Google has announced its Nexus 10 tablet. The Nexus 10 features a 10.1-inch PLS (plane-to-line switching) panel with 2,560x1,600-pixel resolution, displaying 299 pixels per inch (ppi). This announcement comes not a week after Apple announced its fourth-generation iPad, which launches later this week with a lower 2,048x1,536-pixel-resolution, 264ppi screen.
You'll be able to get a Nexus 10 in two memory configurations starting on November 13: $399 for 16GB and $499 for 32GB. The tablet will be available in the Google Play store.
Design and features
The Nexus 10 is manufactured by Samsung and houses the company’s new 1.7GHz dual-core Exynos 5250 processor, with ARM's Mali-T604 GPU. The tablet also ships with Android 4.2, includes 2GB of RAM, Bluetooth 4.0, NFC (near-field communication), micro USB, micro HDMI, a 1.9-megapixel front-facing camera and a a 5-megapixel back camera with LED flash. The Nexus 10 will not include a microSD slot.
The tablet will support Miracast wireless displays, which allows you to wirelessly stream content from your tablet to your HDTV. Also, through Android 4.2, the Nexus 10 includes support for multiple user profiles, and Google says to expect up to 9 hours of video battery life, which is about typical for a full-size tablet, but lower than what I've seen with the iPad (March 2012). Of course, once I get a Nexus 10 into my hands I'll be sure to put its battery through its paces.
First thoughts
So far, I like what I'm seeing here, especially from a specs perspective. I'm really interested to pit it against the Transformer Infinity and fourth generation iPad in a Nova 3/Riptide GP/GLBenchmark testing extravaganza! Hopefully, I'll get the chance soon.
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