There’s also a pair of integrated stereo speakers. It’s nice that there is stereo separation here, but, as istypical with tablet speakers, they don’t sound great very good. Also typical (and unfortunate): The TouchPad doesn’t come with earphones, but you do get a cleaning cloth and a USB sync cable that plugs into the included wall charger.As far as what’s under the hood, the TouchPad is the first tablet we’ve tested built around the Qualcomm Snapdragon dual-core APQ8060 1.2GHz processor. All Android 3.0 (Honeycomb) tablets thus far have used Nvidia’s dual-core 1GHz Tegra 2. At 1.2GHz, the Qualcomm processor is more powerful in theory, but there aren’t any benchmark apps like the ones we use to test Android tablets right now, so there’s no way to prove this. In actual use, there wasn’t an obvious processor performance difference between the TouchPad and other Honeycomb tablets. (More on overall performance in a minute.) The TouchPad also integrates 802.11b/g/n Wi-Fi, as well as Bluetooth 2.1+ EDR.
Saturday, April 7, 2012
HP TouchPad (Wi-Fi)
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