Tablet

Lenovo Yoga Tab 3



The Lenovo Yoga Tab 3 is the meatloaf of Android tablets. It's appealing and you know a lot of folks will hunker down with one, but it's not glamorous. That's not to say it's a bad looking tablet--- Lenovo Yoga tablets are in fact good looking thanks to their tapered silhouette, barrel hinge and metal flip-down kickstand that integrates so nicely into the overall design. But this is a $169 tablet with an 8" display, and for that price you know you're not getting top specs or a light tablet. The Yoga has a soft touch black plastic back that's grippy and it has fairly large bezels. It has a low end Qualcomm Snapdragon CPU. Did you know that there's a Snapdragon 200 series? Most folks know about the 800, 600 and maybe 400 series, but this is the lowly Snapdragon 212 (Lenovo avoids mention of that and refers to it by its Qualcomm MSM number instead). The good news is that mobile CPUs are so fast that even a low end CPU allows for a usable experience.

The Yoga Tab 3 is an Android 5.1.1 tablet and it's fairly clean without the heavy UI customizations Lenovo employed in older models. It has single band WiFi 802.11n, Bluetooth 4.0, a GPS with GLONASS and an 8MP camera that swivels so it's both the front and rear camera. As with all Lenovo Yoga Tabs, it has a capacious battery in the barrel hinge for long battery life. For those who prefer a larger tablet, it's also available in a 10" size.

Display

Lenovo knows that a good looking display is one of the most important features--if you look at the screen and say "bleh", it won't sell. The 1280 x 800 display won't win resolution awards, but it provides sufficient pixel density at 8 inches, so I doubt anyone would complain or claim to eyeball individual pixels. It's an IPS display with good viewing angles, pleasing blacks, good contrast and vivid colors. It makes for a nice experience when viewing movies and photos and is sharp enough when reading eBooks or web pages. It's a much better display than you'll find on no-name Android tablets in the lower price ranges.


The Yoga Tab 3 has Lenovo's AnyPen digitizer, where you can literally use any pen or pointed object as a stylus. The glass is hardened and resists marks from pens and pencils, though it always makes me feel squeamish to use a writing implement on a glass screen. Lenovo has encouraged us to test using screwdrivers and scissors, which we've done without damaging the glass.

Build and Quality

Beyond the attractive display, the Yoga Tab 3 is better built and is more attractive than many budget tablets. It feels sturdy and is rigid. The metal rotating kickstand is robust and designed to be strong enough to use the tablet as a wall hanger. The stand's action is firm and it holds the tablet upright against spirited pokes on the touch screen. This isn't an infinite position hinge however; it locks into one of 3 positions: upright for use, closed flush and straight up as a wall hanger. Given the barrel design, you can use it on a table with a slight angle for better viewing, and the barrel acts like a magazine's spine for holding when reading. The back is rubbery plastic and the 180 degree swivel camera in the barrel hinge makes a satisfying set of clicks as you rotate it, not unlike a precision instrument. At 1.04 lbs. it's a heavy 8" tablet that weighs as much as the 9.7" iPad Air 2, and it's far heavier than Samsung's Galaxy Tab S2 8" model. Something has to give with a price this low.

Performance

It's not the sharpest knife in the drawer. The 1.3 GHz quad core Snapdragon 212 with 1 gig of RAM does lag here and there, sometimes more often than not. Again, in this price range, you won't get blistering performance or even consistently snappy performance. But I'd assume that buyer expectations aren't lofty in this price segment, and it delivers a functional experience. With 1 gig of RAM, you'll want to keep an eye on multitasking, particularly with heavy apps like games and YouTube. The tablet has 16 gigs of storage and a microSD card slot under a plastic door on the back.

Lenovo has thankfully dropped their heavy-handed UI overlay and gone with a much cleaner Android 5.1.1 experience. Since this is a budget tablet, I wouldn't expect years of OS upgrade support. In fact, I'm not sure it will get any OS version updates.



Samsung Galaxy Tab S2 9.7


So you like the Samsung Galaxy Tab S but you figure it's last year's model and you have a hankering for a 4:3 aspect ratio that's easier to read on? Then you're in luck: the Samsung Galaxy Tab S2 models are the refresh with a faster CPU and lighter TouchWiz skin, and 4:3 aspect ratio displays. Yep, just like the iPad. That aspect ratio makes the tablet easier to hold and it is indeed better for reading documents, web pages and books. In fact, I find games more enjoyable too. However, if you're buying a tablet primarily for watching movies, TV shows and YouTube, then you might want to opt for last year's Tab S or consider the Dell Venue 10 7000. Those two will also net you the incredibly vibrant AMOLED display but with the standard Android tablet 16:10 aspect ratio that means almost no black bars on the top and bottom of widescreen content.

The Samsung Galaxy Tab S2 is available in two sizes: 9.7" and 8". We look at the 9.7" model in this review. They're available in your choice of black, white or gold and each has a matte back so we're not talking blingy gold or slippery stuff. The tablets are some of the thinnest and lightest on the market (currently they're the thinnest at 5.9mm). The 9.7" model weighs just 13.7 ounces (almost 2 ounces less than the iPad Air 2) and the 8" model weighs 9.34 ounces. They feel trivially thin and light--as if they were props rather than actual devices. That's a good thing-- despite the light weight, they don't feel or look cheap. Samsung hasn't moved to exotic materials here as they did with the Samsung Galaxy S6 family and the Note 5, but the plastic back with metal frame look and feel quite nice.
The tablet runs Android 5.1.1 Lollipop with Samsung's ever improving TouchWiz. TouchWiz is lighter and less overwrought and it still brings great features like multi-window multitasking. Flipboard is still here as the leftmost home screen, for better or worse, and there are a few Samsung staples like their own app store and Milk Music.

Horsepower and Performance
Inside, Samsung has moved up to the (Exynos Octa 7 CPU family) Exynos 5433 CPU that has four high power 1.9 GHz cores and four 1.33 GHz low power cores. It uses the fairly powerful MALI-T760 graphics that provides very good performance not only in benchmarks but in today's popular 3D games. This is the same CPU used in the International version of the Samsung Galaxy Note 4, and while I'm sure everyone would be even more excited if Samsung used their latest high end Exynos CPU from the Galaxy S6 and Note 5, the performance is still good enough to make it one of the fastest Android tablets on the market (and almost as fast as the iPad Air 2 in benchmarks). The tablet has 3 gigs of RAM, as did the first generation Tab S and 32 or 64 gigs of storage. Our 32 gig model had 25.4 gigs available on first boot. There's a microSD card slot to expand storage with cards up to 128 gigs. The Tab S2 also supports USB host, which means if you get a USB OTG dongle adapter, you can use USB flash drives, card readers and small self-powered portable hard drives with the tablet.
Super AMOLED Display is Super

The display is simply amazing. Few tablets have AMOLED displays, with the first gen Tab S and the Dell Venue 8 and 10 7000 models rounding up current offerings. The display far exceeds the sRGB color gamut and even covers more than 100% of the wider Adobe RGB gamut. That means you'll get incredibly saturated and vibrant colors with near infinite contrast as you do with the Samsung Galaxy S5, S6 and recent Galaxy Note phones. As with those phones, you can choose from several different color profiles including AMOLED Photo for a more realistic 100% sRGB gamut (handy if you're using it to proof photos or video). The display is also extremely bright and remains visible outdoors. Auto-brightness works well and unlike some older Samsung mobile products, indoor brightness doesn't default to a too dim setting. This is a touch screen and it doesn't have the active Wacom digitizer that Samsung Galaxy Note phones and tablets have. You can use a capacitive stylus but nothing that's precise and there's no palm rejection since capacitive styli are essentially finger replacements (they're capacitive as are your fingers).
Battery Life

The Galaxy Tab S2 actually has a lower capacity battery than the Tab S. CPU efficiencies and the lower resolution afforded by the smaller 4:3 aspect ratio display mean lower power consumption. But the 5870 mAh battery in our 9.7" model (4,000 mAh in the 8" model) seems a bit too modest. With auto-brightness on and WiFi turned on, our 9.7" tablet typically lasted two days on a charge with light to moderate use. That clocked in at 4.5 to 5 hours of screen on time (actual active usage time), which is lower than the original Tab S and several competing tablets like the Dell Venue 10 7000 and the iPad Air. Our tests include web browsing, email, reading an eBook in Kindle, streaming an hour episode via Netflix, editing a few photos and watching 5 short YouTube videos. If you use the GPS or play 3D games, battery life will be shorter.

Connectivity

We look at the WiFi-only models here, and they have dual band WiFi 802.11ac, Bluetooth 4.1 BLE and a GPS with GLONASS but no NFC. Carriers will sell versions with 4G LTE added, typically for $150 additional at full retail.

Conclusion

The Samsung Galaxy Tab S2, as Samsung intended, is the Android answer to the iPad Air, right down to the 4:3 aspect ratio and thin and light design. Though the back is plastic, the tablet has a quality feel and look, and it indeed is one of the nicest Android tablets money can buy. It may not add groundbreaking new features, but it brings some of the best features and parts Samsung has to offer in 2015. We like the improved TouchWiz experience that lightens the load and the bloat while providing very useful capabilities like multi-window multitasking. The S2 runs as smoothly as the Nexus 9 running straight Android 5.1, and in fact it feels faster. The tablet's only problem with respect to the iPad isn't Samsung's fault: there are still relatively few tablet optimized apps in Android land, and that means some of your favorites (Instagram, Facebook) stretch the small screen experience to fill the display rather than make good use of the added real estate. If your interests extend only to the built-in apps like PIMs, the web browser, video player and MS Office, then you'll do fine. Netflix supports tablets nicely and there are a few tablet-optimized games that are truly pleasant on the Galaxy Tab S2.

Price: $499 for 32 gig WiFi-only model. ~ $650 for 4G LTE model sold direct by carriers

Website: www.samsung.com

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