Top ten Tablet in in 2011 you should know
What's the hotest portable devices issue in 2010? It must be Apple iPad and Tablet. How about in the year of 2011? Overview, there more than 100 all kinds of Tablets on market. If you really want one, what the best to get? All of us know the Apple iPad and the coming iPad 2. What can we expect except the Apple tablet? Here list the other top ten tablets that we think they might popular in the 2011 and in the future?
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Motorola Xoom

The 10.1-in. Android 3.0 , or Honeycomb, tablet sports an Nvidia (NVDA) Tegra 2 dual-core processor, uses a laptop-like 1280 x 800 resolution, and has two cameras: a 2-megapixel sensor in the front for video chat over Wi-Fi, 3G, or 4G and a 5-megapixel rear camera for stills and 720p video recording. It will initially work on Verizon's (VZ) 3G network but will be upgradable to 4G/LTE soon after launch. The Xoom (MMI) is expected to be available in the first quarter, although no pricing has been announced.
Someone said that the Xoom betters the iPad in some ways - -it comes standard with front - and rear-facing cameras, including one that can record in HD, compared with none in the current version of the iPad. It also boasts a larger screen with a higher resolution, supports Adobe Flash, and uses Verizon's network instead of AT&T's. So, we give a great expection in it.
ASUS Eee Pad Transformer
January 4, 2011 - The Eee Pad Transformer was unveiled at CES 2011 by Asus today. We aren't sure if this is jus the Eee Pad Transformer or if this EeePad Transformer will have it's formal product number of EP101. We know that the Eee Transformer is the EP101 which was shown off earlier in the year.
The 10.1-in. Android 3.0 tablet runs for 8 hours but can mate with a keyboard dock, providing a laptop-style configuration while boosting battery life up to 16 hours. The slate runs on the dual-core Nvidia Tegra 2 processor and features two cameras. It will sell for $399 to $699 and be available in April.
ASUS Eee Pad Slider
The Slider is a 10.1-inch tablet with a capacitive touchscreen and a physical keyboard that slides out from behind the display panel, so you can tap out those important messages and emails at lightning speed. Nifty. The Slider feels pretty good to hold. It measures 273 by 180 by 18mm, so, while the keyboard definitely makes it bulkier than rival tablets, it's not disastrously huge. More importantly, it's pleasingly designed, with curved edges, a black glossy bezel around the display, chrome edging around the sides, and a big iPad-style 'home' button, flanked by touch-sensitive menu and back buttons. It feels well put together, and generally really classy.
BlackBerry PlayBook
RIM (RIMM) announced a 4G version of this 7-in. tablet that will run on Sprint's (S) WiMAX network. The 1 GHz dual-core tablet runs the QNX operating system and includes a 1024 x 600 capacitive touchscreen, 1 GB of memory, and two cameras. Although the final software isn't ready, the overall user experience shows elegance, fluidity, and solid performance as shown on our video look. Both the Wi-Fi and 4G versions are expected to be available by this summer.
Acer Iconia Tab A500
Iconia is another thin Android tablet, but Acer added a custom user interface (UI) to the device, which could make future updates a challenge. The lack of hardware buttons on the display bezel required Acer to create gestures from the bezel; sliding a finger from the right edge toward the screen brings up software buttons to go back or home, for example. The 13.3-millimeter-thick Iconia runs on a Tegra 2 and will follow the Xoom as an LTE-enabled tablet on Verizon's network later this year.
Samsung announced its Sliding PC 7
Consumer Electronics Show today in Las Vegas, introducing the Windows 7 tablet PC that will feature a slide-out QWERTY keyboard and sport a 10.1-inch (1366 x 768), 340-nit, multi-touch display. The Sliding PC 7, which will weigh in at 2.2 pounds, will be powered by the upcoming Intel Atom Oak Trail processor, which clocks in at 1.66 GHz. It will also feature 2 GB of DDR2 RAM, a 32 GB or 64 GB solid state drive, a USB 2.0 port, a 4-in-1 memory card reader, HDMI out, and a 1.3 megapixel webcam.
Between the six-cell lithium-polymer battery and Samsung's Eco Light Sensor, which can conserve energy and adjust screen brightness based on available lighting, Samsung claims the Sliding PC 7 has a battery life of approximately nine hours.
There will also be optional 3G connectivity available for the Samsung Sliding PC 7.
Lenovo IdeaPad U1 Hybrid
This true hybrid of tablet and laptop is actually two devices in one. Lenovo showed the U1 last year, but retooled the software: Gone is the custom Linux tablet UI in favor of the more popular and recognizable Google Android platform for the detachable screen. The screen detaches for tablet use and can be purchased alone as the $530 LeTab with either 32 GB or 64 GB of storage. When attached to a keyboard, the device becomes a laptop running Windows 7 with 320 GB of storage, 2 GB of RAM, and an Intel 1.2 GHz CPU. Altogether it's $1,300 and is reportedly available in China first.
LG G-Slate
LG's 10-in. tablet will offer Android 3.0 and will feature a dual-core processor. It will run on T-Mobile's 4G/HSPA+ network and will be available in the coming months, likely after the Motorola Xoom launches. The device was shown off onstage at the T-Mobile press event, but no additional details were provided.
Toshiba tablet.
Toshiba hasn't named its 10.1-in. tablet, but like most others it has outfitted its tablet with Nvidia's Tegra 2 dual-core processor, a 1280 � 800 touchscreen, two cameras, and Android 3.0. Unique to the devices is a nice rubberized back, making the tablet easier to handle. It should be available in the second quarter with Honeycomb, although Toshiba was showing it off with Android 2.2 at CES.
Notion Ink Adam
Adam features the unique 10.1-in., 1024 * 600, transreflective, PixelQi display that has an eInk mode to save battery life. Nvidia's dual-core 1 GHz processor will power Android 2.3 with Notion Ink's custom Eden interface. Instead of separate front and rear cameras, Adam sports a 3.2-in. swivel camera. The tablet will boast battery life of 16 hours, or 160 hours with the backlight off and costs $375 to $549, depending on connectivity and screen configurations.
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