It has taken two
years for Sony to enter the tablet market, and in that time every
manufacturer and their budget Taiwanese spin-off have colluded to fill
the tablet market with dross.
This presents both and opportunity
and a threat to Sony, and while there are many sub-standard tablets on
the market, some great work has been done by a few companies, and
there's now a handful of successful, great value Android tablets to
choose from.
You can check out our Android Tablet round-up to see how this slate measures up against three of its rivals below:
Aside from the obvious iPad 2, which is the gold standard of design and usability, Samsung has unleashed a flurry of tablets, from the excellent Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1, to the imminent Galaxy Tab 7.7 which boasts a vibrant AMOLED display.
Other notable competitors also include the Motorola Xoom, which is now aggressively priced at £349, and the Asus Eee Pad Transformer, and soon-to-be-released Eee Pad Slider, which both boast full, physical QWERTY keyboards.
To
launch into this crowded marketplace, Sony had to release something
different, and with the Sony Tablet S and the forthcoming Tablet P,
that's exactly what its done.
The Sony Tablet S is a curvaceous,
wedge-shaped tablet, which looks as if it has been folded out of a
single piece of textured black plastic. It's thicker at one side, with a
rounded edge, as if you'd taken a thin paper back, and folded the cover
back on itself to really get stuck into the story.
Aside from
making it look different to every other tablet on the market, the Sony
Tablet S's unique appearance isn't purely aesthetic. The design means
that typing is comfortable when laid flat on a table or desk, which is a
flaw in most flat tablets. The book-like design makes it easy to grip with one hand, making it perfect for browsing the web or reading ebooks.
The
Tablet S weighs just 600g, which makes it identical in weight to the
iPad 2. There's a plastic finish, which doesn't feel cheap, and it has a
textured back which offers grip for your hand.
While Sony has
done well to make the form stand out from its peers, the specs are a
standard affair emulating their rivals closely. There's a dual-core
Tegra 2 processor clocked at 1GHz, 1GB of memory, capacitive
touchscreen, and an SD expansion slot. The
Sony Tablet S also comes with a range of other features, which make it
really stand out from the crowd. There are front and rear cameras, 1080p
video capture and playback, PlayStation certification, which enables
users to access a range of exclusive titles, and a host of Sony created
apps, including a universal remote for controlling other Sony products.
The
tablet comes in two iterations, with 16GB and 32GB options available,
and it has set pricing at £399 for the 16GB version. This in itself is
an admission by Sony to the ferocity and difficulty of the tablet
market.
Sony tends to market itself as a premium manufacturer, and
set its pricing accordingly, but at £399, it has decided to compete
directly with companies it would look down upon in other markets.
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