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**** Ipad 2 Vs Sony's New Tablet Vs Other Andriod Tablets


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Posted

which one is best

ipad2
sony tablet
black berry play book
amazon kindle


??
Please suggest

Posted

cheapest is the kindle. the next is the play book and then comes sony tab. Finally ipad.

Posted

[quote name='Chocolateboy' timestamp='1322363298' post='3129479']
cheapest is the kindle. the next is the play book and then comes sony tab. Finally ipad.
[/quote]

india ki .... they just use it for skping and yahoo msging

which one ?

Posted

[quote name='TomandJerry' timestamp='1322363432' post='3129484']

india ki .... they just use it for skping and yahoo msging

which one ?
[/quote]

hmm only skype ki ante go for ipad... kindle ki cam ledu...

Posted

[quote name='TomandJerry' timestamp='1322363432' post='3129484']

india ki .... they just use it for skping and yahoo msging

which one ?
[/quote]

ala aite ipad vaddu le baa.. costly.

think between the 3.

Sony price ekkuva undi still compared to the 3.

Playbook deals unnatlunnay chudu. 250$ i think somewhat.

Kindle is also fine. cheapest for 199. but andulo cam and microfne ledu. soo u cant use skype efficiently.

Posted

ASUS transformer ani kottaga vachindi. bestbuy vadu deal pettadanta. bavundi anta.

Posted

[url="http://youtu.be/9tAwHCDq-94"]http://youtu.be/9tAwHCDq-94[/url]

Posted

[img]http://cache.gawkerassets.com/assets/images/4/2011/11/medium_f5d4206a93aacbc753cf24af333f5782.jpg[/img]


[url="http://gizmodo.com/5649368/ultimate-tablet-showdown-ipad-vs-playbook-vs-galaxy-tab-vs-slate"]http://gizmodo.com/5649368/ultimate-tablet-showdown-ipad-vs-playbook-vs-galaxy-tab-vs-slate[/url]

Posted

[img]http://www1.pcmag.com/media/images/290462-tablet-comparison-chart.jpg?thumb=y[/img]

Posted

[img]http://cache.gawkerassets.com/assets/images/4/2011/11/e9e2221a647dbb60b2f67939136211b6.jpg[/img]

Posted

[b] Tablet Highlights[/b]
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For details and in-depth analysis see the Comparison Table below.[/size][/font]
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[b]Apple iPad 2 Highlights[/b][/size][/font]
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The iPad 2 has an excellent display, [url="http://www.displaymate.com/iPad_iPhone_ShootOut.htm"]virtually identical in performance to the impressive iPhone 4 Retina Display[/url], with a somewhat higher pixel resolution but a much lower pixel density of 132 ppi due to its much larger screen size. The iPad 2 IPS LCD display is fairly well calibrated and delivers bright images with excellent contrast, reasonably accurate colors and very good Viewing Angle performance with small color shifts but a large decrease in Brightness, which is the case even for the best LCDs. A major shortcoming is a reduced Color Gamut, but the iPad 2 improves on-screen image color saturation by steepening its intensity scale – a simple trick that is also used by the Galaxy Tab, but the other displays fail to implement this (and the Motorola Xoom does the reverse).[/size][/font]
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[b]Asus Transformer Highlights[/b][/size][/font]
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The Asus Transformer also has an IPS LCD like the iPad 2. It's not as bright or as well calibrated as the iPad 2 but it still delivers very good performance including very good contrast, reasonably accurate colors and very good Viewing Angle performance like the iPad 2. But the Transformer screen reflects 66 percent more ambient light than the iPad 2. It has an 18-bit color display, but produces 24-bit color by using dithering (except in the Android Gallery viewer where there is 16-bit color with dithering as discussed above).[/size][/font]
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[b]Motorola Xoom Highlights[/b][/size][/font]
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The display on the Motorola Xoom is a lower performance LCD than on the other Tablets, compounded by poor factory calibration. Colors and color saturation were much worse than the other displays, and the variation with Viewing Angle is awful. The Xoom screen reflects 49 percent more ambient light reflectance than the iPad 2. The Xoom also has a Dynamic Backlight that varies the screen brightness in a peculiar fashion – it slowly dims the screen based on the Average Picture Level down to about 60 percent and then just stops. It makes dim images dimmer – it's counterproductive and just strange display behavior… All of the other Tablet displays have standard Backlights, which don't vary the brightness with picture content (the Galaxy Tab makes it an option).[/size][/font]
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[b]Acer Iconia Highlights[/b][/size][/font]
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The Acer Iconia A500 also has a lower performance LCD like the Motorola Xoom, but it's better in a few decisive categories and is much better calibrated. Of particular noteworthiness, it was the definitive leader in Contrast Ratio, with more than double that of any other tested Tablet because of its very dark black. We triple checked this with some special DisplayMate test pattern measurements to make sure that it wasn't due to a Dynamic Backlight. But it really has a true very dark black, which is quite noticeable in a dark room. Unfortunately the black brightness increases rapidly with Viewing Angle. The Iconia also had a nicely calibrated intensity scale, but it would actually have been better off with a steeper intensity scale in order to increase color saturation in the same fashion as the iPad 2 and Galaxy Tab.[/size][/font]
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[b]Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 Highlights[/b][/size][/font]
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The Galaxy Tab display has a PLS (Plane to Line Switching) LCD, which is Samsung's version of IPS, and it performs comparably to IPS – sometimes a bit better and sometimes not. It's an impressive mobile display with a lot better standout performance than all of the other Android Tablets – except in one very important category… If you like to watch your HDTV with the Color Saturation control set to maximum then you will be right at home with the Galaxy Tab because Samsung has turned the color obnoxiously high with no way to lower it (see below). It's tolerable for images that don't have much color to begin with, but it hurts to look at images that have strong color content. Moderation rather than the sledge hammer approach to color would have resulted in an outstanding display. This could be fixed easily with a software update by adding a color picture control that lets users adjust the color to their liking—see our [url="http://www.displaymate.com/Tablet_ShootOut_2.htm#Recommendation_3"]Third to Fifth Recommendations[/url] below.[/size][/font]

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