Motorola Droid Xyboard 10.1"
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Promedio de 1 puntuaciones (de 4 análisis)
Análisis para el Motorola Droid Xyboard 10.1"
Origen: PC Mag EN→ES Archive.org version
The Motorola Xyboard isn't a bad tablet. It's good looking, and it works. But it doesn't stand out in a crowd of similar Android tablets, all with the same Honeycomb-based problems, and it's more expensive than the others.
Único Análisis, disponible online, corto, Fecha: 12/16/2011
Puntuación: Puntuación total: 60%
Origen: Techspot EN→ES Archive.org version
People that read my reviews frequently might have noticed about my preference for smaller tablets over larger ones. I simply find a 10.1-inch tablet unwieldy, even if it is relatively light. As such, I greatly prefer the cheaper 8.2-inch Droid Xyboard over the 10.1-inch model. Both are very nice, or at least as much so as Android Honeycomb allows, and they offer blazing LTE data speeds. Price and required monthly data contracts will be their undoing though. In a world where Apple's iPad 2 is available for the same price as the Xyboard 10.1 and Amazon is offering a solid 7-inch Android tablet for less than half the cost of the 8.2, Motorola will be fighting uphill battles. Even if they are pretty nice machines.
Comparación, disponible online, Mediano, Fecha: 12/16/2011
Origen: Ubergizmo English EN→ES Archive.org version
When the Motorola Xoom was launched with Honeycomb, I was slightly disappointed by its hardware design and the below average quality of the display. Consequently, I was happily surprised when I saw the Motorola Droid Xyboard 10.1 for the first time, the chassis design is sleek and elegant and the IPS display offers high contrast and great color accuracy.
Único Análisis, disponible online, Mediano, Fecha: 12/16/2011
Origen: Slashgear EN→ES Archive.org version
The question that’ll be popping up on most XOOM owners minds at one point or another now is this: should I upgrade? With a tablet that’s got such a similar processor and a display that’s not especially improved over the original XOOM, it’s essentially only the chassis and the fact that you can no longer use a microSD card that should sway you in one direction or the other – not to mention the money you’ll have to drop to move from one model to the next. If you’ve already got a tablet, I’ll say, this probably isn’t going to seem like much of an improvement over the model you’ve already got.
Único Análisis, disponible online, Mediano, Fecha: 12/14/2011
Comentario
unknown:
Muchos juegos son difícilmente ejecutables con estos adaptadores gráficos o se ejecutan de manera muy lenta.
>> Más información puede ser encontrada en nuestra comparación de tarjetas gráficas moviles y la lista de benchmarks.
unknown:
>> Más información puede ser encontrada en nuestra comparación de procesadores móviles.
10.10": Este es un tamaño típico para tablets y pequeños convertibles.
Grandes tamaños de pantalla permiten resoluciones más altas. Por tanto, los detalles como letras son más grandes. Por otro lado, el consumo de energía es más bajo con diagonales de pantalla más pequeñas y los aparatos son más pequeños, más livianos y más económicos.
>> Para averiguar cual fina es una pantalla, vea nuestra lista de DPI.
60%: Una evaluación tan mala es rara. Difícilmente existen portátiles, que sean evaluadas peor.
>> Más información puede ser encontrada en nuestra Guia de compra de portátiles.