If you want a tablet you can get some work on, iPads are the way to go. The glaring problem remains Googleįor years, Android on tablets has remained incompetent when compared to the iPad, and it seems like that will continue. But Google not pushing Android on tablets forward is a disappointment. Doubling your Pixel Tablet as your smart assistant at home is a neat feature, and bundling the speaker dock at $499 is a much-appreciated move. Not making a keyboard case for its Pixel Tablet further solidifies my argument that Google is fine with pushing Android tablets as content consumption devices. Instead of working to improve the app situation, Google has taken a backseat and is now working on doubling your tablet as a smart speaker – a smart move by all means. It’s a bummer for people like me who want their tablets to double as their second work machines. Do you want to type words or do some office work on the go? Sorry, Android tablets aren’t made for that. You can browse and watch videos on one, and that’s about it. It seems like Google has accepted that Android tablets can’t be anything more than content-consumption devices. I’ve yet to come across any Android tablet with a “redesigned” interface that works for big Android screens. The company said something along the lines of, “Over the last year, we have redesigned Android for big screens.” That may be true, but nothing like that has shipped to users’ hands. I tuned into Google I/O 2023 with high hopes to see the changes Google is bringing to Android tablets with the launch of its Pixel Tablet. Who needs the Pixel Tablet? Amazon’s new Fire Max 11 looks great Google Pixel 8: all the latest rumors and what we want to see I have to stop using the Pixel 7a - but I don’t want to
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