hype?” Yes. We originally gave it an 8 verdict, but now with its new multitasking supp...
Very portable, Reasonably fast, Android is flexible and somewhat optimized, Dual cameras with reasonable quality, microSDHC card slot, Flash as an option, Great for optimized games,
Too close to a smartphone in size, Some OS elements, many apps not optimized for tablets, Slow, sometimes stuttery web browsing, Flash often a liability, not a help, Slightly awkward button layout, Expensive versus an iPad for what you get.
With a retail price of $599 off-contract, the Galaxy Tab is $30 less than the comparable 16GB iPad, but we're not sure it's automatically a bargain. We’re really disappointed with the web browsing, Flash and video chat performance of the Tab and we’re ...
Resumen: Competing with Apple on quality, elegance, and innovation is nearly always a losing battle. By comparison, most products feel awkward and substandard. And so it is with the Samsung Galaxy Tab, a 7-inch, Android 2.2-powered touch-based slate device.Th...
Resumen: Video Review: The Samsung Galaxy Tab is both super thin and light with a 7" touch screen, Android 2.2, dual cameras and Flash support, all for $600. Kevin Pereira and Sara Underwood review what could be the coolest gadget for the holidays....
No USB port, Screen will attract fingerprints, No user-replaceable battery
The tablet market is hot right now obviously, and Samsung is ready to capture its share of the market with its Galaxy Tab. This tablet is widely available from all of the top four U.S. cellular providers at a competitive price. Powered by Android 2.2 (Fro...