Google’s Nexus 7 tablet is not exactly a surprise. Nor is the fact that I’m able
to work on a review of the product just hours after the device was announced.
For years now, Google has had the uncanny habit of not only making big
announcements at its I/O events, but then immediately sharing what it has
shown off with developers and members of the press.
This year was over the top. Not only did Google hand out its new, 7-inch,
$199 Nexus 7 tablet, but it also introduced a new version of Android (4.1)
called Jelly Bean, upgraded its flagship phone, and... rolled out the Nexus Q.
Perhaps the most odd of all, the Q is a spherical media player / amp which
functions as a wired audio and video output for all of your Google content.
Early, Google has announced that it's working on the second generation of the tablet Google Nexus 7, also images of it while it was in test phase has
appeared at FCC which proving that the device will come out soon.
According to a source Executive within the company Asus -the manufacturer
of the device- the next generation of Nexus 7 will have a 7 inches, Full HD
screen having 1080 x 1920 pixels.
Also Nexus 7 will have a quad core processor snapdragon 600 with 2G ram,
Also it will have an 32G internal memory, supporting WIFI 802.11a/b/g/n and
Bluetooth 4.0 also Nexus 7 will be supporting 4G LTE. Nexus 7 will have a 1.2
mega pixel front camera and 5 mega pixel back camera, with a 4000 MAH
battery, Running on android 4.3 and it will be released during july.
But the main course is obviously the tablet — a stock Google experience with
a price point clearly meant to put a hurt on Amazon’s Kindle Fire, and sway
potential buyers of Apple's lower-end iPad 2. Android as a tablet platform has
stumbled thus far — can Google finally begin to make an impact in an
increasingly crowded market?
These features have been leaked by one of Asus's Engineers
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