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Test Motorola XOOM Wi-Fi + Verizon Wireless (Legitreviews)

Marque
Motorola
Modèle
XOOM Wi-Fi + Verizon Wireless
Site
Legitreviews.com
Date
13.09.2011
Nombre de Visites
47
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0 vote
The Motorola Xoom was the inaugural Android 3.0 "Honeycomb" tablet, but for some reason it didn't sell off the store shelves like it was supposed to. Motorola began selling its Xoom February 24, 2011 and CEO Sanjay Jha reported on April 28, 2011 that the company had sold 250,000 Xooms to date To put things into perspective Research in Motion sold over 250,000 Blackberry PlayBooks from April 19th to May 19th and thus matching the Motorola Xoom in unit shipments in half the time. Apple's iPad is still the company to beat as they sold 4.7 million in the first quarter alone. For some reason the Motorola Xoom has been given negative associations, but why? We got our hands on the Motorola Xoom and have been using it for the past month to see how it performs and if this tablet deserves a second chance. When the Motorola Xoom was originally released it was the very first tablet to use the Google Android 3.0 'Honeycomb' operating system designed from the ground up for tablets. Months later there was the Android 3.1 update that was released over the air (OTA), which includes support for the new Android movie rental service, full support of Adobe Flash Player 10.3, resizeable home screen widgets, USB-connected peripheral support, expanded Bluetooth accessory support and simplified photo sharing between the Xoom and PCs. Then came the Android 3.2 update, which included screen scaling compatibility mode, support of microSD cards up to 32GB in size, adaptive streaming support for movies and other minor improvements. As you can see the Motorola Xoom has gone through many changes since it was first released and is a much more capable tablet than when it was first released. The Motorola Xoom offers as close to a typical PC experience that you are going to get on a tablet, so we just had to get one in to review. If you've ever owned an Android powered device the user interface will be easy to learn and catch onto, so the learning curve of a tablet isn't as bad as one might think.
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