Buy Nexus 7 online

Buy cheapest Nexus 7 online. Cheap Nexus 7 for sale online.

 

The Nexus 7 is an Android tablet computer co-developed by Google and Asus, the first tablet entry in the Nexus series. The Nexus 7 is a 7-inch tablet, primarily competing with similar devices such as the Nook Tablet, Kindle Fire and the Blackberry Playbook.

 

Buy Nexus 7 online.

 

Buy Nexus 7. The Nexus 7 will be shipped with the latest version of Android, 4.1, codenamed Jelly Bean. Additionally, it will ship with Chrome as its web browser.

 

So what do you actually get with the Nexus 7? You get a solid 7-inch tablet with a 1280 x 800 IPS display. You get a “pure Google” Android experience — no bloatware, no stupid manufacturer-added skins, and no locked-down limited-use nonsense (paging Amazon…). The Nexus 7 ships with the brand new Android 4.1, a.k.a. Jelly Bean. Just as important, as a Nexus device — and one with no carrier interference, at that — you’re guaranteed to get fast and frequent software updates as they become available in the future.

 

Presumably taking a cue from Amazon’s Kindle Fire, the Nexus 7’s Android 4.1 software puts content consumption front and center. Out of the box, the Nexus 7 has home screen widgets showing you all of your purchased content from Google Play along with recommendations for future multimedia and app acquisitions. Don’t be misled, though: Those are just widgets, and the Nexus 7 is a fully functioning Android tablet — not a restrictive platform built solely to encourage purchases from its manufacturer’s ecosystem. Google’s new setup makes basic stuff simpler for the less tech-savvy crowd while still providing the full range of advanced functionality for those of us who want it.

 

Tap the microphone on the search bar or hold down the home button and you can ask Google Now to search for the best restaurants in the area or for the name of the cast in “Nurse Jackie.” The results will show up as cards in the app. But the uses extend beyond just search. You can ask Google Now for the weather inNew Yorkand it will state out loud — in a much nicer and gentler voice than Siri — the current temperature there. And it can do even more: It regularly shows the directions to locations you search for and once it learns your daily patterns it will show your weather, your favorite team’s score, etc.

 

I found the service to be consistently accurate, however, it does require a web connection, so testing some of the other features on-the-go was challenging. The Nexus 7 isn’t available with3Gor4Gservice; there is only a WiFi model available. Additionally, the tablet comes with only 8GB of storage; you can upgrade to the 16GB version for $50 more.

 

As a 7-inch device, the Nexus 7 feels a bit different to use than the typical 10-inch tablet. I’ve been underwhelmed by 7-inch tablets in the past, so I approached the Nexus 7 with a healthy bit of skepticism. I’ve found the smaller form to be perfectly pleasant to use, though; compared to a 10-inch tablet, it’s surprisingly easy to hold in one hand while swiping or tapping with the other.

 

The Nexus 7 is listed at eight hours of battery life. In my usage — ranging from casual to moderately heavy — I’ve yet to have trouble making it through an entire day on a single charge; in fact, I’ve often gone multiple days without having to recharge.

 

So it looks like the only way for people to get their hands on Surface will be to purchase it directly from Microsoft, which is a big step away from how Microsoft usually sells hardware like the Xbox and peripherals.

 

Curiously this news comes as the other big tablet announcement of recent weeks, Google’s Nexus 7, starts appearing for pre-order from Australian retail.  The tablet, which has been available for preorder from Google Play since it was announced, has popped up on the local EBGames site, available for $1 less than Google is selling it.

 

It is the higher end 16GB version of the tablet, priced at $298, and comes with the $25 Google Play credit and free copy of Transformers: Dark of the Moon that is on offer from Google Play. While the marginal saving means we’ll still be getting ours from Google Play, the convenience of in-store pickup will be enough to make some people happy.

 

The Nexus 7 is a pleasure to use, with no stutters or lag in my testing so far. Oh yeah — and there’s one other noteworthy element of the Nexus 7 user experience:

 

The Nexus 7 has pure Google software — and it rocks.

 

You know that whole “Nexus” part of the Nexus 7 name? Yeah — that means the tablet runs pure Google software and will continue to get the latest and greatest updates first. (As a Wi-Fi-only device, there should be no room for the, ahem, carrier interference we’ve seen in certain other circumstances.)

 

The Nexus 7 is smooth and lacks the silly software modifications tablet-makers tend to make in attempts to “differentiate” their devices. No arbitrarily reimagined icons, no unremovable bloatware. It’s finally a pure Android experience in a tablet form. And that, my friends, is worth a lot.

 

The Nexus 7 is focused on simple content consumption, kind of like that other inexpensive 7-inch tablet.

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