- Nov 20, 2005
- 14,612
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Now that I have had my Prime for a month I thought I would do a write-up of my experience including the dock. Overall I like the Prime, but I must admit it is a mix of good and bad where I think the good wins out.
The design of tablet itself is really nice. Thin is in, and I like the metallic look (even if my wife swears the grey model is purple). The HDMI port works great- it mirrors onscreen except when I play a 1080p movie in Dice Player, then it outputs 1080p. The screen is the best I have seen on a tablet, mostly because of the IPS plus mode. It eats battery, but it works great in sunlight (and makes games look great indoors).
The only major downside to the Prime’s design (other than the infamous backplate) is that the SD card slot makes the card stick out too much. When I have it in a case it doesn’t matter, but I actually lost a 32GB class 10 card (ouch) when I used it outside the case in its dock. Now I don’t use SD card in it because honestly 32GB is enough for me thanks to NTFS support for external HDs. Load up up with mkvs/m2tses, play straight 1080p on a TV up to full Blu Ray quality (30+gb files).
As far as software is concerned, I love how the Prime was the first ICS tablet. ICS works great on it- very smooth with no stutter on the most recent update. My friend’s Xoom has a few slight stutters every now and then (mostly when playing with the app drawer) and the Prime lacks that. Browsing is fast, games are smooth. I love the added effects some games have when played with a Tegra 3 device, and I love playing Samurai 2 Vengeance, Riptide, and Shadowgun in stereoscopic 3D on my 3D plasma.
Honestly I don’t have a single complaint about the software. It is the best Android tablet experience I have seen, and one of the few Android devices I have seen that is as smooth as my SGS2. The SGS2 wins when it comes to Flash playback I think (just barely) but the Prime mops the floor with the SGS2 with web browsing (ESPECIALLY with AdFree+Chrome).
The dock is pretty cool. At first I was miffed that it was the only way to get a USB port, but honestly the Prime looks slick in the dock and I like the fact that it can replace my netbook (and mostly has). I even have it make the Transformer noise when it docks. The keys are better than my netbook, worse than my Macbook. I like that the dock has some keyboard shortcuts, and the mouse support is surprisingly good (even though I mostly leave the trackpad off to type). I am glad I have the dock.
Now for the bad: the backplate. Yes it blocks signals, mostly the GPS. The GPS is pretty much useless. Compared to any other device I have tested (Xoom, SGS2, Evo3D, GNex) the GPS is way behind. It tells your weather app what town you are in, and that is it. I wasn’t surprised by a useless GPS, as I had an aluminum cover for my SGS2 once and that wrecked its GPS. This doesn’t bug me so much because I bought a Bluetooth GPS for my Nook Color that I would use if I ever wanted a GPS in the car. At least the Prime will sync with that cheap GPS, unlike my wife’s iPad 2.
The other often cited issue with the Prime is wifi. Overall wifi is a mixed bag.
I don’t like how it lacks 5GHz support like the iPad 2 has and my SGS2 has been hacked to have. Maybe an unlocked bootloader will fix that in the future via 3rd party developments.
But the real issue is when using 2.4Ghz the Prime falls behind my other devices on the very edge of my network. But again, it’s a mixed bag.
Within 30 or so feet of the old router, my Prime is actually my fastest device. On speedtest it smokes my SGS2, my 3GS and my Nook Color. Only the wife’s iPad 2 competes toe-to-toe. I mean, sometimes it is more than double my SGS2 or NC. In most of my house, it is faster than my other Android devices in my current configuration.
The issue is that on the edge of the network (the land of one bar on all mentioned devices) the Prime slows way down compared to the rest. On the edge of the network, the Prime drops its speeds to be half as fast as my other devices (SGS2, NC). This has been cited as a flaw due to the all aluminum backing, and I can confirm it. Wifi is really important, but even with the speed drop the speeds are faster than the browser is often able to render pages. Still, it seems to be an unfixable flaw.
Personally I decided to keep the Prime despite these flaws, simply because right now is limbo-land with tablet devices and I love the Prime’s overall speed compared to other Android tablets I have used. My solution, as I hinted to earlier, was to finally use the Prime as an excuse to upgrade my router (an old WNDR3300). I found a V1 Cisco e4200 on the shelf of a local store, and that boosted my overall range to the point where the Prime wifi slowdown doesn’t happen on any piece of my property. With this I am happy, but if you are a road warrior depending on hopping on weak wifis in a motel room then the Prime probably isn’t suitable.
Overall I have been pleased with my Prime. Not only is it a huge upgrade over the old Nook Color, but it surely bests other Android tablets I have messed with (Kindle Fire, Xoom, and Transformer 1,). Simply the fact that it is the first 10 inch Android tablet that can play my mkv files makes it a keeper for me- I am tired of waiting for a tablet that can do that. I like the SGS2-level framerates in games too.
I recommend the Prime to those that want a fast tablet despite the limitations, especially if you have a 3D tv…
The design of tablet itself is really nice. Thin is in, and I like the metallic look (even if my wife swears the grey model is purple). The HDMI port works great- it mirrors onscreen except when I play a 1080p movie in Dice Player, then it outputs 1080p. The screen is the best I have seen on a tablet, mostly because of the IPS plus mode. It eats battery, but it works great in sunlight (and makes games look great indoors).
The only major downside to the Prime’s design (other than the infamous backplate) is that the SD card slot makes the card stick out too much. When I have it in a case it doesn’t matter, but I actually lost a 32GB class 10 card (ouch) when I used it outside the case in its dock. Now I don’t use SD card in it because honestly 32GB is enough for me thanks to NTFS support for external HDs. Load up up with mkvs/m2tses, play straight 1080p on a TV up to full Blu Ray quality (30+gb files).
As far as software is concerned, I love how the Prime was the first ICS tablet. ICS works great on it- very smooth with no stutter on the most recent update. My friend’s Xoom has a few slight stutters every now and then (mostly when playing with the app drawer) and the Prime lacks that. Browsing is fast, games are smooth. I love the added effects some games have when played with a Tegra 3 device, and I love playing Samurai 2 Vengeance, Riptide, and Shadowgun in stereoscopic 3D on my 3D plasma.
Honestly I don’t have a single complaint about the software. It is the best Android tablet experience I have seen, and one of the few Android devices I have seen that is as smooth as my SGS2. The SGS2 wins when it comes to Flash playback I think (just barely) but the Prime mops the floor with the SGS2 with web browsing (ESPECIALLY with AdFree+Chrome).
The dock is pretty cool. At first I was miffed that it was the only way to get a USB port, but honestly the Prime looks slick in the dock and I like the fact that it can replace my netbook (and mostly has). I even have it make the Transformer noise when it docks. The keys are better than my netbook, worse than my Macbook. I like that the dock has some keyboard shortcuts, and the mouse support is surprisingly good (even though I mostly leave the trackpad off to type). I am glad I have the dock.
Now for the bad: the backplate. Yes it blocks signals, mostly the GPS. The GPS is pretty much useless. Compared to any other device I have tested (Xoom, SGS2, Evo3D, GNex) the GPS is way behind. It tells your weather app what town you are in, and that is it. I wasn’t surprised by a useless GPS, as I had an aluminum cover for my SGS2 once and that wrecked its GPS. This doesn’t bug me so much because I bought a Bluetooth GPS for my Nook Color that I would use if I ever wanted a GPS in the car. At least the Prime will sync with that cheap GPS, unlike my wife’s iPad 2.
The other often cited issue with the Prime is wifi. Overall wifi is a mixed bag.
I don’t like how it lacks 5GHz support like the iPad 2 has and my SGS2 has been hacked to have. Maybe an unlocked bootloader will fix that in the future via 3rd party developments.
But the real issue is when using 2.4Ghz the Prime falls behind my other devices on the very edge of my network. But again, it’s a mixed bag.
Within 30 or so feet of the old router, my Prime is actually my fastest device. On speedtest it smokes my SGS2, my 3GS and my Nook Color. Only the wife’s iPad 2 competes toe-to-toe. I mean, sometimes it is more than double my SGS2 or NC. In most of my house, it is faster than my other Android devices in my current configuration.
The issue is that on the edge of the network (the land of one bar on all mentioned devices) the Prime slows way down compared to the rest. On the edge of the network, the Prime drops its speeds to be half as fast as my other devices (SGS2, NC). This has been cited as a flaw due to the all aluminum backing, and I can confirm it. Wifi is really important, but even with the speed drop the speeds are faster than the browser is often able to render pages. Still, it seems to be an unfixable flaw.
Personally I decided to keep the Prime despite these flaws, simply because right now is limbo-land with tablet devices and I love the Prime’s overall speed compared to other Android tablets I have used. My solution, as I hinted to earlier, was to finally use the Prime as an excuse to upgrade my router (an old WNDR3300). I found a V1 Cisco e4200 on the shelf of a local store, and that boosted my overall range to the point where the Prime wifi slowdown doesn’t happen on any piece of my property. With this I am happy, but if you are a road warrior depending on hopping on weak wifis in a motel room then the Prime probably isn’t suitable.
Overall I have been pleased with my Prime. Not only is it a huge upgrade over the old Nook Color, but it surely bests other Android tablets I have messed with (Kindle Fire, Xoom, and Transformer 1,). Simply the fact that it is the first 10 inch Android tablet that can play my mkv files makes it a keeper for me- I am tired of waiting for a tablet that can do that. I like the SGS2-level framerates in games too.
I recommend the Prime to those that want a fast tablet despite the limitations, especially if you have a 3D tv…
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