Google re-joins the tablet market with a clever trick.
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Tablet provided by Google for review.

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Thank you! Hey, what's up I'm Kim BFC here. Okay, I'm gonna make myself sound really old here just for a second. but about 10 years ago, there was a vibrant ecosystem of a ton of different tablets. There's all kinds of tablets.

There is like iPads versus Android tablets. All these fights going on. There were small screen tablets, big screen tablets, and all the Android tablets were sort of anchored by Google's family of Nexus tablets. So we had the Smash Hit Nexus 7 and the cult classic Nexus 10.

But then Google kind of got a little bit lost with Android tablets and Chrome OS tablets. A little bit in there for a bit and they made a few bad ones in a row and then they just gave up. like they literally just gave up. Stopped making tablets but something else that's picked up a whole bunch of steam since then is a new product category.

Smart Home displays. So Google bought Nest and we've seen this. Nest Hub and the Nest Hub Max came out and this is a growing category every single month. So at some point during all of this Google probably thought, wait a second, we're making all these Smart Home displays.

And what is a smart home display? It's basically just a cheap tablet. So what if we just made a cheap tablet that could turn into a smart home display? and so that's how we got this. This is the pixel tablet. So I've been using this tablet for a few weeks now and look, it's not amazing or super premium or high-end or exciting.

Uh, and neither are any of the other Smart Home displays. but I do want to talk about it? It's also a little bit interesting and underrated and how important this tablet could be to other tablets. So let's talk about it. So as a tablet, this thing is pretty simple: I Really like the soft touch finish on the back.

this is the porcelain color and it hides fingerprints really really well. Feels solid in the hand. it's actually made of metal, but you honestly could never tell just holding it thanks to this coating. But it's very basic.

single camera on the back corner, volume buttons with the inset fingerprint reader that doubles as a power button up at the top. there's a set of speakers on the left and right that sounds okay, but really doesn't have much bass at all. and the USBC Port is on the left hand side. It's not too big, it's not too heavy, and on the front is an 11 inch 2560 by 1600 60hz LCD display with bezels just thin enough to hold it and not be a problem.

and the display does not get particularly bright. and it's not the fastest thing in the world, but it is running the same tensor G2 chip as the Pixel 7s. but I just I I Cannot call this tablet fast. Not sure if it's under clocked or what's happening here, but it behaves very much like a basic mid-range Android tablet.

and that's because that's basically what it is. This is a 499 dollar tablet and it comes with the dock in the box that you can buy separately if you want to if you want an additional one for 130. So I would say tame your expectations here like it's it works and it's It does what it's supposed to. but I would just I would say tame your expectations.
So this speaker dock comes on the box which I think is super cool and it's actually the only way to charge the tablet that comes in the box. There is no USBC Cable in here. It's just the dock which has a barrel connector that connects to the wall and the dock is basically it's just a speaker in a box really with some pins. Super simple.

The pins kind of retract a little bit when you touch them, which is cool. But basically the premise is there's some magnets in the dock as you can see here with this magnet paper and there's some magnets in the tablet which you can also see here with this magnet paper and so when you line those up and connect the dock to the tablet, it just pops right onto those pins. and the pins carry both power and data. So now it's charging and the audio quality should be improved because it's now using the speaker in the dock.

It works pretty darn quickly too. Thankfully it's not Bluetooth pairing or anything, it's just literally a physical connection for the the data. So it's just like connecting like an iPad to a keyboard. It just works right away.

It holds it at a pretty good angle too. It's basically straight up and down. It looks just like a nest home hub when you put it on the dock. Like that.

magnets are pretty strong. You can pop it off with one hand if you want to. I'm just uh I'm just glad that this comes in the box and isn't an additional hundred thirty dollars. First of all, the charging speed is up to 15 watts, which is not that fast.

It's a tablet battery so it's pretty big. takes a while to charge um, and then the the speaker in here is not that great. I would say it feels on par with like the nest Hub Mini at Best So the speakers in the tablet are uh, like I said, they're fine, but they really lack a lot of bass and then when you add it to the speaker dock, you're getting like 20 to 30 more volume. But it's mostly just adding the bass back.

But it's not super loud here. I'll give you a little sample. not a ton of bass right. all low end and it's quick too.

It's immediate as soon as I pop it off back to the speakers. but it's not the it's not the loudest thing in the world. Honestly, it's I Guess it's fine. This dock cannot be used as a Bluetooth speaker or anything else when a tablet isn't attached.

But honestly I don't think you'd want to. It's basically just sits there and is waiting for the tablet to be attached to it. What's funny though is it does help with the battery. So the battery life on this tablet was decent for me, but it did have particularly weak standby life.

For some reason it would drop like 10 overnight sometimes, which could be a bug. Either way, the idea is when you're done using it, you can pop it onto the dock and it is literally just a smart speaker. Now if you really wanted to, you could buy another one and put it in a different room and then when it's in the kitchen per se, it'll show you certain things When it's in the bedroom, it'll show you other things, but it is a hundred and thirty dollars per Dock And I'm now starting to think that that's the more overpriced thing among this bundle, so just know what you're getting into that. But I think really? What I realized is this docking feature is cool, but it's not the most interesting part of this tablet.
For me, it's the headlining feature because it's the cool thing that it does. But as I was talking about, there was this whole tablet ecosystem like 10 years ago and seeing what Google does with the software for this tablet could give us a window into how Google can anchor Android tablets again going forward. So I was really curious about the software. So here's what I found number one: I Really like the new dock, the software dock so the home button at the bottom.

you can swipe up at any time and all the same gestures work like normal, but there's a new gesture where you just grab the Bottom bar and swipe up just a little bit and that brings up a dock which is the exact same order of whatever apps you had in your home screen dock. It also shows up in multitasking and then from there you can switch to a recent app or initiate multitasking by dragging something to half the screen to get two things going at once. It works great, it simple. I use it all the time for going back and forth between two things quickly.

So I really like that? Then number two multi-user support is so sick and the iPad should seriously be taking notes on this. So anytime you want either from the notification tray or from the lock screen or anywhere that you see that profile picture for your account, you can switch users. When you set up a new user. At first, you basically go through the whole setup process as if you're setting up a brand new tablet and then that second person can sign into their apps and set up their home screen and their widgets and everything.

and you can switch back and forth by logging into each one literally just with your fingerprint. It's exactly as simple as it should be. It could also totally be like one person's personal profile and business profile so you never get the two confused. or I don't know, just a profile for your burner accounts.

Whatever you want to make it. The point is, tablets are often used at home and by families that have more than one person. so the ability to just like log into your kids account and not have them worry about accidentally buying thirty thousand dollars of I don't know Minecraft credits or something. It's a pretty obviously great feature.

and then number three, of course Hub mode. This is the mode that sort of pops up when you get it onto the dock uh, that they had to build of course because they turned this into a Smart Hub I kind of end up just using it like a Smart Hub a lot of the time that it's on this dock I don't touch it as much I just use voice controls which all work and then I have a clock here. you can do like a photo gallery type thing or rotating pieces of Art And of course the smart home display controls are available at the bottom corner, but it just kind of lives like that. I have it in the kitchen most of the time.
Nice! Oh this is also fun. Fact: the the first tablet that has Chromecast built in as a Target so you can use it as a Target to Chromecast things to it I would never do that but you can do that. So the number four. Last but not least is the app situation.

This is something we talk a lot about with Android tablets and there was a lot of promise with this version and with this tablet that there would be a whole bunch of new tablet optimized apps and that that experience would be meaningfully different. and it's not. Well, I guess you could say it's a little bit true. So Google can say that their own apps are now all optimized and take full advantage of the larger display so you know you can be confident.

Anytime you open a Google app on this Google tablet, it's going to look great and that's awesome. But for all of the rest of the apps that make the world go round, all the third-party apps, all the stuff that you probably are thinking about when getting a tablet that you're going to use, there is no meaningful difference in that situation right now. So a lot of them are still, uh, big phone apps I would say Instagram is still a giant phone app Twitter is still a giant phone app Tesla is still a giant phone app Expedia Stole a giant phone app cash app is Still not optimized. neither is Tick Tock It still kind of looks weird.

SoundCloud is like half optimized I guess Pocket Casts is also halfway there looking like a giant phone app. Overdrop. Weather is still a blown up phone app and the list goes on and on. They have this thing where you can, uh, double tap the space to the left or to the right to move it over to the side to make it more one-handable.

but I mean yeah, that's it. It's just a big phone app. The app ecosystem for Android tablets is still to this day. Even now that this has arrived, it's still the biggest weakness of an Android tablet and the incentive.

it's got to be on developers of course, but most of their incentive is to be as simple and streamlined as possible. And if you can just make one iPad app that covers all iPads you'll do it. But if you can make one tablet app, it won't necessarily work on all Android tablets, so the incentive is still kind of tough. Well, actually, there is one app that Google can say that they got optimized before the iPad and that's the calculator.

They did do a full scientific, not scientific, but a full-on calculator. There's a history. over here. To the side there's the readout which you can change the size of a light and dark theme.
All this stuff. It's pretty good. your move. Apple Some other little random things that didn't quite fit into the full review: Uh, when it's docked on the charger, it default charges up to 90, not 100.

But I do think that's smart IT preserves the battery life overall. There's also no headphone jack on this tablet, just so you know. And then, in case you're wondering, the camera quality is very much in line with the rest of this tablet's Hardware pretty mid. It's good enough for basic video calls and document scanning, but nobody's shooting any movies on this thing.

At the end of the day. though, my conclusion is this: two in one devices are typically they're funny because they're They're always like slightly worse at one of the things that they're trying to be. this is a two in one device. It's a tablet and it's a smart home hub.

So I was wondering as I got it like what is it going to be compromised at? Is it worse at one or worse at the other? Turns out it's a decent cheap Android tablet and it's a slightly below average speaker dock home hub. Uh, but that's fine I think those two things are close enough together and are simple enough that it makes sense at least. I Would personally love a super high-end version of this I'd be so down for like a 120 Hertz. Super fast, Nice premium tablet that also could dock whenever I want on a nice speaker and become like this high-end like Boombox thing.

But I Also know that that would be super expensive and would have a much much smaller Target demographic and probably wouldn't sell enough to exist. Well so this is the thing that makes sense. and I think it may actually sell a decent amount and we'll see how it does until the next one. Thanks for watching catch in the next one! Peace Foreign.


By MKBHD

17 thoughts on “Pixel tablet review: is google back?!”
  1. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Kevin Arana says:

    I wish we would have seen more footage of nest integration (like the smart home features). How does it stream nest camera / doorbell video feed?

  2. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Outlook Salon says:

    Bro wherever i listen to you i save money and time

  3. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Hekios888 S says:

    So home hub max or pixel tablet?

  4. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Joe Pruss says:

    Not compatible with 2 out of 3 of my banking apps. Deal breaker for me!

  5. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars KamenCJ says:

    are Youtube and Netflix giant phone apps?

  6. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Anthony Pilkjaer says:

    Having Nest Hub in the bedroom and a tablet next to it for a wife to watch movies or browse the web before bed time, this can be a nice replacement. I like the idea of "all-in-one" device but 500$ price is way too high. For my particular use-case I can get Nest Hub for 99$, a cheap Android tablet for 100-150$ and I will have like 250$ over to buy something else. Sure, you will have 2 devices to charge and a smaller Nest Hub screen (which is not an issue at all) but it will literally be half the price. At the same time you won't get as slick solution as with just one device so I think Google might have a point there. I wish you could use the speaker when device is not docked.
    I like the look of the cover for the device as well. But once again – 80$ for a silicone case with a metal ring behind is a tad too much imho.

  7. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Oscar Svanberg says:

    Is the dock compatible with as a speaker group?

  8. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars AznSlickSlaya says:

    I miss Nexus so much.

  9. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Rizq Logistics @Rizqshops says:

    Welcome to Gboard clipboard, any text you copy will be saved here.

  10. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Success Marketing says:

    What are the dimensions what android version?

  11. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Hockeyguy 99 says:

    Man do I miss my Nexus 7 tablet. I bought it in 2013 and IIRC, it died. I had a similar sized Samsung tablet 2017-2019 that was OK but it bricked itself out of the blue (can’t remember the error, it was something that required me to send it back to Samsung). I bought another smaller Samsung tablet in 2019 and it’s sitting here cracked on my tv stand lol. Upshot of my post, I want another Nexus 7 lol ❤

  12. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Chris Schafer says:

    Digital audio out would be really nice. Yes I can cast but…

  13. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars vinod naik says:

    Ignore this tablet

  14. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Steven Corbo says:

    For $400 it's $250 overpriced

  15. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Jack Chou says:

    Hope Google keeps optimizing it. It's a promising product.

  16. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars DAFAWK says:

    Ah a bit nostalgia. I had the Nexus 7 tablet, that thing was my favorite tablet I ever owned. I used it for 5 years straight and then I eventually got rid of it, i dont remember why but it was amazing. So i kinda want this one because that stock android no bloatware feel is unbeatable.

  17. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Dmitriy Chaikovskiy says:

    to be honest I use Android and Apple Phones and Tablets and neither Tablet Apple and Android doing a great job at apps, Apple Ipad still cant show Instagram in full mode and youtube on Apple devises really sucks comparing to Android so the comparison to Android and IOS is very not accurte here

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