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Wednesday 18 January 2012

Samsung P1000 Galaxy Tab …..Review








Well  SAMSUNGS smartphones, TABS and  ANDROIDS aee loved by everyone….

So please read this interesting review of Samsung P1000 Galaxy Tab …..

 
Introduction             
Not so long ago the tablet was a futureless species, stuck in an evolutionary dead-end. The technology and the the operating systems didn't offer the right balance of portability and usability to suit its needs. But just look at it now...
It was the Apple iPad that made the first splash and many other tablets are on their way on following its steps. We guess Samsung’s had an easier job than Apple bringing it to market. They already had the Samsung Galaxy S in the works and just had to make it bigger. Plus, they didn’t need to go to great lengths explaining what a tablet is and what it does.


If nothing else, the Galaxy Tab makes the S in Galaxy S meaningful. But the Tab itself is not size XL. In a nutshell, the new Samsung tablet is a Galaxy S with 3 inches added to the screen and 2 megapixels taken away from the camera. The Tab is equipped with the same 1GHz Hummingbird processor and PowerVR SGX540 graphics accelerator, 512MB RAM, a complete connectivity set and 16GB internal storage. The whole thing’s running on Android’s latest – v2.2 Froyo.
Key features
  • 190.09 x 120.45 x 11.98mm, 380g
  • Quad-band GSM and tri-band 3G support, 7.2 Mbps HSDPA and 5.76 Mbps HSUPA support
  • Full GSM phone calling functionality
  • 7" 16M-color TFT LCD capacitive touchscreen of WSVGA (600 x 1024) pixel resolution, Gorilla Glass
  • Android OS v2.2 with TouchWiz 3.0 UI customization
  • 1GHz Cortex A8 Hummingbird CPU
  • PowerVR SGX540 graphics accelerator
  • 512 MB of RAM
  • 3.2 MP autofocus camera with smile detection and geo-tagging
  • D1 (720 x 480 pixels) video recording at 30fps
  • Wi-Fi 802.11b/g/n support
  • GPS with A-GPS connectivity; Digital compass
  • 16GB internal storage, microSD slot
  • DivX and XviD video codec support, Full HD video playback
  • HD video out (with a proprietary dock)
  • Accelerometer, ambient-light and gyro sensor
  • Standard 3.5 mm audio jack
  • 30-pin connector and stereo Bluetooth v3.0
  • Office document editor
  • Secondary video-call camera
  • Swype predictive text input
  • Adobe Flash Player 10.1 support
  • Stereo speakers
  • 4000 mAh Li-Ion battery
  • Great audio quality
Main disadvantages
  • Poor viewing angles
  • Picture ghosting due to slow LCD response
  • Some apps incompatible with the new resolution
  • Gallery displays downsized images only
  • Quiet loudspeaker
  • No FM radio
  • No USB host support
That’s a long list of features but the full phone functionality is perhaps what sets it apart from the arch-enemy. Soon enough however, the Galaxy Tab will have other things to worry about than a certain Apple slate. With the likes of Dell Streak and even RIM’s PlayBook around, the Samsung tablet will be trying harder to convince users it’s the perfect fit between a phone and a laptop.


When Samsung unveiled the Galaxy Tab they stated that its purpose was not to rival the iPad but to bring something different to the tablet market. This might have just been a face saving statement but it’s obvious the iPad and the Galaxy Tab are each aimed at quite different types of users.
Samsung Galaxy P1000 Tab over Apple iPad
  • Lighter and smaller, easier on the pocket
  • Telephony (including 3G video calls)
  • 3.2 MP camera with D1 video recording @ 30 fps and LED flash
  • Android OS v2.2 Froyo
  • Proper multitasking (though the iPad is getting that too in a couple of months)
  • microSD card slot for memory expansion
  • Uses regular size SIM card
  • 16:9 widescreen display
  • Adobe Flash player 10.1
  • DivX/XviD 1080p video playback
  • Bluetooth 3.0
Apple iPad over Samsung P1000 Galaxy Tab
  • Larger and better screen
  • Metal body
  • iOS 3.1.3 with more than 25 000 apps tailor-made for it
  • Larger internal storage (iPad 64GB)
  • Better battery life
  • YouTube app streams higher-quality footage


It’s not about which one is superior: more powerful or better looking. It’s about what you need the tablet for. Some will call the Galaxy Tab plain smaller. To others it will mean more pocketable, manageable and easier to handle. Some need to make calls on their tablets, to others it’s irrelevant. Where some will see a small screen, others will appreciate the better DPI.
For all the good and bad of it, the Samsung P1000 Galaxy Tab has finally arrived at our place and we are ready to give it a test ride. Everything you may want to know starts right after the jump.

Unboxing the Samsung P1000 Galaxy Tab
The Samsung Galaxy Tab retail box is not nearly as exciting as the tablet itself. It has the basics covered and that’s that – an Apple-influenced charger, a 30-pin USB cable and a one-piece wired headset.
No, it’s not the best, but at least the package is better than the iPad’s, which only had a USB cable/charger combo included.


Of course we would have really appreciated a carrying case, a QWERTY keyboard or an HDMI dock, but these are things you’ll need to buy separately.


Samsung P1000 Galaxy Tab 360-degree spin
The Samsung Galaxy Tab fits somewhere between top-end smartphones like Galaxy S or iPhone 4 and the currently available tablets such as the 10-inch iPad. With a surface measuring 190 x 120mm, the Galaxy Tab is not a small device, but the 7” screen says it all.

The Samsung P1000 Galaxy Tab compared to the iPhone 4
Apple’s iPad is way bigger than the Galaxy Tab. The Samsung’s tablet has a proper wide aspect ratio and handles comfortably regardless of which orientation you prefer (portrait or landscape). The 12mm thickness is another thing to be impressed with.

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