Not content to stamp out just another cookie-cutter iPad clone, Sony has come up with a distinctive design. The tablet also incorporates ties to the company’s vast collection of content, including movies and music. It even runs PlayStation games.
Yet, as with so many things Sony these days, the Tablet S sounds much more appealing than the reality turns out to be: Its good ideas are undermined by its execution.
Sony S Tablet
At $500 for a 16-gigabyte, Wi-Fi-only model and $600 for 32 gigabytes, it’s priced the same as Apple iPad 2
The device’s 9.4-inch screen is just a bit smaller than the Apple iPad 2
Leaving to others the competition to produce the thinnest, flattest device, Sony S Tablet
The shape takes some getting used to. It felt quite natural when I was holding it vertically, as if I were reading a book or online magazine. In landscape mode, though, I initially had a hard time. If the thin side was down, the thick part tended to dip.
I eventually came to prefer holding it with the thick edge down — opposite to the way I had to position it when I wanted to tap out an e-mail.
Ultimately, I didn’t mind the shape and even give Sony extra credit for trying to, as Apple used to exhort us, “think different.” My real problem isn’t what they did, but how they did it.
Achieving its light weight, for example, means a case that feels cheap and plasticky on the sides and back. The on-off switch and volume controls are poorly placed along an inside edge.
Plugging in the charger is difficult: You have to align its protruding tabs just so, and I kept accidentally yanking the cable out when I picked up the device or tried to use it while charging. And the pull-out door covering the micro USB port and SD card slot feels like it’s just waiting to break off.
The brain of the Tablet S is Nvidia’s Tegra 2 dual-core processor, the same chip that powers the Galaxy Tab. Yet the pre-production unit I was testing felt appreciably more sluggish than the Galaxy when scrolling through Windows or launching applications.
Like the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1-Inch
Unusually for a Sony product, I found more to like on the software front. The S includes an app that turns it into a universal remote control for your various home audio-visual devices. I was able to control not just Sony products but also a Panasonic TV and Motorola set-top box.
The Tablet S’s performance felt considerably zippier when I was playing games than when I was doing more mundane tasks. You’ll be able to download PlayStation games directly to the device, and it comes with two pre-installed, the vintage Crash Bandicoot and Pinball Heroes — here’s a tip for the latter: Hold the tablet with the fat side down to keep your thumbs from accidentally hitting the Home button in a flipper frenzy.
The preproduction model I was using couldn’t access Sony’s Music Unlimited and Video Unlimited services, so I couldn’t tell you how well they work. Ditto for the app that turns the Tablet S into an e-book viewer compatible with Sony’s line of Reader devices; it wasn’t yet available.
The S is Sony’s first tablet, but not its last. The company is getting ready to introduce another, the P, with an even more unusual design: twin screens that fold up like an oversize eyeglass case.
In a world of all-but-indistinguishable Android devices, it’s good to see Sony innovating and taking risks. But style points don’t overcome its practical shortcomings.
Article Source: thejakartaglobe.com
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