Hey xda im writing a shortish informative essay for my language arts class. I was womdering if you guys would proofread it over and tell me im a dumbass if i got some of the facts wrong. I hope you guys will enjoy! Its a pleasure to be a part of this awesome community.
Thanks a bunch
-Silente
Nook Tablet Devs and Kindle Fire Devs working together!
In the fall of 2011, two average-priced E-reader/Tablet crossover devices were launched. The Kindle Fire was made by Amazon in order to enter the tablet realm with the name of their successful e-reader line stamped on its back. The other, the Nook Tablet was Barnes and Nobles second venture into the tablet realm, with their Nook Color that was released in 2010 being the first. These two device's releasing marked a new price range for tablets, with most tablets costing anywhere from $300-$500. The Kindle Fire sold for a low $200 which was a great entry level price for people who had been wanting a tablet but had not been wanting to shell out the bug bucks for it. Whereas the Nook Tablet was $50 more at $250 but boasted a better screen, twice the storage space and an expansion slot where you could put in up to 32GB more. The two were locked in mortal combat and as time went on it became apparent that the Kindle Fire was the consumer favorite, mainly because of its farther developed app store and built-in Amazon media services. The Nook's problem was that Barnes and Noble hand-picked all of the apps for its app store and thus didn't have as wide of a selection. The Kindle Fire went on to actually become a direct competitor to Apple's famed iPad while the Nook continued to simply be an e-reader tablet, and didnt make as big a splash in the world of technology.
Now as tablets go, both were quite a good deal for what you paid for them and thus were prime targets for developers. A good value at some of the lowest prices in the tablet market, whats not tol ike? And so in the first few months after their release, both the tablets started to have strong and vibrant development communities, people who were committed to breaking through the restrictions set up on both of the tablet's by their manufacturers. As time went on the Kindle Fire proved to be the easier development platform because of Barnes and Noble's restrictive bootloader. A piece of software built into the Nook Tablet that wouldn't allow it to run any software except Barnes and Nobles. Eventually though the Nook Tablet's boot loader was cracked and the devs surged through the cracks they had made, working through rooting the Nook and eventually even running a custom made version of a popular android mod CyanogenMod7. Meanwhile though, the Kindle Fire devs had not been idle, they had rooted and modded the Kindle Fire even so far as to get the latest versionofAndroid (Ice Cream Sandwich) somewhat running on the Fire. At this point though, both development communities had hit a brick wall so to speak. To go any further in running Ice Cream Sandwich on either device, they would need to re-build a 3.x kernel from scratch. Both devices came running a 2.x kernel and up until then both of the dev communities had used that to base their mods off of. It was a huge task but both dev communities tackled it valiantly and began to make progress. But then an event came around that would change the course of the 3.x kernel development infinitely for the better!
On March 1st 2012, Hashcode; one of the leading developers from the Kindle Fire development group contacted Team A from the Nook Tablet development, pointing out the similarities in the two devices they coded for and proposed that they begin to help each other by letting the other's team use bits of code in order to better both of their 3.x kernel development projects. Merely 18 minutes later, Fattire; the leading developer for Ice Cream Sandwich on the Nook Tablet side of things, replied back that it would be great if the co-operation started up because they could simply cherry-pick the parts of code that they needed from each other's projects. it would be "Good Times" as Fattire put it. Now as both the teams work doggedly to get the 3.x kernel built, both the groups know that the work load has been lightened a bit and that the two dev communities may become more of friends instead of enemies each defending their turf, or in this case respective tablets. Its all uphill from here,but hopefully the two communities can help each other climb that hill a little faster on both sides.
Sent from my Nook Tablet using xda premium
And to make it even more amazing is a number of the devs making breakthru's didn't even have the product in hand.
~ G
SilentStormer said:
Hey xda im writing a shortish informative essay for my language arts class. I was womdering if you guys would proofread it over and tell me im a dumbass if i got some of the facts wrong. I hope you guys will enjoy! Its a pleasure to be a part of this awesome community.
Thanks a bunch
-Silente
Nook Tablet Devs and Kindle Fire Devs working together!
In the fall of 2011, two average-priced E-reader/Tablet crossover devices were launched. The Kindle Fire was made by Amazon in order to enter the tablet realm with the name of their successful e-reader line stamped on its back. The other, the Nook Tablet was Barnes and Nobles second venture into the tablet realm, with their Nook Color that was released in 2010 being the first. These two device's releasing marked a new price range for tablets, with most tablets costing anywhere from $300-$500. The Kindle Fire sold for a low $200 which was a great entry level price for people who had been wanting a tablet but had not been wanting to shell out the bug bucks for it. Whereas the Nook Tablet was $50 more at $250 but boasted a better screen, twice the storage space and an expansion slot where you could put in up to 32GB more. The two were locked in mortal combat and as time went on it became apparent that the Kindle Fire was the consumer favorite, mainly because of its farther developed app store and built-in Amazon media services. The Nook's problem was that Barnes and Noble hand-picked all of the apps for its app store and thus didn't have as wide of a selection. The Kindle Fire went on to actually become a direct competitor to Apple's famed iPad while the Nook continued to simply be an e-reader tablet, and didnt make as big a splash in the world of technology.
Now as tablets go, both were quite a good deal for what you paid for them and thus were prime targets for developers. A good value at some of the lowest prices in the tablet market, whats not to like? And so in the first few months after their release, both the tablets started to have strong and vibrant development communities, people who were committed to breaking through the restrictions set up on both of the tablet's by their manufacturers. As time went on the Kindle Fire proved to be the easier development platform because of Barnes and Noble's restrictive bootloader. A piece of software built into the Nook Tablet that wouldn't allow it to run any software except Barnes and Noble's. Eventually though the Nook Tablet's boot loader was cracked and the devs surged through the cracks they had made, working through rooting the Nook and eventually even running a custom made version of a popular android mod CyanogenMod7. Meanwhile though, the Kindle Fire devs had not been idle, they had rooted and modded the Kindle Fire even so far as to get the latest versionofAndroid (Ice Cream Sandwich) somewhat running on the Fire. At this point though, both development communities had hit a brick wall so to speak. To go any further in running Ice Cream Sandwich on either device, they would need to re-build a 3.x kernel from scratch. Both devices came running a 2.x kernel and up until then both of the dev communities had used that to base their mods off of. It was a huge task but both dev communities tackled it valiantly and began to make progress. But then an event came around that would change the course of the 3.x kernel development infinitely for the better!
On March 1st 2012, Hashcode; one of the leading developers from the Kindle Fire development group contacted Team A from the Nook Tablet development, pointing out the similarities in the two devices they coded for and proposed that they begin to help each other by letting the other's team use bits of code in order to better both of their 3.x kernel development projects. Merely 18 minutes later, Fattire; the leading developer for Ice Cream Sandwich on the Nook Tablet side of things, replied back that it would be great if the co-operation started up because they could simply cherry-pick the parts of code that they needed from each other's projects. it would be "Good Times" as Fattire put it. Now as both the teams work doggedly to get the 3.x kernel built, both the groups know that the work load has been lightened a bit and that the two dev communities may become more of friends instead of enemies each defending their turf, or in this case respective tablets. Its all uphill from here,but hopefully the two communities can help each other climb that hill a little faster on both sides.
Sent from my Nook Tablet using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Two proof issues (Red text in quote)
It's nitpicking, but, I wouldn't use abbreviated words (such as "devs" and "mods") without explaining what they are abbreviations for. It might confuse an audience unfamiliar with the parlance of the community. Especially not in the title.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I997 using Tapatalk
Birdsbeaks said:
It's nitpicking, but, I wouldn't use abbreviated words (such as "devs" and "mods") without explaining what they are abbreviations for. It might confuse an audience unfamiliar with the parlance of the community. Especially not in the title.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I997 using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks youre probably right
Thanks for all the suggestions guys!
Sent from my Nook Tablet using xda premium
change bug bucks to big bucks
Nook Tablet Devs and Kindle Fire Devs working together!
In the fall of 2011, two average-priced E-reader/Tablet crossover devices were launched. The Kindle Fire was made by Amazon in order to enter the tablet realm with the name of their successful e-reader line stamped on its back. The other, the Nook Tablet was Barnes and Nobles second venture into the tablet realm, with their Nook Color that was released in 2010 being the first. These two device's (devices') releasing (release) marked a new price range for tablets, with most tablets costing anywhere from $300-$500. The Kindle Fire sold for a low $200 which was a great entry level price for people who had been wanting a tablet but had not been wanting (had wanted a tablet but were unwilling) to shell out the bug bucks (big bucks) for it. Whereas the Nook Tablet was $50 more at $250 but boasted a better screen, twice the storage space and an expansion slot where you could put in up to 32GB more (get an additional 32GB's worth via microSD cards) . The two were locked in mortal combat and as time went on it became apparent that the Kindle Fire was the consumer favorite, mainly because of its farther developed app store and built-in Amazon media services. The Nook's problem was that Barnes and Noble hand-picked all of the apps for its app store and thus didn't have as wide of [delete] a selection. The Kindle Fire went on to actually become a direct competitor to Apple's famed iPad while the Nook continued to simply be an e-reader tablet, and didnt make as big a splash in the world of technology.
My suggestions for the first paragraph. I leave the rest to others.
That was a good read.Hope you do well with it.
The complicated, detailed history...
SilentStormer said:
On March 1st 2012, Hashcode; one of the leading developers from the Kindle Fire development group contacted Team A from the Nook Tablet development, pointing out the similarities in the two devices they coded for and proposed that they begin to help each other by letting the other's team use bits of code in order to better both of their 3.x kernel development projects. Merely 18 minutes later, Fattire; the leading developer for Ice Cream Sandwich on the Nook Tablet side of things, replied back that it would be great if the co-operation started up because they could simply cherry-pick the parts of code that they needed from each other's projects. it would be "Good Times" as Fattire put it. Now as both the teams work doggedly to get the 3.x kernel built, both the groups know that the work load has been lightened a bit and that the two dev communities may become more of friends instead of enemies each defending their turf, or in this case respective tablets. Its all uphill from here,but hopefully the two communities can help each other climb that hill a little faster on both sides.
Sent from my Nook Tablet using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hey Silente!
Here's even more of the "inside story" if you want it-- the cooperation between KFire and NT goes back even further than what you report. In fact, I was contacted in PM a few months back by KFire developer "JackpotClavin" who had some questions regarding, if I remember right, some issues that came up w/the Nook Color that he thought might apply themselves to CM7 (and later ICS) for the Fire. So he and I had been exchanging messages back and forth for some time on various topics, since the devices are so similar. Then weeks after that, right after I had upgraded the "pvr"driver for NT to 2.6.35, I wanted to update some of the other advanced stuff (ion, tiler,etc.) and noticed that Hashcode (who I think I had spoken to once before) had already committed a lot of this work, or at least an attempt was made, for fire. So I adopted his work as a basis for porting it for NT, and after a few more days of struggling, I contacted him with questions, and we started talking in more detail. He was a HUGE help for me to understand what tiler and ion and all that even were plus issues he had encountered, etc. Ultimately that tiler/ion stuff didn't work out for 2.6.35 though.
Then a few weeks LATER, Kuzma30 (with chrmhoffmann and others) were making some serious progress with 3.0x, but we didn't have any history and the wrong pvr and I wasn't sure if it was using the right kernel to start with. So I switched to the Google version of the 3.0 kernel and used the Nexus Galaxy branch as a base for kuzma30's 3.0 work so that we would have a "known" place to start (and compatibility with video files used by the Nexus Galaxy) as well as all the history from TI and google. So I took kuzma30's stuff and add it THAT to the "end" of the source code. Doing this seemed to run well, and we had graphics, and soon touchscreen, and this became the basis for further work. And that's when what is in your essay began-- Hashcode decided to use the successes we had had with 3.0 as a basis for doing the same on the KFire, since they are so similar. that's when he branched the source for KFire and introduced himself to everyone on the forums...
Anyway, this is probably way too much info and probably too technical and even boring, but I just wanted to point out that the spirit of cooperation has been going on for a while-- there is no "turf" between devices, at least as far as I'm aware. The more the merrier! Your essay looks great btw- it's an honor to be mentioned, so thanks, and good luck with it!
ft
fattire said:
Hey Silente!
Here's even more of the "inside story" if you want it-- the cooperation between KFire and NT goes back even further than what you report. In fact, I was contacted in PM a few months back by KFire developer "JackpotClavin" who had some questions regarding, if I remember right, some issues that came up w/the Nook Color that he thought might apply themselves to CM7 (and later ICS) for the Fire. So he and I had been exchanging messages back and forth for some time on various topics, since the devices are so similar. Then weeks after that, right after I had upgraded the "pvr"driver for NT to 2.6.35, I wanted to update some of the other advanced stuff (ion, tiler,etc.) and noticed that Hashcode (who I think I had spoken to once before) had already committed a lot of this work, or at least an attempt was made, for fire. So I adopted his work as a basis for porting it for NT, and after a few more days of struggling, I contacted him with questions, and we started talking in more detail. He was a HUGE help for me to understand what tiler and ion and all that even were plus issues he had encountered, etc. Ultimately that tiler/ion stuff didn't work out for 2.6.35 though.
Then a few weeks LATER, Kuzma30 (with chrmhoffmann and others) were making some serious progress with 3.0x, but we didn't have any history and the wrong pvr and I wasn't sure if it was using the right kernel to start with. So I switched to the Google version of the 3.0 kernel and used the Nexus Galaxy branch as a base for kuzma30's 3.0 work so that we would have a "known" place to start (and compatibility with video files used by the Nexus Galaxy) as well as all the history from TI and google. So I took kuzma30's stuff and add it THAT to the "end" of the source code. Doing this seemed to run well, and we had graphics, and soon touchscreen, and this became the basis for further work. And that's when what is in your essay began-- Hashcode decided to use the successes we had had with 3.0 as a basis for doing the same on the KFire, since they are so similar. that's when he branched the source for KFire and introduced himself to everyone on the forums...
Anyway, this is probably way too much info and probably too technical and even boring, but I just wanted to point out that the spirit of cooperation has been going on for a while-- there is no "turf" between devices, at least as far as I'm aware. The more the merrier! Your essay looks great btw- it's an honor to be mentioned, so thanks, and good luck with it!
ft
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for reading it, ive just turned it in today but i didnt see your post until now
Its cool to see that theres so much collaboration going on between these two similar dev communities. And as for the "turf" thing i guess at my school and around the general surface of the internet ocean theres a lot of competition between things. Phones, clothes, computers, tablets etc etc and i guess since im somewht new to fhe dev community i still have that "competition" mindset. Thats just something i guess i realized just now
Thanks again
Noone at my school will understand half of this essay
-Silente
Sent from my Nook Tablet using xda premium
Related
Listen, I understand how people are looking at KF and thinking - man, it's already rooted, has CWM and ROMS are but a minute away. Our NT is still locked down, and we're being told it may stay this way.
So naturally, being in your return period, you're thinking about switching boats to KF.
I have one word explaining why that's a real bad idea: SPECS.
Ok, say you have a KF running CM on it.
RAM - you have 512MB RAM. That's low, not enough for GB or ICS. No need arguing that GB will run on it - yes it will, but it'll never be as smooth as a 1GB RAM device. Android will keep closing apps to free up mem, that creates response lag.
Anybody who had an original SGS with GB on it knows - you just can't make an SGSII out of it, it will always lag here and there. Read engadget review - they are complaining about how laggy it is.
Memory - You've got 6GB memory. That's it. You'll never have any more. That means you'll constantly feel deprived of space - you can't load full HD movies to watch, you can't load your music collection on it. You'll constantly be sacrificing something.
Books/Media store - you only have access to Amazon media store, since B&N doesn't have a store you can install and use. On a NT, though, without any root we already can stream Amazon content, read Kindle books, and that's all with native support of everything B&N has to offer.
No MIC - forget about using your Fire with Google Voice. There's no mic. Also forget about recording yourself reading books to your kids, to use in case you're on vacation or something.
Amazon Cloud you say? Yes, but only where you have a good WiFi connection. As soon as you're out of range - the fun stops. Phone tethering you say? Those 2GB will disappear MEGA FAST if you stream to your KF.
Amazon videos you say? Sure, but remember - that ain't free. Pay Amazon Prime membership fee, then also pay for movies themselves. And again, only when on WiFi and you don't get to keep it.
On the other hand, consider this:
With NT, even without root, we already have a device that's:
Very snappy
Able to sideload apps
Able to run a different launcher
Able to run Opera browser - nice n fast
Able to run 720p videos in browser, full screen
Able to play almost any video up to full-HD 1080p BlueRay
Able to play AVI files with free third-party players (no need for conversion)
Has 33GB+ of memory with an added SD card. I've just loaded tons of movies, books, magazines and music on it, and still have space remaining
Will be able to be used as a phone with Google Voice
Run Amazon Market (some have reported that even older Android Market APK works)
Run both Amazon's and B&N's premium content.
Think about it. Yes, KF was hacked faster than our NT was, but in the end, we already have almost everything we need, AND we have a much more powerful device.
KF was quicker at the start, but it has almost depleted its potential as a modern Android tablet, considering what future versions of Android need. Our device still has tons of untapped potential.
EDIT:
Engadget released a comparison between the two HERE.
Here are some interesting parts for the lazy:
Both tablets are a good size for one-handed reading, though the Nook edges out the Kindle here a bit, with its slightly lighter weight (14.1 ounces to the Fire's 14.6). The Nook's subtly convex back and plastic bezel make a bit easier to hold.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Both devices rock 1GHz dual-core processors, but the Nook has an edge here, with its 1GB of RAM to the Fire's 512MB -- and certainly the difference is noticeable, even when booting up something as simple as a game like Angry Birds. Things are even more pronounced during video playback. We took Shutter Island for a spin via Netflix streaming on both devices, and it was really like night and day. Motion is far less choppy on the Barnes & Noble device. The HD playback on the Nook also picked up subtle imagery like patterns on ties, which were largely lost on the Fire.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
tl;dr version: PATIENCE!
+1 to NT and I repped you too!
oh wait..not SD. LOL
That is why everyone needs to pull their pants back up and wait.
It will be rooted.
I also voted this thread up!
How hard would it be for them to close the sideload loophole? The thing updates automatically, right? Obviously they are not going to be excited hearing about everyone using the Amazon store.
I agree the Fire is not a good alternative for exactly your reasons, but that doesn't necessarily mean that this is worth keeping if it turns out to be locked down tight.
compscure said:
How hard would it be for them to close the sideload loophole? The thing updates automatically, right? Obviously they are not going to be excited hearing about everyone using the Amazon store.
I agree the Fire is not a good alternative for exactly your reasons, but that doesn't necessarily mean that this is worth keeping if it turns out to be locked down tight.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
In my opinion, a locked NT as it is right now is still much better than a KF running CM.
But given that they locked it down, don't you think it was a mistake/accident that they allowed apk installs through the browser? When they push the first update will that ability still be there?
DarkDvr, normally i would agree with you if the market only have two 7inch tablet to choose from (KF and NT). However this is not the case, we have tons of options in 7inch tablet market, and if B&N really is being an ass to lock down the NT, then people can choose other tablets that might fit their need better.
Last year when NC came out there was only two 7inch tablet (NC, and Samsung Tab), so we get a lot more developer support, and people are willing to be more patient, but this is no longer the case.
7inch tablets:
Nook Tablet
Kindle Fire
Samsung Tab (~$250 refurbished for 3g version, cheaper for wifi version)
Nook Color ($199)
Lenovo Idea Pad A1 (Cortext A8, 512mb ram, bluetooth, GPS, f/b camera, microsd slot, $199)
Acer Iconia Tab A100 (tegra 2, 1gb ram, Honeycomb, bluetooth, f/b camera, <$200 on BF)
Kobo Vox (Cortex A8, 512 ram, Gingerbread, MicroSd, $199)
Samsung Tab 7.0 Plus (Exynos dual core, 1gb ram, honeycomb, GPS, BT, F/B camera, $399)
Samsung Tab 7.7 (Exynos, 1gb ram, Honeycomb, GPS, BT, F/B camera, 1280x800, price?)
HTC Flyer (1.5ghz, pen input, $299)
Dell Streak 7 Tablet (Tegra 2, 800x480, Honeycomb, f/b camera)
And those are only the major brands, there are other off brands like Archos, Velocity Micro, Coby, that i didn't include.
So to me, if B&N really want to piss off the community that help make their NC a success to began with, then I will vote with my wallet and let them know that it is not a good idea to piss off the people your loyal customer, and your first adopter for the NT.
EDIT
Don't get me wrong, I still have high hope for the NT, and i really like the NC/NT simple but elegant design. However if B&N really choose to lookdown the NT's bootloader (which the dev community haven't conclusively proven yet), then i really don't want to buy a product from a company that chooses to piss off it's loyal customers.
gordon1hd1 said:
7inch tablets:
Nook Tablet
Kindle Fire
Samsung Tab (~$250 refurbished for 3g version, cheaper for wifi version)
Nook Color ($199)
Lenovo Idea Pad A1 (Cortext A8, 512mb ram, bluetooth, GPS, f/b camera, microsd slot, $199)
Acer Iconia Tab A100 (tegra 2, 1gb ram, Honeycomb, bluetooth, f/b camera, <$200 on BF)
Kobo Vox (Cortex A8, 512 ram, Gingerbread, MicroSd, $199)
Samsung Tab 7.0 Plus (Exynos dual core, 1gb ram, honeycomb, GPS, BT, F/B camera, $399)
Samsung Tab 7.7 (Exynos, 1gb ram, Honeycomb, GPS, BT, F/B camera, 1280x800, price?)
HTC Flyer (1.5ghz, pen input, $299)
Dell Streak 7 Tablet (Tegra 2, 800x480, Honeycomb, f/b camera)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
True, I definitely think that locking NT was a huge mistake that B&N will pay for, but for some of us NT IS the best option.
Samsung Tab - 10 inch heavy shovel - screw that
NC - too weak and laggy, even after mods
Lenovo - 512 RAM, weak
Acer Iconia - I see $330+ price even for 8GB version
Kobo Vox - 512 RAM and don't trust that brand
Samsung Tab 7.0 Plus - 400+tax for a tablet is overpriced
Samsung Tab 7.7 - even more expensive?
HTC Flyer - slow and laggy, overpriced since day 1
Dell Streak - slow and laggy, low res screen
What I'm saying is that when you, like me, are in the market for a cheap tablet, there's only 2 good options - NT and KF. Rest of them are either overpriced as a device (going into netbook or UP category, where they just can't compete) or some shady brands.
At least that's my thinking.
EDIT:
Don't get me wrong, I still have high hope for the NT, and i really like the NC/NT simple but elegant design. However if B&N really choose to lookdown the NT's bootloader (which the dev community haven't conclusively proven yet), then i really don't want to buy a product from a company that chooses to piss off it's loyal customers.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Agreed, and given a choice, I'd always go for a company that doesn't insult my intelligence and doesn't treat its customers as morons. However, I have full faith in XDA community and still believe this will get hacked. And when it does, I'll be pointing finger at KF and laughing maniacally.
Depending on the weather here on the forum in the next 12 days, B&N may be losing my $260 to a Samsung G 7+ (maybe even a KF if I'm feeling crazy). Or just wait a few months see what turns up after Christmas.
gordon1hd1 said:
So to me, if B&N really want to piss off the community that help make their NC a success to began with, then I will vote with my wallet and let them know that it is not a good idea to piss off the people your loyal customer, and your first adopter for the NT.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I saw a quote linked somewhere here recently from someone from B&N and they said something about 3% of NC coming from modders. I don't know how accurate or guesstimated that number was, but we shouldn't forget that they sell millions of these devices to normal consumers and there are only thousands of us. I'd like to think they keep people like us in mind, but we certainly aren't they primary market by a long shot.
I agree that there are lots of other options, but it's disheartening when none seem to have the build quality and specs in the same price range as the Nook models, excluding BF sales that might be hard to get. The IdeaPad looks intriguing at first glance but is the same basic hardware as the year-old NC and with a worse screen (and eww: the $200 version has 2GB storage that probably won't ever fit ICS). Acer A100 looks nice but also has a cheaper screen and a small battery.
DarkDvr while i am like you, think that the NT might be the best fit for my use case also. But with so many choices out there, i think our dev and support community won't be anywhere near the same as it was with NC. Plus with the bone headed move on B&N part, i don't see many true devotee sticking to the NT like yourself. And that is the ultimate problem, without a strong dev community, the NT most likely won't get all the goodies like CM7/CM9, which is what made the NC awesome.
By the way the Samsung Tab i was referring to earlier is the 7inch model, the same one that came out right before NC. Both are rocking Cortex-A8 processor.
I am honestly VERY happy with the status of my KT right now. As it stands, with a launcher, widgetlocker app and all the other sideloaded apps I wanted I have everything i wanted.
I dont care if I lose amazon marketplace support, because honestly I can find any apk I want all amazon does is give me a way to read reviews (which i can through the browser + android market)
the only thing, and trust me it is a HUGE thing, i am terrified of is that come day 15 or 16 or even 30, B&N releases a firmware update i cannot click 'no' to and it updates my nook and closes the hole we've been using. I dont know if its possible, but I reckon it is and that would make me a very sad camper since stock, this thing is a total piece of **** software wise (nook market is worthless), i bought a tablet, not an ereader.
boomn said:
I saw a quote linked somewhere here recently from someone from B&N and they said something about 3% of NC coming from modders. I don't know how accurate or guesstimated that number was, but we shouldn't forget that they sell millions of these devices to normal consumers and there are only thousands of us. I'd like to think they keep people like us in mind, but we certainly aren't they primary market by a long shot.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Boomn i think you underestimate the word of mouth, and unofficial advertisement B&N get from the modder community. Every few weeks there is a story on Engadget, Liliputing or Gizmodo about how great the NC community is, and the release of the a popular Rom for the NC. Or how most of the highly rated reviews on B&N, Amazon, BB are from modder who brought the NC to use as a tablet. So while we as a community might be small, but our influences on "Normal" people's purchase decision are much higher than B&N thinks.
And if B&N think that they can piss off the dev community, while taking on Amazon, and all the other 7inch tablet maker out there, and still make the NT a commercial success, they might be in for huge disappointment. Just look at how many of the NT and KF review out there mention rooting or app side-loading as part of the official review, and how much negative PR B&N got from the 1GB storage limitation on the review sites.
.
Because I live in Italy I'll receive my NT only on 26Nov. (if I will lucky), so no give back option for me
So.. I really, really hope that a hack will be found. Just the root will be enough for me
With the root we'll be able to run custom recovery, trow away what we don't need and add what is missing (settings, etc).
BTW for me realease the source and lock the bootloader is a nonsense!
First post.
I'm a full-time iOS developer with about 6 iOS devices on my desk right now. I really like iOS and love developing for it. Having said that....
I picked up a Kindle (e-ink) about a year ago and then switched to a Nook Simple Touch the day they were released. I've been watching the KF/NT release with great interest.
I eventually decided on the Nook Tablet and stumbled across this site the day I got it (the 16th). I have been blown away by the things you people have accomplished in just a couple of days and I've had a blast watching the hour-by-hour discoveries.
My main reason for getting the NT was as a reader and everything you folks are doing is icing on the cake. Very nice icing!
I'm also very optimistic that breakthroughs will continue even if the pace slows a bit. For me the KF is just too restricted in capability--even it if can be rooted.
As an aside, I also have access to a handful of Android devices including a 10.1 Galaxy Tab, and a Lenovo Ideapad K1 (it helps when the company is buying), but I prefer the Nook Tablet to either.
As long as I can keep side-loading apps I'll be happy. I certainly understand the sentiments of those not wanting to reward B&N for what appears to be a snub. At the same time as long as they continue to allow me some method to get a few more apps on the device I'm good with it.
It's been my experience that once I get a device setup--either iOS or Android--I really only end up using a handful of apps (after trying dozens)--but I want them to be very good apps that *I* get to choose.
Thank you to you all!
This thread should not exist, has nothing to do with android development and sounds more like a sales pitch than anything.
I get it you prefer the NT, me too but this thread is pointless and should be deleted...
gordon1hd1 said:
Boomn i think you underestimate the word of mouth, and unofficial advertisement B&N get from the modder community. Every few weeks there is a story on Engadget, Liliputing or Gizmodo about how great the NC community is, and the release of the a popular Rom for the NC. Or how most of the highly rated reviews on B&N, Amazon, BB are from modder who brought the NC to use as a tablet. So while we as a community might be small, but our influences on "Normal" people's purchase decision are much higher than B&N thinks.
And if B&N think that they can piss off the dev community, while taking on Amazon, and all the other 7inch tablet maker out there, and still make the NT a commercial success, they might be in for huge disappointment. Just look at how many of the NT and KF review out there mention rooting or app side-loading as part of the official review, and how much negative PR B&N got from the 1GB storage limitation on the review sites.
.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Good point, we are certainly a vocal and influential bunch. However lots of those "normal" consumers would never check any place like Engadget for any review and have probably never heard of it. Mentions of modding/hacking/flashing in online store reviews go right over lots of people's heads too. Amazon and B&N are going to sell a ton of their tablets through physical stores like Walmart, Target, BestBuy, etc where most people still shop too. I agree that we probably do have more influence than just 3%... and now I'm not even sure where I was going with this point, lol
notinterested said:
This thread should not exist, has nothing to do with android development and sounds more like a sales pitch than anything.
I get it you prefer the NT, me too but this thread is pointless and should be deleted...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is the general forum for the NT not the development forum. Calm down.
Knuxr said:
This is the general forum for the NT not the development forum. Calm down.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
My mistake, was on the wrong tab.
Still though, pointless thread is pointless. We all know the better device.
notinterested said:
My mistake, was on the wrong tab.
Still though, pointless thread is pointless. We all know the better device.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I completely agree with that, but this thread serves as a reminder why it is still better than the Fire, to those that might not know.
notinterested said:
This thread should not exist, has nothing to do with android development and sounds more like a sales pitch than anything.
I get it you prefer the NT, me too but this thread is pointless and should be deleted...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
...Excuse me?
Forgive me for not appreciating your "experience" on XDA since, omg, feb 2010, but this is a General NT forum, and this thread is very much important to people who are right now at a tipping point between NT and KF, considering the latest root news for both devices.
So drink some coolaid and move along, kid.
Hi All,
I know, there are many threads about KF vs NT, sorry for another one, I just haven't found my answer yet about following.
I'm visiting US and plan to buy a souvenir - either Kindle Fire or Nook Tablet. I lean towards NT slightly - because of the SD slot and RAM. I'm worried about locked bootloader however.
I would like to use the tablet for video playback, surfing the web, playing some games.
I'd like to have there ICS/CM9 one day. And that's the question. We have seen big progress in NT hacking recently, but it's definitely behind the state of KF development (of course thanks to B&N obstacles).
Is it only a matter of time and effort till NT gets working ICS (capable of reasonably smooth performance including video playback, etc.), or is it still a mystery, whether we ever get there? How big is the risk of ending with devs giving up due to some B&N obstacle?
Thanks for your opinions/knowledge, I'm scratching my head for 1,5 months already
Aleq
Based on what we're seeing with CM7 I don't see any impossible hurdles for CM9. It's just a lot more work and a much less mature project. I'd say NT is a no brainer over KF.
Cool, Nook Tablet with only 8GB of storage was introduces for $50 less, $199 total. It keeps the SD slot so I'd say that's a great deal.
I just hope no new bootloader (with new hacking countermeasures) comes with it or it gets cracked soon.
UPDATE: Too bad, the RAM has been cut from 1GB to 512MB :-(
I am a amazon prime member/amazon fanboy try to buy everything there and was really excited in the summer when I heard amazon was making their own line of tablets.
Then it was finally announced and I was like wtf seriously... 8gb or storage and no sd card slot plus the dreaded power button and no volume control buttons. I was massively disappointed and planned to wait till they updated the kindle but since the NT was on sale for 200 I bought it and couldn't be happier for my needs. Before I was using a coby tablet with lower res screen and no development since no firmware is public.
KF seems useless until updated with sd card/moved power button
Aleq said:
Hi All,
I'd like to have there ICS/CM9 one day. And that's the question. We have seen big progress in NT hacking recently, but it's definitely behind the state of KF development (of course thanks to B&N obstacles).
Aleq
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I am really interesting in this problem too, NT hardware is much better but software development it’s far behind than KF.
What B&N obstacles are you taking about?
Judging by the youtube videos I have seen, CM9 is coming along nicely. I think once a 3.0+ working kernel is working, it will only be a matter of time.
The obstacles with the NT are B&N's bootloader being locked down and continuously changing. That keeps holding up development as new fixes are constantly being needed to progress further. Now, it seems, with the introduction of the 8GB version, it seems to be stalling a bit again while current progress is ported over to that build as well. I may be wrong on that, but that's the way it seems to me.
So I bought Nook Tablet and I'm loving it. Best souvenir from vacation ever
Running so far only rooted stock 1.4.2 + Android Market. Looking at CM7, looking forward to CM9.
nexuslm said:
What B&N obstacles are you taking about?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Locked bootloader, new firmwares removing root and preventing old rooting methods.
Sent from my BNTV250 using XDA
The only thing I disliked about my Nook is the fact that the B&N store is useless outside the States.
So using CM7 is pretty much obligatory for me.
That's true, but partly the same applies to Amazon Store - foreigners are not allowed to make purchases there.
Hacking - root + Market (Play, eh.) or CM7 / CM9 (it's coming!) was always the main reason for me to get one. I wouldn't be buying either of two, if it would be locked to stock forever
Before we start this discussion, i'd just like to say that the devs are doing a brilliant job of bringing android flavours to the Touchpad and this discussion should in no way be a deterrent to them doing their work.
Is it just me or is the touchpad a neglected device in terms of development compared to other tablets? i.e. asus, samsung, htc.
There are a huge number of devs and a wide variety of custom ROMS, themed ROMS, ported ROMS, Mods the list goes on and on.
As far as I'm aware of the problems (feel free to correct me) the source for half the hardware hasn't been released (such as the webcam) etc etc. so it kind of makes it very very difficult if not impossible to experiment with different ROMS.
Yes some out there can say to me "buy a tablet that was meant to run android next time" fair enough. But is it alot to expect the same level of development as usual android tablets?
webOS is very lovely but it doesn't cut it for me in terms of customisation (even with some of the childish looking themes on preware). CM9 has its issues still with regards to not everything working yet, but even when it's complete i still miss simple conveniences like VPN and connect WiFi using WPS automatically to name a few.
So can we expect that kind of development? or is it too much to ask.
I doubt we'll have Samsung level development, but that's true of any non-Samsung device. Have no idea why they're so popular, but usually the size of their dev communities put others to shame.
As you've pointed out, we don't have all our hardware working right now. Between that and the fact that CM9 itself (as a whole, not just the TP Version) is incomplete, its no wonder there's only two or three roms. Many people make their roms using another as a base, be it a stock firmware (of which the TP obviously does not have) or CM. Since CM9 is in a constant state of flux, there's no solid base for the TP yet.
As it is, we have the CM9 alpha, CM9 weeklies, AOPK, Unofficial Cornerstone kangs, MIUI, Classicnerd, Cherrykang... and that's just ICS based stuff. Add in Gingerbread roms and non-Android OSs like Ubuntu and you'll find we have a quite a good selection already.
my gripe with gingerbread ROMS is not as some people say "phone rom on a tablet" its just the fact that the apps recognize it as a phone and ruins the whole thing.
apart from MIUI, alot of the other ROMS look and feel pretty similar to me and there isn't much that sets them apart. granted cm9 is in its infancy (EVERYWHERE including my evo 3D, google definitely not redeeming itself over this update fiasco). I haven't really sampled Ubuntu to make a judgement on it.
I suppose if one was to put together something original a) it would be so hard people wouldn't bother attempting it cuz it's just too time consuming b) it'd be like making a lovely dish from leftovers....kernel's modified and compiled from things like htc jetstream (and rumor has it the GS2 on AT&T), ROMS put together from 7" android tablets most of which have the same resolution as the touchpad so it'll make life easier with respect to resizing.... again too much effort and time consuming to be worthwhile
I feel the TouchPad has great development. Especially when you consider a vast majority of the devices were sold before android was put on the device. When the fire sales happened the people that bought them didn't know android was going to be put on it. So anyone that wanted to play with android or build ROMs probably got an android tablet.
There will never be a full stock optimized android build. With the Samsung devices they have a solid start point, and a manufacturer that is devoted to the success of the device. HP has washed its hands of the TouchPad more or less. Everything done to get android on the TouchPad had been done by volunteers, without the resources really needed.
Samsung just generally makes things easiest for people to hack it. HTC and Asus ship their devices with locked bootloaders. Samsung doesn't, so they have one less hurdle right from the get go. The other side of that is Samsung makes great hardware, and decent software. This is easier to show in the phones. HTC makes good phones, but there is two or three extra hurdles that don't exist on Samsung phones. LG phones also don't have those hurdles, but their hardware isn't as good, and they are notoriously bad at getting android updates out.
Another thing to consider is the quality of android overall on a tablet. There is minimal tablet apps, and little motivation. Apple bet their company on the success of the iPad, Microsoft is doing the same with Windows 8. If either of them fail at their tablet product their entire company is in jeopardy. But Google wouldn't notice if android tablets fail, and flop. The entire thing to them is like a hobby. I think if android tablets were more popular in general we would see a lot more going on here. The fact that the TouchPad has sold more units than any other android tablet (combined I think) is really sad. Android just isn't taking hold in the tablet market, and won't without a lot of work by Google. But, what's their incentive? 98% of their revenue is from advertising. They still make money when an iPad pulls up an ad served by Google. They don't really have a lot of skin in the game, and it shows. I think the only reason Samsung, HTC, Motorola etc sell android tablets at all is because they don't really have a choice. They can't sell iOS tablets. The real test will be Windows 8 on ARM. If these companies can license W8 from Microsoft, its familiar to them. Its like building a Laptop or Ultrabook, they rely on Microsoft's ability to make compelling software, and enterprise friendly systems. That's really what HP was trying to do with the TouchPad. HP said the TouchPad wasn't their last tablet, but I would bet their next one runs W8. I think the tablet race us destined to be a two pony race, and that android isn't going to be the second pony much longer at the rate things are going. </rant>
Sent from my Galaxy S II (i777)
ace9988 said:
Before we start this discussion, i'd just like to say that the devs are doing a brilliant job of bringing android flavours to the Touchpad and this discussion should in no way be a deterrent to them doing their work.
Is it just me or is the touchpad a neglected device in terms of development compared to other tablets? i.e. asus, samsung, htc. niggles (or problems; you decide) with cm9 has started to
.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I get so tired of people complaining they don't get the same things from a $200 device as others get from their $600 ones. The reason the TPs are selling at the price they are is that the manufacturer stopped development. But, IMNSHO, the TP users are actually benefiting from that. If HP were still in charge, the TP would not have ICS, Ubuntu or Arch running.
this is my first tablet after all.....and when we're used to the development we see on our (assumed) android phones you can't help but compare, but like i said its only a discussion. and whats Arch?
Doesn't the fact that HP released the android kernel help development? How much does it help
I'm looking to get my first Android tablet. I've always rooted and run custom firmware on my Android phones, so I need a "cheap" Android tablet with a healthy developer community and a lot of support.
My first thought was to go for the $250 Nook Tablet, spec for spec it's better than the Kindle Fire; but didn't an update come out for it recently that made rooting it near impossible or so highly difficult that it hasn't been done yet?
Then the $200 Kindle Fire came to mind, very popular tablet must mean a very healthy/active hacking/dev community right? But isn't it also locked down in such a way it can't be rooted or modified anymore? I need a working Android Market (Oh I'm sorry, I mean <sarcasm>Play Store</sarcasm>) and good custom ROM's including ICS.
Then I see a $189 Lenovo A1 Tablet at Best Buy with decent specs. It's running Android 2.3 which I'd normally prefer over Android 3.0/Honeycomb but now that ICS/Android 4.0 is out, I'd definately want to run that on my tablet.
So is ICS running very good/stable on any sub $300 Android tablet? I wonder when the $250 Tegra3 based tablet from Asus (or is it Acer...) comes out. Suggestions on which route to go?
You should really do some reading/research because almost all of your perceptions are way off.
Sent from my Xoom using Tapatalk
Yeah, I plan on researching it to no end. That's what I tend to do, read through the various forums, FAQ's, etc. I don't purchase blindly (even for a 'budget' tablet), but before I did I wanted to drop these questions out there to see if somebody who's a lot more familiar with these devices has an opinion or if somebody who's already done a lot of research could pipe in. I wanted to use a combo of my own research and direct recommendations/observations from people more familiar with this Android tablets than I. I'm more into the Android Phone hacking community, I've rooted many various Android models and have run a lot of custom firmwares on various models. I'm sure I'll adapt quickly enough to the tablet scene but while I'm getting my feet wet I was hoping to hear from more experienced people.
Basic research leads me to believe the Nook Tablet has superior hardware but not as active a dev community as the others. It's a shame cause the hardware is nice. The only real ICS ROM for the Nook Tablet is Alpha status with a lot of known bugs, no where near daily driver ready. But CM7 seems to be a popular ROM for this tablet and it seems to be stable enough for Daily Driver status. I'm leaning more toward the Kindle Fire as they have ICS with only 3 real main known issues (HW Acceleration, 720p Video and Bluetooth). But I'm also seeing that they have CM9 running on the HP Touchpad (which has the best HW out of all these devices) but they have several more known issues. I like that the HP Touchpad can dual boot webos and Android though, always wanted to play with WebOS and the superior HW is nice (I mean it was a $500 tablet in its hay-day). Still researching.
The main problem is. initially the nook tablet was-and still is- locked down tighter than a virgin princess with a chastity belt, thus we only had a few devs working on it as most abandoned the tablet and moved to the fire/other tablets/phones, but we had adam and indirect and a few others tinker and twist and mangle and mutilate the tablet until we are where we are.
cm9 is behind the cm7 team only because they decided to do the 3.0 kernel? vs the 2.6.7(or something like that), and the 3.0 kernal has been giving them...issues that they are resolving one by one.
the cm7 team, conversely, has had an easier time since they ported the nook color's cm7, tweaked of course, and are fixing things that are/were not working correctly.
HW accellaration/720p accell is working on cm7,
bluetooth and multitouch(more tha 2 at a time) are on the list of things to get done BUT, B&N did not include the "key" to activate the bluetooth(and fm radio) part of the chip so that is WAY down on the list of things to do.
if the nook tablet was "exactly" like the kindle fire for bootup/hackability, then it would be way ahead of the kindle fire at this time, but due to the initial problems the devs had getting root/breaking the bootchain to install alternate OS's....they are behind.
hardware wise the NT is better than the kindle fire,
personally my next tablet will -most likely- be the new asus that is coming out in a few months (tegra quad core) that is going to be 250.
glitchsys said:
Basic research leads me to believe the Nook Tablet has superior hardware but not as active a dev community as the others.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes to the first part, no to the second part. You're mistaking size with activity. The Nook tablet community is one of the most active communities I've encountered among ~12 devices that I've followed. Its small and tight knit but people are working constantly. Pop into the IRC channel or read some of the threads and you'll see that.
It's a shame cause the hardware is nice. The only real ICS ROM for the Nook Tablet is Alpha status with a lot of known bugs, no where near daily driver ready.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
True. But again, dedicated developers working hard on it.
But CM7 seems to be a popular ROM for this tablet and it seems to be stable enough for Daily Driver status.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yep. I have a Xoom with ICS and I'm anxious for CM9, but CM7 is more than adequate for what I use the NT for.
I'm leaning more toward the Kindle Fire as they have ICS with only 3 real main known issues (HW Acceleration, 720p Video and Bluetooth).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Meh. The fire is simply a sub par device. The lack of an sd slot is a deal breaker for me as well. The only reason it got more hype than the Nook tablet is because of the $50 cheaper price tag. If B&N had released the 8GB NT first or at the same time as the 16GB tablet, you'd hear a lot more about it.
Think about it. Most people don't know much about specs and what not. They look at the price, see that the two devices are very similar but one is $50 cheaper. B&N really dropped the ball here.
But I'm also seeing that they have CM9 running on the HP Touchpad (which has the best HW out of all these devices) but they have several more known issues. I like that the HP Touchpad can dual boot webos and Android though, always wanted to play with WebOS and the superior HW is nice (I mean it was a $500 tablet in its hay-day). Still researching.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
HP Touchpad is a great device (I snagged 5 on the firesale and resold 4, kept one for a while for tinkering then gave it to a friend), but here you're talking about completely different form factor. Its a 9.7" I think? It is however being worked on by the official CM team and those guys are extremely dedicated. And I know quite a few people that use the latest CM9 Alpha as a daily driver. And I think they got Netflix working on it (not 100% sure though, haven't checked it in a few weeks).
---------- Post added at 12:42 PM ---------- Previous post was at 12:40 PM ----------
lenardo said:
the cm7 team, conversely, has had an easier time since they ported the nook color's cm7, tweaked of course, and are fixing things that are/were not working correctly.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This was for the first Alpha release. Alpha Final is a build from scratch for the Nook tablet.
personally my next tablet will -most likely- be the new asus that is coming out in a few months (tegra quad core) that is going to be 250.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Rumors of a nexus tablet around the same time (possibly built by Asus, for Google).
If that happens, the nexus tablet will likely be the way to go (unless it doesn't have an sd slot).
Very nice info. Thanks guys. Yeah I'm leaning toward HP Touchpad ($225) or a Kindle Fire for ($140) used. But if a good deal on a Nook Tablet comes along, at least I know I can drop CM7 on it and it'll run good; bluetooth doesn't concern me that much, but multi-touch is fairly important.
Questions go in the Q&A section. There is a sticky stating that.
Request a moderator to move it. Thanks
Sent from my Nook Tablet using xda premium
lavero.burgos said:
Questions go in the Q&A section. There is a sticky stating that.
Request a moderator to move it. Thanks
Sent from my Nook Tablet using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yep, crap, just saw that. Apologies everyone. You don't have to move this thread, you can just delete it or close it. I' tried to find controls to allow me to close or delete this thread but can't.
glitchsys said:
The only real ICS ROM for the Nook Tablet is Alpha status with a lot of known bugs, no where near daily driver ready.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I've been using it since the day Alpha 0 came out, and couldn't be much happier with it. The WiFi is a little wonky if I don't turn it off before I turn the screen off, but CM7 was the same for me. The video acceleration is a little off when doing things fast, but for all the video watching and game playing I've done (and my kids have done) it has not caused any problems.
I would say the HP Touchpad is a great choice. I have two of the 16GB that I got direct from HP for $99 each them running CM7. I mostly use them as photoframes and use an HTC Evo View (32gb onboard storage) or HTC Flyer (16GB onboard storage) for daily useage. But the HP touchpad has the more development. There is a fair amount of dev for the Flyer, but not much development for the View but after installing VTLauncher and rooting and installing NoLock I am satisfied. I have also owned the Nook Color and Nook Tablet... but sold them once I tried a Flyer ($199 refurb) .... and then a View ($239 new). The NC or NT are both nice you are primarily looking for a reader with a few tablet functions. The Nook Color has more development but the Nook Tablet is noticeably faster. BTW I actually prefer Gingerbread to HoneyComb on the flyer and view. They have hw buttons for home, back, menu buttons so don't have to lose any screen when in full screen games but you lose the HW buttons in HC.
Moved To Q&A
Please post all questions in the Q&A section
Why don't you try an [B][I]android tablet from ESPOW[/I][/B]?
Why don't you try an android tablet from ESPOW?
Compared with others,it's low price with just $139 but has a lot of functions,such as WiFi,Supports 3D Video Decoder, enables you to play 3D games
Has three modes of operation: buttons, touch screen and Capacitive Touch Sense
Supports HDMI video
PMU Intelligent power management, 30% power save and lengthen the battery using time
Support most of audio format, multi-sound effect and cycleplay mode, enable you to enjoy listening to music
Support AVI, RM, RMVB, FLV, MP4, WMV, 3GP, MKV, etc. video format and support as high as 3840*2160P revolution playing
Built-in microphone and speaker, supports a super long recording time.
Never heard of ESPOW...
I decided on an HP Touchpad. I mean it's a $500 tablet and I was able to pickup the 32gb one for $190 shipped on EBay. I could have got a 16gb model for $170 but since it doesn't have a MicroSD card I decided more internal storage is best. I've seen CM9 running on my boss's HP Touchpad and it's quite stable, only 2 issues are Camera and Microphone but they work fine in the WebOS side.
This will hold me over until the $250 Asus with the Tegra3 comes out in a few months, or the Nexus Tablet for $150 comes out. I then may buy another tablet, if I found it useful enough, or just sell the Touchpad and pay the difference to get the upgraded Asus.
Thanks all for the advice though. I was down to the Kindle Fire or HP Touchpad and the HW is far superior in the Touchpad. The Kindle Fire though was cheaper/smaller/thinner/lighter and may have been a better option for my 2 year old who loves to play Angry Birds but the touchpad's hardware and fact that the wife would be using it a lot as well drew me to the touchpad.
Hello folks,
I have a question regarding the Nook tablet. I was making a delivery to a customer this morning and he has a Nook 16GBTablet. We got to talking and he indicated that he was going to sell it since his wife didn't use it. It looks like new physically and I am considering obtaining it for one of my grandsons, basically so I can get my Nook Color with CM7.2 on it back from him. Is the Nook Tablet a worthwhile barter or would something else be better? I bought a Samsung Tab2 7" tablet for a younger grandson a couple of weeks ago and he really likes it, But I don't think I can get a deal like I got for the Samsung. I only gave $169 for it new, still sealed in the box and I doubt I will find another deal like that as I'm pretty sure the fella sold it to me for less than he paid for it. I'm getting off track here, what I need to know is if the Nook Tablet is even a worthwhile Andriod tablet or would I be better off waiting a bit for the new, different brand tablets to come out?
Check swappa.com and see the prices for the tablets. Maybe you get to catch a good deal, I bought my Samsung captivate there and loving it. The nook is worth it in my opinion and the deal breaker is the sdcard slot . Nexus 7 temps me but no sdcard slot no way I buy it, anyways for what I do the nook tablet is enough. Tho I know kids love games and probably that is what they do in their tablets more than anything and the nook does a decent job with kids games, heavy games not that good.
Tablets with Tegra 2 chip is gamers glory and with dual/quad cores is a dream but your budget is not enough.
Good luck!
~ V
Sent from my Cappy powered with Jelly Bean using Tapatalk 2
The nexus 7 is ( in my humble opinion ) the product of the year. The other major producers were surprised and knocked back on their butt. Now they have to answer back with something equal or better. Then there is the argument that it is 'not' just the product but the 'exosphere' along with the product. Lastly, the Nook is a fine performing tablet.
The Nook Tablet, was made to be a reader, but the xda community saw it to having more potential then BN wanted it to. The Nook Tablet has gone far from becoming a full-fledged reader into a usable, 7-inch Android tablet wonder. The Nook was at the bottom along with it's brother in technology, the Kindle Fire, as it was a reader, but it has pushed to the top, and now is one of the most popular tablets out there. I have a Nexus 7 myself, and it is amazing, but was at the top from when it was born. The Nook, and the great devs of this forum, had to work it up there, while BN did not help even once, except for the kernel. We even have our own nearly working kernel, thanks to Rebellos, Chris, and Kuzma. We have succeeded in reaching the latest Google experience, Jelly Bean AKA Android 4.1, and the devs hope to keep working and catching up with Google. As the problems slide off the radar, more devs have appeared. The Nook may not be a Nexus 7, but it sure damn does the job like it.
From what I've heard/read/seen I could make such list of tablets in this class, from best to slighty worse
1) Nexus7
2) Nook Tablet
3) Kindle Fire (note this has got better Android support than NookTab for now <points at Hashcode>)
4) Nook Color
There are for sure others, but I don't know others.
Also, if you want to use it as overpowered Android device someday - get 16GB version, it has got 1GB of RAM, while 8GB ver got 512MB of RAM and it might be not enough for some games, more browser tabs, etc.
Thanks for the opinions.
If I and the owner decide to work out a barter I may do the deal. Cash purchases are not many, but I do quite a bit of bartering and it is a 16GB Tablet. Have a 14 almost 15 year old grandson that could make good use of it I believe. Don't know how savvy he would be to rooting the Nook though he is really good with computers, he fixes all my messups.
When the reboot bug gets squashed expect lovely things coming along.
I get 1.9Mpixel/sec on this test on default clocks.
http://www.ziilabs.com/products/software/mandelmark.php
0.1Mpixel/sec more than Galaxy nexus o.o
Imagine 2x1.2ghz and gpu from 308mhz to 384mhz that can be easily be achieved without any problems as our platform 2.3ES defaults to 1.2ghz.
Is not implemented yet because of the 1st priority is to fix that reboot bug!
Also new drivers for graphic card are release from ti DDK1.9 i guess more speed will be possible also with them implemented
http://www.omapzoom.org/?p=device/t...it;h=ad17249821001789f159a5d5c542302e5f38cd2e
When our developers finish with this board you will have nothing to be jealous from Nexus7.
You would be able to play anything you throw at it
Edit: 2.2 Mpixels/sec on DDK1.9