Google's first tablet
Nexus 7
This morning, Google unveiled the Nexus 7 tablet at its I/O developers conference in San Francisco, California. Designed by Google but built by Taiwan's Asus, the seven-inch tablet has many features to it, both externally and internally. With a back-lit 7-inch 1280 x 800 HD IPS display covered in “Scratch-resistant Corning glass” and a Tegra 3 processor designed for video gaming and movie viewing, the Nexus 7 will have a newly enlarged lineup of magazines, TV shows and films for rent. There's a GPS, a 1.2MP front-facing camera, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, a Near Field communication (NFC) chip and up to nine hours of video playback. It'll run Google's latest Android mobile operating system software (4.1, or Jelly Bean) that was also introduced today. The "My Library" widget on the home page features tiles with the latest content you were reading or watching, and a tap of the tile launches that content right where you left off.
The 8GB model will cost $199, while the 16GB device will be priced at $249. Google is taking pre-orders now and will ship the Nexus 7 in the next two weeks from the Google Play store.
Now, some people are angry that there are no microSD card slots in the Nexus 7 and no rear camera. Personally, I would love for this device to have those features. But we should not forget that this is the Nexus 7 tablet, so they can't put all the features that we want. Why? There are many Android manufacturers that will use the Android OS Jelly Bean, which was made by Google. If Google made the perfect device with a cheap price ($199), no one would buy the third-party manufacturers products, which ends in less money for Google. When Google has made the near perfect device (Nexus One smartphone), third-party manufacturers (Sony, Samsung, etc.) get ideas from it and make a revised version of it, with more features and better pricing. Eventually, they will deliver, and give a product with everything that you need and will satisfy you.
Google is not Apple. They have different business strategies. Google is like Microsoft, giving/selling their OS or their products. Apple is a closed system that owns their hardware and does not distribute their OS.












