The web cam functionality and
video hosting capabilities don't hurt, either.
Not exact matches
I tested the Transformer out at mobile world congress in February (
video below) and wasn't too impressed with the weight but full USB ports made me wonder if ASUS are building some nice USB
hosting capabilities.
Samsung Galaxy S III is packed with a 4.8 - inch Super AMOLED 720p display with 1280 x 720 pixels of resolution and Eye Tracking technology, powered by a 1.4 GHz Samsung - made Exynos 4212 quad - core processor, a Mali - 400MP GPU, 1 GB of RAM, 8MP rear - facing camera with 1080p HD
video recording
capability, an additional front - facing 1.9 megapixel camera with face recognition
capability, S Voice app, 16GB / 32GB / 64 GB internal memory storage, a microSD slot for memory expansion up to 32 GB, Wi - Fi 802.11 a / b / g / n, DLNA, Wi - Fi Direct, GPS / GLONASS, Wi - Fi hotspot, Bluetooth 4.0, access to Google Play, a whole
host of the Google services, 2050mAh battery.
HTC One X runs Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich OS with HTC Sense 4.0 UI on top of it, powered by a 1.5 GHz Nvidia Tegra 3 quad - core processor under the hood, sporting a 4.7 - inch second generation Super LCD HD display with 1280X720p resolution, equipped with an 8 megapixel rear - facing camera with LED flash, 1080p HD
video recording
capability, an additional front - facing camera, 32 GB internal storage, 1 GB RAM to keep things running smoothly, micro USB 2.0, Bluetooth 3.0, Wi - Fi, DLNA functionality, 21 Mbps HSPA connectivity, Beats Audio integration, pre-installed HTC Watch app, access to Android Market, a whole
host of the Google services, 1800mAh battery to power everything and all the regular features of an Android phone.
Exynos 1.2 GHz processor 1Gb Ram 2 GB of ROM 16 GB of internal memory Micro SD Tab proprietary connector with USB
Host capabilities (adapter) 7 inch WSVGA IPS technology for the display Ability to call,
video call and send sms Touch Wiz 4.0 halfway between that and the Honeycomb dell»S 2
Specs wise, HTC HD7 is having a large 4.3» WVGA touchscreen, 5 Megapixel camera with LED flash & Auto focus, 720p HD
video recording
capability, Qualcomm Snapdragon 1 GHz processor, 576 MB RAM / 512 MB ROM, 3G, Wi - Fi, 16 GB internal storage, Bluetooth 2.1, micro USB and 1200mAh battery, T - Mobile special services, and a whole
host of Microsoft services like Zune, Xbox Live and more.
Sony Xperia V runs Android 4.0.4 Ice Cream Sandwich OS out of the box, sporting a 4.3 - inch HD Reality Display with 1280 X 720 pixels of resolution, powered by Qualcomm Snapdragon MSM8960 chipset clocked at 1.5 GHz, 13MP rear - facing HD camera with 16x digital zoom to shoot 1080p HD
videos, an additional front - facing VGA camera, PlayStation certification, 8 GB onboard storage, microSD card slot for memory expansion up to 32 GB, 4G LTE
capability, micro USB 2.0, MHL connectivity, Bluetooth 3.0, 802.11 Wi - Fi b / g / n, NFC with «One - touch» function, compatible with Xperia TV Dock with MHL to HDMI converter, 1750mAh battery, a whole
host of the Google services, access to Play Store and all the regular features of an Android phone.
Equipped with an 8 megapixel camera with dual - LED flash capable of 720p HD
video recording, expandable memory of up to 32 GB with an 8 GB micro-SD card included in the box, Wi - Fi b / g / n, 3G, HSPA +
capability, Android Market, 1230mAH battery, and a whole
host of Google, HTC, and AT&T services.
Samsung Galaxy S II Skyrocket comes equipped with a huge 4.5 - inch Super AMOLED Plus display with 480 X 800 pixels of resolution and a 1.5 GHz dual - core processor ticking inside the device, Android 2.3.5 Gingerbread OS, an 8 megapixels camera on the back side to capture full 1080p HD
video,
video calling capable 2 megapixel camera on the front side, 1 GB RAM to speed up the system, 3G, HSPA + / LTE
capability, 802.11 Wi - Fi a / b / g / n connectivity, 16 GB internal flash storage, microSD card slot support for memory expansion up to 32 GB, DLNA, Wi - Fi Hotspot functionality, Bluetooth 3.0, A-GPS, DLNA
capability, Accelerometer, Proximity sensor, Light sensor, powered by an 1850mAh battery, Android Market, Google Maps and the full
host of the Google & AT&T services.
Motorola ATRIX 4G is runing with Android 2.2 Froyo on Nvidia Tegra 2 Dual - core 1 GHz Processor with a 4 - inch QHD display (or 960x 540), a front - facing VGA camera and 5 - megapixel with LED flash, a Biometric fingerprint login security, 1 GB of RAM, Wi - Fi 802.11 n support on both the 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands, GPS, 3G, HSPA +, Bluetooth, HD Dock for it's HDMI
video output
capabilities and Laptop Dock, 1080p HD
video playback, a 1930 mAh battery that gives nine hours of talk time, Android Market and a whole
host of Google & AT&T services.
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.
Motorola Atrix 4G is running with Android 2.2 Froyo (can be upgrdable to Gingerbread later) on Nvidia Tegra 2 Dual - core 1 GHz Processor with a 4 - inch QHD display (or 960x 540), a front - facing VGA camera and 5 - megapixel with LED flash, a Biometric fingerprint login security, 1 GB of RAM, Wi - Fi 802.11 n, GPS, 3G, HSPA +, Bluetooth, HD Dock for it's HDMI
video output
capabilities and Laptop Dock, 1080p HD
video playback, a 1930 mAh battery, Android Market and a whole
host of Google & AT&T services.
Asus Transformer Infinity runs Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich OS, sporting a 10.1 - inch Super IPS + 1920 x 1200 display, 1 GB RAM to keep things running, an 8 megapixel rear - facing camera with f2.2 & 5 element lens, an additional 2 megapixel front shooter for forwarding
video chats, 1080p HD
video recording
capability, 16 GB to 64 GB memory storage support, 4G LTE 100 Mbps connectivity, 3.5 mm jack, micro-HDMI output, microSD card reader, Bluetooth 2.1, enhanced 802.11 Wi - Fi b / g / n, 25WHr battery, Keyboard dock, Access to Android Market, a whole
host of the Google services and it features all the usual features of an Android tablet.
It boots iOS 6, sports a 7.9 - inch IPS LCD display with 1024 X 768 pixels of resolution, an Apple dual - core A5 processor, a FaceTime HD camera on the front, and 5 megapixel iSight camera on the back with 1080p HD
video recording
capability, 802.11 Wi - Fi a / b / g / n support for speeds up to 150 Mbps, Lightning to USB connector, LTE / DC - HSDPA connectivity, Safari browser, access to App Store, iCloud services, 16.3 Wh battery to power everything, a whole
host of the iOS services and all the regular features of an iPad.
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.
Huawei MediaPad has got a 217 pixels - per - inch 7 - inch IPS LCD capacitive touchscreen display with the resolution of 1280 x 800 pixels, powered by a dual - core 1.2 GHz Qualcomm processor, auto focused 5 megapixel rear facing camera with HD
video recording
capabilities, an additional 1.3 megapixel front - facing camera for
video calling, 1080P full HD playback support, HDMI port, HSPA + 14.4 Mbps connectivity, 3G support, 802.11 Wi - Fi b / g / n, Bluetooth, 8 GB internal storage, micro-SD card slot support for memory expansion up to 32 GB, Adobe Flash player 10.3, Android Market, an dthe full
host of Google services.
LG Nexus 4 runs Android 4.2 Jelly Bean OS, sporting a 4.7 - inch LCD screen (1280 x 768 pixels), powered by a Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 Pro chipset with quad - core processor at 1.5 GHz, 2 GB RAM to keep things running, an 8 megapixel main camera with LED flash to record 1080p HD
videos, 1.2 MP front - facing camera for forwarding
video chats, 8 GB on - board storage, NFC
capability, micro USB 2.0, Bluetooth 4.0, 802.11 Wi - Fi a / b / g / n, access to Google Play Store, a whole
host of the Google services, 2,100 mAh battery to keep power everything and a whole
host of the regular features of an Android phone.
HTC 7 Pro is having 3.6» WVGA touchscreen, Qualcomm 1 GHz chipset, full - slide out QWERTY keypad, 5 MP camera with LED flash, 720p HD
video shooting
capability, 3G, Wi - Fi, 16 GB internal storage, Bluetooth 2.1, micro USB and a whole
host of Windows services like Xbox Live, Zune and more.
BlackBerry Z10 comes with new BlackBerry 10 OS, sporting a 4.2 - inch display with 1280 X 768 pixels of resolution, powered by a 1.5 GHz dual - core processor, 2 GB of RAM, equipped with an 8 megapixel camera with LED flash on the back, 1080p HD
video recording
capability, a front - facing 2 megapixel shooter for forwarding
video chats, 16 GB of internal storage, microSD card slot for memory expansion up to 32 GB, micro USB 2.0, micro HDMI port, NFC, 4G LTE connectivity, Bluetooth version 4.0, 802.11 Wi - Fi a / b / g / n, a whole
host of the BlackBerry OS services, access to BlackBerry World, 1,800 mAh battery, and all the regular features of a BlackBerry phone.
Packed with brushed aluminum back, the Dell Streak Pro comes pre-installed with tablet optimized Android 3.1 Honeycomb OS skinned with Dells» Stage 2.0 UI with Gorilla Glass protection, featuring 10.1 - inch WXGA screen display with 1280 X 800 pixels of resolution, powered by a 1 GHz Nvidia Tegra T20 Dual - Core processor for increased performance
capabilities, boosted by 1 GB of DDR2 RAM, 1080p HD
video playback
capability, equipped with a 5 megapixels auto - focused rear camera with flash, paired up with an additional 2 megapixel front - facing camera for
video chats, dual stereo speakers, two mics (left and right), Data only — modular modem, dock connector, microUSB 2.0, Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR, 802.11 Wi - Fi a / b / g / n connectivity, built - in GPS navigation system, 3.5 mm audio headset jack, Android Market, a powerful battery providing up to 12 hours of usage time, and a whole
host of Google services.
The New iPad runs iOS 5.1, sporting a 9.7 - inch super-high resolution Retina Display with 2048 x 1536 pixels, powered by a A5X quad - core processor under the hood with quad - core graphics, 5 megapixels rear - facing iSight camera with IR filter, 1080p HD
video recording, 16GB / 32GB / 64 GB internal storage, 21 Mbps HSPA + and DC - HSDPA at 42 Mbps, 4G LTE
capability, Bluetooth, 802.11 Wi - Fi a / b / g / n, a whole
host of the iOS services and all the regular services of an iPad.
Samsung Galaxy S II is running with Android 2.3 Gingerbread on a dual - core 1.2 GHz processor and it is having a 4.3 inch Super AMOLED Plus display at 800 X 400 pixel of resolution, and equipped with 8 Megapixels camera with 1080p HD
video recording
capability and LED flash, Auto focus, an additional front - facing 2 Megapixels camera for
video calling, 3G, Wi - Fi b / g / n connectivity, 16 GB internal memory storage, micro-SD card slot support for 32 GB memory expansion support, 1 GB RAM, Wi - Fi hotspot functionality, Bluetooth 3.0, A-GPS, NFC support, HDMI - out, DLNA
capability, Accelerometer, Proximity sensor, Light sensor, Android Market, Google Maps and the full
host of the Google, Samsung services.
The latest update comes with a
host of features like new UI, inline keyboards, support for 19 more file types, new sticker packs, upgraded
video player and easy «chat switching»
capabilities.
Those exact same search and algorithmic
capabilities, though, made it trivial for Uziel and BuzzFeed to find a whole
host of exploitive
videos.