All three MeMO
Pad tablets sport 5 - megapixel primary cameras and 2 - megapixel front - facing cameras.
Not exact matches
The same goes for the Asus Transformer
Pad Infinity TF700 as well, which also
sports a faster processor and a 1920 x 1200 pixel display, while still being priced the same as the 32 GB Xperia
Tablet S.
Named Transformer
Pad 300, the
tablet is likely to
sport a price tag of around $ 399 for the Wi - Fi only version.
As for the
tablet, the MeMO
Pad sports pretty decent specs in the form of a Tegra 3 quad core chip, 1 GB RAM, and 16 GB of internal memory.
Interestingly, the LG Optimus
Pad also
sports an 8.9 inch display and the only
tablet so far to boasts of 3D capabilities.
Up next is the 10 inch screen sized Eee
Pad sporting the conventional
tablet form factor and has been priced between $ 399 and $ 499.
Nvidia has already shipped a quad - core ARM processor for
tablets, and Asustek Computer recently announced the Eee
Pad Transformer Prime
tablet, which
sports a 10 - in.
The LG G
Pad 7.0
sports a similar design to other 7 - inch Android slates, with a wraparound black plastic rear panel and glossy black bezel on the front (the
tablet is also available in white).
The
tablet's metal back panel
sports the same concentric circle pattern surrounding an ASUS emblem found on the ASUS Zenbook Prime and Transformer
Pad Infinity.
Asus MeMO
Pad runs Android 4.1 Jelly Bean OS,
sporting a 7 - inch LED - backlit display with 1024 X 600 pixels of resolution, powered by a 1 GHz VIA WM8950 processor with a Mali - 400 GPU, 1 GB of RAM to keep things running, 1MP f / 2.0 back - illuminated sensor with 720p HD video capturing capability, 8 GB or 16 GB onboard storage, microSD card slot for memory expansion up to 32 GB, 5 GB of free ASUS online storage, micro USB 2.0, 802.11 Wi - Fi b / g / n, Bluetooth, a whole host of the Google services, a suite of preinstalled ASUS apps, 4,270 mAh battery to power everything, and all the regular of an Android
tablet.
For starters, Asus Eee
Pad Transformer is a Android 3.0 Honeycomb
tablet powered a 1 GHz dual - core NVIDIA Tegra 2 processor,
sporting a 10 - inch bigger touchscreen Gorilla Glass display with 1280 x 800 pixels resolution, optional additional keyboard support (hence the name «Transformer»!)
LG Optimus
Pad LTE runs Android 3.2 Honeycomb OS,
sporting an 8.9 - inch IPS True HD display with 1280 X 720 pixels of resolution, powered by 1.5 GHz Qualcomm dual - core processor, an 8 megapixel rear - facing camera with 1080p HD video recording capability, an additional front - facing 2 megapixel camera to make video calls, 32 GB internal storage, microSD card slot for memory expansion up to 32 GB, micro USB 2.0, 802.11 Wi - Fi a / b / g / n, 3.5 mm headset jack, HDMI out, DLNA functionality, 6,800 mAH battery, a whole host of the Google services plus all the regular features of an Android
tablet.
On the
tablet side of the spectrum is the Transformer
Pad TF701T, an Android 4.2 slate whose 10.1 - inch display
sports a resolution of 2500 × 1600.
The G
Pad II 8.3 LTE
tablet from LG, which
sports a full HD display with a resolution of 1,920 x 1,200 pixels, caused quite a stir on its arrival.
Shaped like a
tablet, the WiiU controller
sports two circle -
pads (functioning like analog sticks), your standard ABYX face buttons, L / R and LZ / RZ triggers on the top and back, a single input 6.2 inch, 16:9 touch - screen, gyroscope, accelerometer, camera, rumble feature, microphone, and stereo speakers.
With its sober black and silver surfaces, the
tablet sports much of the same handsome aluminum aesthetics as the
Pad Infinity TF700, except for one noticeably bad difference — the Windows device's back panel is sectioned off into two parts, one of which is about 2 inches wide and is made out of an unattractive lined plastic.
A preview video for the LG G
Pad 8.3 sees LG asking regular people what'd make a
tablet just right for them, with suggestions that LG's new 8.3 - incher will
sport a Full HD display, a thin design and the ability to connect to Smart TVs.
The existing G
Pad — be sure to read our full review —
sports a microSD slot, a metal chassis and a larger, better - looking display, but besides that the internal hardware is very similar, and the G
Pad currently sits at a price point above the Nexus
tablet, selling for $ 350.