Some of you probably know that I’m behind the times when it comes to new gadgets. Last year, Mrs. L.A. said we should get a tablet for our vacations. I don’t remember the justification.
So let’s say we get a tablet. What do we do with it? Surf the 'Net? Check emails? (I check my webmail a lot.) Watch movies? What advantages and disadvantages do they have compared to my MacBook?
It looks like they’re pretty cheap. How’s this one? What other ones should be considered?
It’s the same as a smart phone. Except it doesn’t have Cellular service and has a big screen…
Mom loves watching streaming video from A&E, History, and Discovery. She uses her Dish login.
She reads her news. I installed Solitaire for her.
I installed the Kindle app. But the tablet is a bit large and heavy for reading books. It’s hard to hold a tablet without touching the screen. Mom prefers her Paperwhite Kindle.
I use mine for overseas travel. Using Google Phone, I can call any number in America (even your bank) for a free unlimited phone call from anywhere with wifi, even Somalia (set up Google hangouts app in advance, in your gmail account.). I also can make or change air or hotel reservations wherever there is wifi. Besides the obvious email and facebook access. Android is a learning curve, and the touchscreen keyboard requires very tiny fingers.
Another nice Android feature is voice translator - it will listen to you in English and then say it in Russian, then listen to the reply in Russian and say it in English.
android also has instant one-click print-screen, so you can have any document ready to show anyone. Or a local street map.
All the above in a $50 tablet, no SIM card ever required. Just wifi
I have last year’s Fire HD 8. For the price I don’t think you can beat it (as long as you don’t mind swiping past an add to get to your home screen).
It works perfectly well for email, surfing, watching videos, listening to music, podcasts, audoibooks and as an eReader. I was able to modify it easily to get access to Google Apps and Google Play. I think you can transfer iTunes media to it but I’ve never tried it.
Probably everything you want to do on the tablet you can do on your Macbook.
Your Macbook is an expensive piece of equipment. What if it gets broken on stolen on your vacation? Does that possibility concern you? (or do you have insurance and all your data/programs are backed up?). If you do have this concern and your phone doesn’t have a big enough screen for say movie viewing get a cheap tablet; if not don’t.
There is also the question about your wife’s needs: do you both want to be doing something with this at the same time? If so perhaps you should get something for her.
I occasionally use my smartphone for navigation. (I did on our vacation.) I rarely use it to talk or text. On the laptop, I read The Dope, Facebook, news sites, check eBay, etc. Sometimes I’ll open Hoyle’s Casino and play some blackjack.
Mrs. L.A. is on her smartphone a lot, talking and texting. (All work-related.)
I’m wondering if I should get her a tablet for Christmas.
They’re good for watching shows (Netflix, etc.), browsing the web, reading books, and playing games. I’m sure somebody will show up to tell me they use it do real work and stuff, but I hate typing on them. So, I only use it for email and posting when I have to.
It probably can’t do anything your Mac can’t do, outside of some android only games. It just does it smaller, easier to carry, and possibly with better battery life. For leisure travel I take my tablet instead of a laptop.
I’ve never used one of the Amazon Fires, but from what I’ve heard they’re fine, and probably the best you can get for $100. A brief web search when I was considering one showed that the Google store can be added very easily.
I love being able to use my tablet to read e-books or listen to audiobooks in bed at night; a lot lighter and easier than the laptop. (I might use it to play some solitaire right before falling asleep, too.)
Android started fully supporting SD cards in Marshmallow. The phone/tablet’s drive is linked to the SD card into one Volume. Apps see it like a single drive.
Yes, but make sure it can be returned or exchanged, because she probably has a better idea of what she wants.
They are great for email, social media, news articles, books, streaming movies and series, and video conferencing (skyping) (better than a lap top for the video in my experience). They are more convenient than even a laptop when you are moving from room to room.
“…on our vacation…” means you were driving? or flying?
You fly helicopters, don’t you? If you don’t have all the latest Garmin glass cockpits in your choppers already, I would think you certainly use a mobile tablet of some sort, with all the umpteen aviation apps you can get.
See this post in the nearby “What happened to tablets?” thread. Aren’t you doing stuff like this?