Not exact matches
Over Black Friday and the holidays in particular, you could get a $ 199 HD
tablet from Amazon, the slightly
cheaper non-HD version, or you could buy a $ 99 (or even in some cases $ 79)
Android tablet from
relatively unknown manufacturers in places like Walgreens, CVS, Bed, Bath & Beyond, and elsewhere.
Also, the
Android app market has to cater to those who buy the
relatively cheaper tablet devices and are also flooded with more affordably priced apps.
Galaxy Tab A is certainly not a flagship
Android tablet but it will get the job done if you're in the market for a
relatively cheap slate that happens to support 4G LTE.
Following the Acer Iconia Tab A100 over the weekend, is yet another
tablet that went on sale today in the US; the ASUS Eee Pad Transformer with a 10.1 - inch 1280 x 800 IPS display, 16 GB of internal storage, 1 GHz dual core Tegra 2 processor and
Android 3.0 Honeycomb, for a
relatively low $ 399.99, making this the
cheapest Honeycomb
tablet to hit the market yet, regardless of size.
Sure, you might wish the
tablet had a dual - core processor, or even an HD resolution, but this could still be a
relatively cheap way to pick up a pretty darn capable
Android tablet.
Yet when it comes to premium devices within a more diversified market, like Windows laptops or
Android tablets, you pick
relatively cheap machines because a more premium option is «too expensive».