- Fantastic $200 price
- Powerful processor
- High resolution screen
- Google Now rocks
- Android 4.1 is a big improvement
- Runs phone and tablet apps well
- App selection not as good as iPad
- No microSD
- Google Play apps aren't our favorite
- No rear camera
- No 3G or 4G option (Wi-Fi only)
The Nexus 7 is Google’s boldest attempt yet to create a hit Android product of its own. It’s also a blatant attempt to capture the massive popularity of small 7-inch tablets like the Kindle Fire and Nook Tablet, which have been some of the only tablets to sell well outside of the iPad. To do battle in the small space, Google has pulled out all the stops. The Nexus 7 runs on a brand new version of Android, has industry-leading processing power, and comes with a bunch of free Google Play content to watch, read, and buy. Find out how the full package performs below.
Video Review
How it looks and feels
There are upsides and downsides to a tablet with a 7-inch screen. It’s roughly half the size of an iPad, which makes a lot of complex apps or Web pages more difficult to use, but Google and manufacturer Asus have made the tablet slim enough that it will actually fit in a front pocket of most men’s jeans. Granted, it isn’t comfortable in your pocket, but it still offers a level of portability impossible with a 9.7-inch iPad.
Design-wise, the Nexus 7 is somewhat plain and slabby, like most tablets, but it has a firm feel to it. It looks and feels nicer in your hands (the back is rubberized) than almost any other 7-inch tablet, and many larger ones as well. The power and volume buttons are easy to reach, and while the single rear speaker produces nowhere near as good of sound as the iPad, it holds its own against most Android tablets. Like the Kindle Fire, the side bezel is also about half the thickness of many tablets, making it rather svelte and portable, even against other 7-inch devices.
The high resolution IPS LCD screen (1280 x 800 pixels) looks comparable enough to the Retina display on the iPad – bright, colorful, responsive – and it’s covered in Gorilla Glass, which makes it quite durable and scratch proof. We’ve had no issues with fingerprints either.
Overall, the Nexus 7 looks and feels better than any tablets in its price range, if not almost any small tablet competitor, period. It also fits in your pocket, which is nice.
Using the Nexus 7
We aren’t usually big fans of the 7-inch screen size on
At least on this device, Jelly Bean has been modified to look more like an
Our chief problem with
Overall, the Nexus 7 works and operates far smoother and better than previous
Google Now rocks
If you’ve read anything about
We have only just begun to use Google Now, but we like what we see. Google has stepped it up with this service, finally delivering search that works on a tablet. You can fully control what information Google will and has collected about you as well. Very cool!
The specs
Though it costs only $200, the Nexus 7 delivers specs and processing power that rival tablets in the $400 to $700 range. It runs on a 1.3GHz quad-core Nvidia Tegra 3 processor, has 1GB of
The Nexus 7 performed well when we played graphically intense games like Modern Combat and ran the Netflix app better than any
The camera
The Nexus 7 does not have a rear camera, not that tablets truly need one. The front-facing camera is 1.2 megapixels and performs well enough in video chats over Skype or other services.
Battery performance
The Nexus 7 gets average battery life, but good for its size. It has a 4,325mAh battery, and Google claims it can get 9 hours of video playback and 10 hours of Web browsing or e-reading. We estimate we’ve gotten between 8 and 9 hours so far. On our current charge, the Nexus 7 has been running for nearly two days and it’s at 33 percent. We’ve used it a fair amount and downloaded about 30 apps so far. The number one battery killer, as usual, is the screen, which is sucking up about 80 percent of the tablet’s power.
So no: The Nexus 7 doesn’t revolutionize battery life, but it meets the standard 8 to 10 hours of competing tablets.
Overall
The Nexus 7 is the best 7-inch tablet we’ve ever used, by far, a good step forward for
Highs
- Fantastic $200 price
- Powerful processor
- High resolution screen
- Google Now rocks
- Android 4.1 is a big improvement
- Runs phone and tablet apps well
Lows
- App selection not as good as iPad
- No microSD
- Google Play apps aren’t our favorite
- No rear camera
- No 3G or 4G option (Wi-Fi only)