Google's Asus-built 2013 Nexus 7 is an HD upgrade to the popular 2012 seven-inch tablet. It is available from Google Play and other retailers starting from £199.

The Pitch:

"Now thinner, lighter, and faster -- Nexus 7 brings you the perfect mix of power and portability and features the world's sharpest 7" tablet screen."

Key Features:

  • 1920 x 1200 IPS screen
  • Snapdragon S4 Quad-Core 1.Ghx processor
  • 2GB Ram
  • 16GB or 32GB of storage (no SD)
  • Five megapixel rear camera
  • Android 4.3 operating system

nexus 7


Verdict:

Google's new Nexus 7 is an upgrade in virtually every respect over the 2012 version: it's lighter, thinner, faster, has a great screen and a camera. It's just brilliant value, and if you're in the market for a seven-inch Android device it's a must-buy.

The screen, in particular, is fantastic. It's bright, colourful and at 323ppi the sharpest display available on any tablet - twice the ppi of the iPad Mini. Reading on the new Nexus is particularly great, and still very readable at lower brightness levels. Likewise the sound on the new tablet is much improved over the older one, with new Fraunhofer drivers and better volume from the headphones compared to the 2012 machine.

It's not all great though. For one, the camera is a disappointment. It has a weedy 5-megapixel sensor, with quite poor low-light performance, and produces grainy images. You're not really going to use it very often, but it's an undeniable weakness. Likewise the 3,950 mAh battery is a downgrade over the older machine, since the higher-grade components draw more power. You'll get about nine hours use, which isn't tremendous.

Needless to say the stock version of Android 4.3 performs very well on a seven-inch screen, and lets you do everything that you want to on a mobile device (even if it does lack some of iOS's finesse). Then there's the price - £199 for 16GB and £239 for 32GB. That's unmatchable value. It really is a steal - though if value0 is an issue, you can go cheaper with the £130 Asus MeMO Pad HD 7.

nexus 7

Above: the new Nexus 7 (left) versus the old one (right)


The main problem, however, is that we still can't quite figure out when we're supposed to be using it.

Until the (much more expensive) 4G Nexus 7 from O2 arrives later this autumn, the Nexus 7 is still a WiFi-only tablet. And that really makes a crucial difference when the Android tablet ecosystem still lacks so many of the truly killer offline apps available on iOS.

Almost everything you might do offline - writing, drawing, playing games, editing video, messing around with music apps and generally getting work done - is still more difficult on Android. Without Paper by 53, X-Com or IA Writer (all creme-de-la-creme iOS apps), spending a lot of time offline with the Nexus 7 is comparitively less attractive.

Online, it's a different story. The getting-stuff-done side of Android on a seven-inch screen is excellent - and with a screen this good, and with this much space for genuinely useful widgets and news tickers, using the Nexus 7 as an email and reading device on-the-go is ideal. Except given it's WiFi only, you won't be using it as your default device on the move over your phone. And though the 4G version is coming, at £320 it's more expensive than an iPad Mini, which is a better offline device.

What we're saying is that you'll love the Nexus so much you'll want to carry it everywhere you go - but if you're already living a gadget-rich life, you might not use it as much as you'd think.

Make no mistake, though, we love the new Nexus. It's not up there with the iPad Mini in terms of hardware design or apps, but on value and screen quality it's way ahead over anything Apple, Samsung - or even Asus itself - can offer.

5starstechdarkblue

  • Google Nexus 7 (2013)

    The new Nexus 7 has a higher resolution display (at 323 pixels per inch), a quad-core Snapdragon S4 processor and a thinner bezel on both sides of the screen. It's also the first device to run the new version of Android, 4.3 Jelly Bean, and a 5-megapixel screen at the same bargain-basement price.

  • Sony Tablet Z

    Sony's Tablet Z is just as beautiful as its smartphone namesake. It's also waterproof, dustproof, has a tremendous screen and is thinner than an iPad. If you can cope with the lack of some of iOS's sweeter apps, or you can't get enough of Sony's resurgent design aesthetic, it's among the best alternatives on the market.

  • iPad Mini

    Pound-for-pound, the <a href="http://gdgt.com/apple/ipad/mini/" target="_blank">iPad Mini</a> is arguably the best tablet in the world. It's lighter, thinner and cheaper (£269) than the iPad 4, with access to exactly the same selection of apps. No, the screen isn't comparable, and the rumours of a Retina version on the horizon might give some cause to wait for a reboot. But for our money <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2012/11/09/ipad-mini-review-uk_n_2100108.html" target="_blank">this is the best designed, most cost-effective and most useful mobile device</a> Apple has ever made.

  • Samsung Note 8.0

    <a href="http://gdgt.com/samsung/galaxy/note/8-0/">The Samsung Note 8.0</a> is faintly ridiculous, in that it's technically a phone, and can be used as such when bought in the UK, but you'll look absolutely ridiculous if you try that in public. On the other hand, it's also a quite beautiful and cost-effective device, with a sharp screen, a good processor, a nice suite of S-Pen enabled drawing and note-taking apps. Yes, it's more expensive than an iPad Mini - and it also suffers on battery life. But for the right customer, it's a good choice.

  • Kindle 8.9 HD

    <a href="http://gdgt.com/amazon/kindle/fire/hd-8-9-inch/">Amazon's second generation Kindle Tablet</a>, is another decent lower-cost tablet with an excellent screen and good options for media consumption, which suffers a little for not being optimised for the other things you want to do on a mobile computer - browse the web, play games and stay in touch with friends. If you just want a tablet to read Kindle books and watch LoveFilm, it's a good choice. <a href="http://www.engadget.com/2012/11/19/amazon-kindle-fire-hd-8.9-review/">But as Engadget said</a>: "If you're a more serious tablet user who wants access to the full power of the Android operating system, the decision is still simple: go with something else."

  • Nexus 10

    The<a href="http://gdgt.com/samsung/nexus/10/" target="_blank"> Samsung-built Nexus 10</a> has an excellent display, runs the latest version of stock Android (which has never been better for tablets) and is less expensive than the iPad - while also being quite a bit lighter. With Google Play's ever improving list of tablet-enabled apps and the availability of many options for watching and consuming media, there is nothing you want to do on a tablet you can't do with this. That said, it suffers from a less-developed app ecosystem, and the design of the machine is far clunkier than you might hope with a thick bezel being a noticeable downside.

  • iPad (4th Generation)

    With the same essential design, price and features as the original iPad, it's possible to think Apple is standing still on the tablet market. Then you actually <em>use</em> the <a href="http://gdgt.com/apple/ipad/4th-gen/" target="_blank">iPad 4</a>, and you realise they're doing nothing of the sort. In individual specs the iPad isn't anything special, but as <a href="http://store.apple.com/uk/buy/home/shop_ipad/family/ipad" target="_blank">a combination of excellent hardware</a> with the simple and efficient iOS, added to a simply selection of mind-blowing apps and a design elegance unmatched elsewhere in the market, it's hard to argue that its anything other than the clear leader.

  • Microsoft Surface Pro

    The <a href="http://gdgt.com/microsoft/surface/windows-8-pro/" target="_blank">Surface Pro</a> is a hybrid between a true tablet and a convertible laptop. Without the clip-on keyboard it's a - fairly hefty, it has to be said - usable tablet that makes sense for watching movies, browsing and a bit of light gaming. The screen is decent and bright, and weighs just two pounds. With the heavy-duty kickstand own and keyboard (either clicky keys or the fancier, touch-enabled accessory) it's a good laptop which runs a full version of Windows 8. Unfortunately it's got weaker battery life than many other true tablets.

  • Asus Padfone 2

    If you want a good smartphone and a tablet, but don't want to (a) sync both and (b) pay for both, the <a href="http://gdgt.com/asus/padfone/2/" target="_blank">Padfone 2</a> might be for you. Essentially a regular, decent if unspectacular Android phone with a slim, secure tablet dock, this is a convertible wonder - for the right customer. What you're gaining is both the convenience of carrying only one device, and the ability to switch to a bigger screen at will. <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2013/03/17/asus-padfone-2-review-pictures-specs_n_2897769.html" target="_blank">What you're losing is a bit of polish on either end</a>. The Padfone 2 is nicely designed but not beautiful, and the tablet-phone mixture of Android is a bit clunky.