Hi, this is Wayne again with a topic “Google Nexus 10: Revisited!”.
Hey, what’s up guys, I’m Kay PhD here and I get asked almost all the time like clockwork what tablet I use the most. What tablet I use the most and, to be honest, I don’t really use tablets all that often, but when I do it’s the Nexus 10 – and this is the Nexus 10 revisited – it’s been almost five months since the Nexus 10 was released and from my experience the Hardware has pretty much disappeared and left only the software for me to focus on, and this is a good thing. This is definitely a very good thing. The hardware itself just the screen, the build quality, the materials and the design they just kind of disappear into your hands and you’re just left interacting with and touching pure Android. I have a link right below the like button on this video to my full Nexus. 10 review, in which I rant and rave about a lot of things, but, first and foremost the display and how awesome it is good news. It’S still awesome everything from the graphics and the websites and games and texts and apps in the Play Store. Everything is all still super crisp super sharp and that’s exactly what you’d expect out of a 2560 by 1600 display that gives you 300 PPI on a tablet that is by far the highest dpi on any tablet out there. Viewing angles and brightness are pretty solid.
You know they’re, probably among the top four tablets again. Another thing that’s become subtly. Awesome, though, is the thinness is a pretty powerful tablet. Yet it manages to be one of the thinnest and slimmest out there, yet it still houses a 9,000 milliamp hour battery that lasts for days on standby and can give you 4 to 5 hours of screen on time before needing to recharge. So that’s enough to watch a movie on a plane easily, but there is something else that Samsung was brilliant with when they made this guy and that’s the speakers, the front-facing speakers. These are huge. I don’t think I could go back to rear firing.
Speakers on a tablet again, front-facing just makes sense for every use of a tablet. I wouldn’t be surprised to see more phones to take on the style now that the HTC One has proved that it makes sense for smartphones too, and yes, the speakers are pretty loud and clear without any sort of distortion, which is pretty important again for me. If I’m watching a movie or listening to music or just watching a YouTube video or something like that, another thing about the design, though, is the material on the back.
It is way more important than you originally think. A lot of people don’t talk about this, but part of the reason the iPad or the iPad Mini can feel so awkward to hold or you might slip while holding it is that they’re just smooth metal plates on the back the Nexus 10 back is my favorite Material on the back of any mobile device, it’s polycarbonate, it’s a rigid plastic hardened plastic that has a sort of a soft touch, feel that’s just a little bit grippy slash tacky on the back, so you can easily hold the weight of the Nexus 10. In one hand, and it still feels natural – I think Google learned a lot from the success of the Nexus 7 and how well it is to hold that they decided to use this sort of back and the back welds on really nice and curves around to the Front and just just blends in with the design well, there’s no other way to put it it just blends in and works with the Nexus tens design. Also speaking of design, the hardware itself has held up pretty well to regular, constant use, and one of the unique points is actually these pogo pins at the bottom actually switched to the Pogo pin charger instead of microUSB and actually found that it charges quite a bit Faster, so I do recommend picking up one of these on ebay or something if you can get in Nexus.
10. Definitely check this out. It’S quite a bit faster. One last thing about the hardware: Google has been slacking on Nexus accessories, especially that mysterious Smart Cover, like accessory.
Some of you may or may not know the Nexus 10 has a removable back, or at least up at the top. You can take the back off and there is supposed to be an accessory that clips into the Nexus 10’s back and folds over, and it has a nice soft microfiber on inside and multiple color options. Basically, a Smart Cover like accessory for the Nexus 10. The Nexus 10 even has magnets inside that sleep and wake the display. It is just begging for an accessory like this as a companion, but as of right now, in March five months after release, it’s still m.i.a come on. Google, either way we’ve already seen: Android 4.2.2 jelly bean in action, and there still might not be all that many optimized apps in the world for this device, but I’ll go ahead and show you how I use Android on the Nexus 10 as a daily driver.
For my own purse, life alright, so even though the Nexus 10 isn’t really a consumer oriented device, I happen to use it personally, as my media consuming device pretty much bring it everywhere to consume media, which for me consists of videos and news. So you can tell basically by my setup here and I’ll, go through my home screens of the Nexus 10 that it is a pretty simple setup here, like we said, there’s not a whole lot of tablet, apps going on here, so I’ll go ahead and start from The middle in the center here I have the Google keep widget and the Google Drive widget and that’s it and I have a calendar widget on the left. Falcon Pro, which is my Twitter, app retinues and eye on the sky. Eye on the sky is a pretty sweet weather app by the way.
It’S a definitely a good-looking one and then over on the far left, is just an open, empty screen and go ahead and throw that wallpaper link down in the description below the like button. For those of you who want to pick that up, then one to the right, we have the Google Play widgets here, just for recommended apps and recommend it on play and then furthest to the right. I have some sound identifiers, but that’s basically it now. I have a Google now search widget up top because that’s basically locked there, but I always use Google now by swiping up from the home screen.
I found that that’s my favorite way to access Google now on any next device and or any device. However, for that matter, with software keys, so I always swipe up from the bottom. Did you get to Google now and I use Google now all the time. I have a separate video on how I use Google now.
So if you want to watch that, that’s where I have all that information there and then, most importantly down on the bottom of the dock here are my most frequently used apps. So I have Google now which again I use quite a bit, but if I don’t want to swipe out from the bottom, I will just tap that I’ve, Google, which I use all the time Google Calendar feedly – that used to be Google Reader. But now I use feedly to keep up with the news, and I found that it’s a surprisingly good alternative, slash replacement for Google readers. So that’s what I use to catch up on articles and stuff throughout the day, then, on the right side, I have Google Tasks.
I have a YouTube here when the YouTube app on tablets is pretty good. I use that pretty much every day, there’s also pocket, which is basically read it later. I throw things in here that I don’t really have time for necessarily immediately and then Dolphin Browser that also used to be a Google product. Google Chrome, but I found in Dolphin Browser, performs better on the Nexus 10.
So there you go guys. Those are my reasons, at least for choosing the next and over a lot of other tablets that I could be using to do the same thing. The Nexus 10.
Does a lot of people like to ask the question also Nexus 10 or iPad 4 or transformer pet? A lot of them are really high-end tablets with high resolutions that are pretty similar, and I picked the Nexus 10 because number one. I like the back material better like I said that polycarbonate is pretty awesome number two. It’S sixteen by nine, which kind of rolls the iPad out immediately, but it still keeps the transformer pad in and then it is the highest resolution tablet on the market today and since I’m a pixel person, that’s really what got me so I really. I really think it’s a great bang for the buck. A lot of people go with the Nexus 7 because it’s also great bang for the buck and it’s a great 7 inch form factor, but Nexus 10.
Does it for me? So leave your thoughts below what do you guys think about the Nexus 7? You can see me down in the comments below replying right below the like button on this video, but definitely give your thoughts and opinions, and we could talk about it either way. Thanks for watching and I’ll talk to you guys in the very next article you .