IMO Surface Pro 2 -- because it's actually useful instead of just media consumption
I want to hate the Surface 2, but the width feels good in your hands & it comes with Office. Hard to beat if you don't have any special requirements!
The Tab Pro *is* lighter, so if you're never planning to use the pen...I'd probably scratch the Galaxy Tab Pro 10.1 because the Note 10 2014 is about the same price now (or only $50 more when someone still sells it at full MSRP).
Hardware looks nice enough, but multi-window is such an awesome thing for Android 10" that until/unless the Samsung/Google patent deal brings it to AOSP, it will be hard to recommend anyone else's non-budget tablets.Likely the Xperia Z2 tablet - out next month. (Yes, I'm running over your requirements a little).
Hmm, interesting responses here.
On the surface pro 2, what do you think makes it better than a 2 in 1, e.g., a xps 12 or a yoga (I believe you can actually buy the ivy bridge xps 12 for cheaper than the surface pro 2 now).
Also, for tablet duties (browsing, Netflix/YouTube, email, etc), is the extra performance from the core i5 worth it over the new bay trail tablets, e.g., Asus t100, dell venue 11 pro?
At the moment I would say Galaxy Note 10.1 or the Galaxy Tab Pro 10.1.
Likely the Xperia Z2 tablet - out next month. (Yes, I'm running over your requirements a little).
A weight at just 429 grammes, lower than any other 10" tablet, waterproof, S800 etc. It doesn't have the smudge-attracting overlay over the screen which the Z1 tablet has either. The only drawback that I can see is that the resolution is still 1920x1200. Not a massive thing, but still.
I was going to say the TabPro or Note 10.1-2014, but the Z2 deserves a look. Its reasonable to believe the Nexus 10 will get refreshed in June at Google I/O as well.
Windows tablets should be avoided, that platform is a barren ghost town and for practical purposes, dead.
I was going to say the TabPro or Note 10.1-2014, but the Z2 deserves a look. Its reasonable to believe the Nexus 10 will get refreshed in June at Google I/O as well.
Windows tablets should be avoided, that platform is a barren ghost town and for practical purposes, dead.
If you want a mobile OS tablet: iPad Air. It's very fast, lightweight and compact. The aspect ratio is superior for web browsing and other tasks you'd do in portrait view. And iOS still has a much better tablet app ecosystem -- I've been using Android tablets lately, and it's wild how few of the OS' apps are properly optimized for a big screen. On an iPad, you can generally assume that any app which makes sense for a tablet will have a tablet-native version.
For something Windows-based: I'd lean toward the Surface Pro 2 for the speed and keyboard support, but it's pretty expensive. The Venue Pro 11 might do the trick if you need something cheaper.
On iOS, you have to separately buy that app per device. That is the one and true annoyance I have with iOS.
That's not true for all apps, there are universal apps in iOS that works for both phone and tablet.
I just got a refurb'ed Note 10.1 2014 from Walmart. 16gb version for $400. Looks brand new but comes in a plain white box...
I know it isn't true for all apps, but there's a good number of them that have two separate apps instead of a universal one.
Android tried that for a bit, but it looked like it never took off since people could just sideload the phone app and use it that way.