However, there are cases that these words may not be applicable. For instance, why would anybody spend US$ 500 on an iPad or even US$ 200 on a Kindle Fire when you can get the Pandigital Planet 7-inch Android tablet for US$ 99? Or a MID 70009 Android tablet for $72.95?
A tablet is a tablet is a tablet, right? Wrong.
Most of these dirt-cheap tablets have excruciatingly slow processors; you tap an icon, and nothing happens for several seconds. Scrolling a Web page can be an unresponsive exercise in frustration. The usability here pales in comparison to what you get from a more mainstream tablet. In short, cheaper versions of iPad or Kindle are just horribly terrible.
What's more, some bargain tablets employ resistive touch screens, which require physical pressure. That is in contrast to the capacitive screens used in better tablets, which respond to the slightest brush of your fingertip. With a resistive screen, you have to push -- and that ruins the entire experience. Plus, with those slow processors, it's very difficult to tell if the tablet has registered your input, so you end up push-tapping again -- often with unwanted results. Bleh.
Another big issue: no Google Play (aka Android Market), meaning you're severely limited in the apps you can add. They might have knockoff app stores, but with none of the apps you'll want. No Angry Birds, No Kindle, no Facebook. Double-bleh.
Recently there has been an upsurge of attractively priced 7- and 10-inch models with fast processors, capacitive screens, and even Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich), but still no Google Play (or, for that matter, Amazon Appstore). Trust me: You won't be happy without at least one of them.









