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	<title>DigiCom &#187; 1</title>
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		<title>Motorola Droid Xyboard 10,1 (Verizon Wireless) Review</title>
		<link>http://www.digicomgroup.com/2011/11/28/1851/index.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.digicomgroup.com/2011/11/28/1851/index.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 28 Nov 2011 15:41:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>vika</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Hardware]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Droid Xyboard 10]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Motorola]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.digicomgroup.com/?p=1851</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Pros: Fast 4G&#160;LTE Speeds with mobile hotspot capability; Lightweight design; Bright display; Great sound; Remote control capability Cons: Expensive; Laggy performance at&#160;times; Takes too&#160;long to&#160;charge the&#160;battery; Stylus not&#160;very useful The Verdict: The&#160;Motorola Droid Xyboard 10,1 is&#160;a sleek Android tablet with very fast 4G&#160;LTE speeds, great sound, and&#160;universal remote capability, but&#160;it doesn&#8217;t offer the&#160;best performance and&#160;takes [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Pros:</strong> Fast 4G&nbsp;LTE Speeds with mobile hotspot capability; Lightweight design; Bright display; Great sound; Remote control capability</p>
<p><strong>Cons:</strong> Expensive; Laggy performance at&nbsp;times; Takes too&nbsp;long to&nbsp;charge the&nbsp;battery; Stylus not&nbsp;very useful</p>
<p><strong>The Verdict:</strong> The&nbsp;Motorola Droid Xyboard 10,1 is&nbsp;a sleek Android tablet with very fast 4G&nbsp;LTE speeds, great sound, and&nbsp;universal remote capability, but&nbsp;it doesn&#8217;t offer the&nbsp;best performance and&nbsp;takes too&nbsp;long to&nbsp;charge. </p>
<p>When Motorola launched the&nbsp;original Xoom last spring, the&nbsp;first Android Honeycomb tablet turned heads with an&nbsp;attractive, widescreen-friendly interface, but&nbsp;its bulky design, high price, and&nbsp;buggy performance held it&nbsp;back. Now&nbsp;that a&nbsp;slew of&nbsp;other Android tablets have come to&nbsp;market, Motorola&#8217;s back with the&nbsp;Droid Xyboard 10,1, a&nbsp;sequel with a&nbsp;lighter and&nbsp;thinner design, a&nbsp;new 1,2-GHz TI&nbsp;OMAP 4430 processor, universal remote control capability, and&nbsp;Verizon 4G&nbsp;LTE baked in&nbsp;from the&nbsp;start. (No need to&nbsp;upgrade this slate after you&nbsp;buy.) However, the&nbsp;Xyboard 10,1 is&nbsp;only available on&nbsp;Verizon&#8217;s 4G&nbsp;LTE network, where it&nbsp;starts at&nbsp;$529 with a&nbsp;two-year contract. Is&nbsp;this tablet really worth that kind of&nbsp;commitment?</p>
<p><strong>Design</strong></p>
<p>Motorola Droid Xyboard 10,1 (Verizon Wireless)Click to&nbsp;EnlargeAt 1,2 pounds and&nbsp;9,9 x&nbsp;6,8 x&nbsp;0,3 inches, the&nbsp;Droid Xyboard 10,1 is&nbsp;the lightest-and one&nbsp;of the&nbsp;thinnest-10-inch tablets on&nbsp;the market today. It&nbsp;weighs 0,1 pounds less than the&nbsp;ASUS Eee&nbsp;Pad Transformer Prime (1,3 pounds, 10,4 x&nbsp;7,1 x&nbsp;0,3 inches) and&nbsp;the Samsung Galaxy Tab&nbsp;10,1 (1,3 pounds, 10,1 x&nbsp;6,9 x&nbsp;0,3 inches). The&nbsp;iPad 2&nbsp;is also slightly heavier (1,3 pounds, 9,5 x&nbsp;7,3 x&nbsp;0,3 inches). The&nbsp;original Motorola Xoom (1,6 pounds, 9,8 x&nbsp;6,6 x&nbsp;0,5 inches) was&nbsp;significantly heftier, so&nbsp;this is&nbsp;a huge improvement.</p>
<p>The big&nbsp;question is&nbsp;whether you&nbsp;want to&nbsp;be seen carrying this slate. The&nbsp;Xyboard 10,1&#8217;s unique chassis definitely stands out&nbsp;in a&nbsp;crowd. The&nbsp;square, angular corners on&nbsp;the front slope at&nbsp;angles, which makes the&nbsp;front face look almost hexagonal. Attractive rubber edges surround the&nbsp;bezel and&nbsp;wrap around the&nbsp;back, making the&nbsp;tablet easy to&nbsp;grip. The&nbsp;sturdy aluminum back consists of&nbsp;a matte-gray middle area that&#8217;s emblazoned with a&nbsp;Motorola logo and&nbsp;surrounded by&nbsp;rubberized areas on&nbsp;the sides and&nbsp;bottom. Even the&nbsp;back-facing camera stands out, thanks to&nbsp;a raised plastic box&nbsp;that surrounds the&nbsp;lens and&nbsp;holds a&nbsp;silver HD&nbsp;logo to&nbsp;indicate that it&nbsp;can shoot in&nbsp;720p.</p>
<p>Some may&nbsp;find the&nbsp;Droid Xyboard&#8217;s aesthetic a&nbsp;little too&nbsp;aggressive, but&nbsp;we like it. One&nbsp;thing we&nbsp;didn&#8217;t like, though, was&nbsp;the placement of&nbsp;the power and&nbsp;volume control buttons on&nbsp;the back of&nbsp;the tablet; they&#8217;re too&nbsp;hard to&nbsp;locate by&nbsp;feel.</p>
<p><strong>Display</strong></p>
<p>Motorola Droid Xyboard 10,1 (Verizon Wireless)Click to&nbsp;EnlargeThe Xyboard&#8217;s 10,1-inch, 1280 x&nbsp;800 screen is&nbsp;one of&nbsp;the brightest and&nbsp;most colorful we&#8217;ve seen, measuring 405&nbsp;lux on&nbsp;our lightmeter test, comfortably above the&nbsp;370 lux&nbsp;tablet average and&nbsp;on par&nbsp;with the&nbsp;396 lux&nbsp;offered by&nbsp;the Samsung Galaxy Tab&nbsp;10.1. When we&nbsp;streamed an&nbsp;HD YouTube trailer for&nbsp;The Avengers on&nbsp;the Xyboard 10,1, images were crisp, smooth, and&nbsp;colorful, even at&nbsp;extremely wide viewing angles to&nbsp;the left and&nbsp;right.</p>
<p>However, colors such as&nbsp;the red&nbsp;in Thor&#8217;s cape and&nbsp;the blue in&nbsp;Captain America&#8217;s uniform were a&nbsp;bit more vibrant on&nbsp;the Samsung Galaxy Tab&nbsp;10,1, and&nbsp;images were a&nbsp;little sharper on&nbsp;the Xyboard 8,2, which packs the&nbsp;same amount of&nbsp;pixels onto a&nbsp;smaller screen. Also, we&nbsp;noticed that the&nbsp;screen picked up&nbsp;fingerprints very easily.</p>
<p><strong>Audio</strong></p>
<p>Believe it&nbsp;or not, you&nbsp;can almost use&nbsp;the Xyboard 10,1 as&nbsp;a mini stereo, because the&nbsp;back-mounted speakers are&nbsp;just that good. When we&nbsp;streamed Everlast&#8217;s &laquo;What It&#8217;s Like&raquo; from Slacker and&nbsp;played &laquo;Forget Me&nbsp;Nots&raquo; from YouTube, the&nbsp;music was&nbsp;loud enough to&nbsp;fill a&nbsp;large room and&nbsp;rich enough to&nbsp;match at&nbsp;least a&nbsp;bookshelf stereo. The&nbsp;speakers are&nbsp;conveniently mounted on&nbsp;the back top&nbsp;of the&nbsp;device, a&nbsp;spot you&#8217;re unlikely to&nbsp;cover when holding the&nbsp;device in&nbsp;either landscape or&nbsp;portrait mode.<br />
Motorola Droid Xyboard 10,1 (Verizon Wireless)Click to&nbsp;EnlargeVirtual Keyboards</p>
<p>Whether you&nbsp;want to&nbsp;tap a&nbsp;traditional QWERTY style keyboard, trace your words, or&nbsp;hand-write them, the&nbsp;Xyboard 10,1 has&nbsp;you covered with four different virtual keyboards. Enabled by&nbsp;default, the&nbsp;stock Android 3,2 keyboard is&nbsp;the same on&nbsp;every tablet with this operating system, featuring a&nbsp;standard QWERTY layout with large, dark-gray keys.</p>
<p>Motorola Droid Xyboard 10,1 (Verizon Wireless)Click to&nbsp;EnlargeSwype lets you&nbsp;form words by&nbsp;tracing lines between letters and&nbsp;enables much faster entry if&nbsp;it correctly identifies your intended word. However, on&nbsp;a number of&nbsp;occasions in&nbsp;our testing, the&nbsp;tracer incorrectly autocompleted words it&nbsp;didn&#8217;t know. For&nbsp;example, it&nbsp;turned &laquo;ziva&raquo; into &laquo;zoos,&#8221; and&nbsp;the only way&nbsp;to get&nbsp;our intended word was&nbsp;to erase the&nbsp;autocomplete and&nbsp;tap on&nbsp;the keys.</p>
<p>Motorola Droid Xyboard 10,1 (Verizon Wireless)Click to&nbsp;EnlargeSwiftKey X&nbsp;promises better-quality autocompletes than other keyboards, but&nbsp;its real key&nbsp;feature is&nbsp;a split-keyboard mode that places half the&nbsp;letters on&nbsp;the left side and&nbsp;half on&nbsp;the right with a&nbsp;numeric keypad in&nbsp;the middle. With the&nbsp;split keyboard, we&nbsp;were able to&nbsp;thumb-type in&nbsp;landscape mode, which increased our&nbsp;typing speed.</p>
<p>MyScript Stylus replaces the&nbsp;traditional QWERTY keyboard model with a&nbsp;drawing area you&nbsp;can use&nbsp;to write letters either with the&nbsp;Xyboard&#8217;s bundled active stylus or&nbsp;with your finger. You&nbsp;can write the&nbsp;letters in&nbsp;a dedicated drawing area at&nbsp;the bottom of&nbsp;the screen or&nbsp;change modes and&nbsp;draw them directly on&nbsp;top of&nbsp;the text area you&#8217;re targeting. Either way, MyScript converts your handwriting into standard ASCII text, and&nbsp;in our&nbsp;testing it&nbsp;did so&nbsp;with reasonable accuracy. At&nbsp;many points, MyScript was&nbsp;able to&nbsp;convert our&nbsp;horrible handwriting into our&nbsp;intended words, but&nbsp;its autocomplete often returned the&nbsp;wrong words. We&nbsp;recommend trying the&nbsp;keyboard&#8217;s character-by-character mode, which lets you&nbsp;write one&nbsp;letter at&nbsp;a time and&nbsp;doesn&#8217;t attempt to&nbsp;autocomplete your words.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, none of&nbsp;the keyboards support haptic feedback. Though not&nbsp;everyone likes having the&nbsp;screen vibrate when they hit&nbsp;a key, we&nbsp;like having the&nbsp;option to&nbsp;have our&nbsp;tablet more closely emulate a&nbsp;physical keyboard.</p>
<p><strong>Stylus</strong></p>
<p>Motorola Droid Xyboard 10,1 (Verizon Wireless)Click to&nbsp;EnlargeUnlike HTC&nbsp;and Lenovo, which sell styluses for&nbsp;their tablets at&nbsp;an additional cost, Motorola includes an&nbsp;active stylus with the&nbsp;Xyboard 10.1. Unfortunately, the&nbsp;stylus feels thrown in, with weak performance, an&nbsp;uncomfortable feel, and&nbsp;few pen-friendly apps pre-loaded on&nbsp;the tablet. The&nbsp;stylus itself is&nbsp;larger and&nbsp;feels more like a&nbsp;real pen&nbsp;than the&nbsp;HTC and&nbsp;Lenovo styluses, but&nbsp;its thick point doesn&#8217;t have any&nbsp;flexibility, so&nbsp;it feels unnaturally hard when held against the&nbsp;glass screen. Worse, we&nbsp;experienced noticeable lag&nbsp;when writing on&nbsp;the screen; tracing letters with our&nbsp;finger seemed faster. Motorola must not&nbsp;expect you&nbsp;to take the&nbsp;stylus with you, as&nbsp;the tablet doesn&#8217;t provide a&nbsp;place to&nbsp;store it&nbsp;while you&#8217;re in&nbsp;transit.</p>
<p>In addition to&nbsp;the MyScript stylus keyboard, Motorola includes just one&nbsp;app that works natively with the&nbsp;stylus. Skitch is&nbsp;a simple drawing application that allows you&nbsp;to make very basic sketches with just a&nbsp;few colors to&nbsp;choose from, add&nbsp;letters and&nbsp;arrows, and&nbsp;draw on&nbsp;top of&nbsp;photos. The&nbsp;Xyboard also includes ColorNote and&nbsp;Evernote for&nbsp;note-taking, but&nbsp;neither one&nbsp;supports pen&nbsp;input. Fortunately, the&nbsp;pen can&nbsp;work just like your finger to&nbsp;tap the&nbsp;keyboard and&nbsp;icons, so&nbsp;you can&nbsp;use it&nbsp;even on&nbsp;apps that don&#8217;t explicitly support it.</p>
<p><strong>User Interface and&nbsp;OS</strong></p>
<p>Motorola Droid Xyboard 10,1 (Verizon Wireless)Click to&nbsp;EnlargeMotorola didn&#8217;t make any&nbsp;significant changes to&nbsp;Google&#8217;s Android 3,2 operating system, only tweaking the&nbsp;default wallpaper, the&nbsp;applications menu button on&nbsp;the upper right of&nbsp;the home screens, and&nbsp;the shortcut icons for&nbsp;the browser, calendar, email, gallery, settings, and&nbsp;tasks. Despite the&nbsp;changed icons, these built-in applications are&nbsp;exactly the&nbsp;same as&nbsp;on every other Android Honeycomb device.</p>
<p>Users unfamiliar with Honeycomb will appreciate the&nbsp;built-in email, Gmail, and&nbsp;calendar apps that take advantage of&nbsp;the tablet&#8217;s wider screen by&nbsp;offering dual-paned views in&nbsp;landscape mode. For&nbsp;example, you&nbsp;can see&nbsp;your inbox on&nbsp;one of&nbsp;the screens and&nbsp;the current message on&nbsp;the other. Honeycomb also makes switching between tasks as&nbsp;easy as&nbsp;tapping the&nbsp;layers button on&nbsp;the lower-left portion of&nbsp;the screen and&nbsp;selecting from a&nbsp;thumbnail list of&nbsp;open apps.</p>
<p>Motorola promises an&nbsp;update to&nbsp;the newer Ice&nbsp;Cream Sandwich OS, but&nbsp;it hasn&#8217;t provided a&nbsp;time line. Some may&nbsp;want to&nbsp;hold off&nbsp;on purchasing this tablet until the&nbsp;upgrade comes, because it&nbsp;will significantly improve usability. For&nbsp;instance, you&#8217;ll be&nbsp;able to&nbsp;close apps by&nbsp;simply swiping them off&nbsp;the screen. You&#8217;ll also get&nbsp;a new&nbsp;People app&nbsp;for managing your contacts, better folder support and&nbsp;improved text input, an&nbsp;enhanced web&nbsp;browser, and&nbsp;new photo-editing capabilities.</p>
<p><strong>Universal Remote Control</strong></p>
<p>Motorola Droid Xyboard 10,1 (Verizon Wireless)Click to&nbsp;EnlargeThanks to&nbsp;its infrared sensor, the&nbsp;Motorola Droid Xyboard 10,1 can&nbsp;also double as&nbsp;a universal remote. Using the&nbsp;pre-loaded Dijit app, we&nbsp;were able to&nbsp;connect the&nbsp;tablet to&nbsp;both our&nbsp;cable box&nbsp;and our&nbsp;TV set&nbsp;with just a&nbsp;few quick taps. After we&nbsp;entered our&nbsp;ZIP code and&nbsp;selected our&nbsp;cable provider, Dijit showed us&nbsp;a useful three-pane view with a&nbsp;list of&nbsp;current programs in&nbsp;the left pane, detail about a&nbsp;selected show in&nbsp;the center, and&nbsp;remote control buttons in&nbsp;the right pane.</p>
<p>Overall, channel surfing with the&nbsp;Xyboard 10,1 was&nbsp;easy and&nbsp;pleasant, thanks to&nbsp;all the&nbsp;additional information Dijit provides about each show, including episode summaries, lists of&nbsp;upcoming episodes, and&nbsp;cast information. However, because the&nbsp;infrared port is&nbsp;positioned on&nbsp;the top&nbsp;surface of&nbsp;the tablet, we&nbsp;could not&nbsp;change channels unless the&nbsp;device was&nbsp;completely flat on&nbsp;our lap-not propped up&nbsp;as we&nbsp;would have liked.</p>
<p><strong>4G Speeds</strong></p>
<p>Motorola Droid Xyboard 10,1 (Verizon Wireless)Click to&nbsp;EnlargeIn our&nbsp;nationwide tests, Verizon&#8217;s LTE&nbsp;network offered the&nbsp;fastest speeds of&nbsp;any 4G&nbsp;network, so&nbsp;it was&nbsp;no surprise that the&nbsp;Droid Xyboard 10,1 delivered incredibly fast downloads. In&nbsp;our New&nbsp;York apartment, ESPN.com loaded in&nbsp;average of&nbsp;6,3 seconds, Laptopmag.com in&nbsp;just 8,6 seconds, and&nbsp;the mobile version of&nbsp;NYTimes.com in&nbsp;just 2,8 seconds. On&nbsp;Speedtest.net, the&nbsp;Xyboard averaged an&nbsp;amazing 26,7 Mbps down and&nbsp;7,5 Mbps up, with download speeds going as&nbsp;high as&nbsp;32,2 Mbps.</p>
<p>The Xyboard 10,1 can&nbsp;also tether to&nbsp;your notebook via&nbsp;USB or&nbsp;double as&nbsp;a Wi-Fi hotspot so&nbsp;you can&nbsp;get up&nbsp;to 5&nbsp;devices online at&nbsp;once with its&nbsp;4G connection. Unlike with its&nbsp;phones, Verizon does not&nbsp;charge extra for&nbsp;tethering with this tablet.</p>
<p><strong>Performance</strong></p>
<p>Motorola Droid Xyboard 10,1 (Verizon Wireless)Click to&nbsp;EnlargeWith its&nbsp;1,2-GHz TI&nbsp;OMAP 4430 CPU&nbsp;and 1GB&nbsp;of RAM, the&nbsp;Droid Xyboard 10,1 had&nbsp;no problem playing HD&nbsp;videos, surfing the&nbsp;web, and&nbsp;zooming around the&nbsp;track in&nbsp;demanding 3D&nbsp;games such as&nbsp;Riptide GP. However, we&nbsp;experienced more instances of&nbsp;lag and&nbsp;bugginess on&nbsp;the Xyboard than on&nbsp;most recent Android tablets we&#8217;ve tested. Whether it&nbsp;was YouTube locking up&nbsp;and turning into a&nbsp;black screen, shortcuts in&nbsp;the app&nbsp;menu failing to&nbsp;launch when we&nbsp;tapped them, or&nbsp;letters that we&nbsp;typed into the&nbsp;email software showing up&nbsp;a couple of&nbsp;seconds after we&nbsp;tapped them another time, there were a&nbsp;few instances where the&nbsp;Xyboard did&nbsp;not feel smooth.</p>
<p>The accelerometer also seemed slow to&nbsp;register changes. When we&nbsp;moved from landscape to&nbsp;portrait mode or&nbsp;vice versa, we&nbsp;often experienced a&nbsp;couple seconds of&nbsp;delay. Additionally, our&nbsp;jet ski&nbsp;kept bumping into the&nbsp;rails in&nbsp;Riptide GP&nbsp;because the&nbsp;Xyboard was&nbsp;slow to&nbsp;register our&nbsp;tilts.</p>
<p>Despite our&nbsp;experience, the&nbsp;OMAP CPU&nbsp;enabled the&nbsp;Xyboard to&nbsp;yield solid numbers on&nbsp;synthetic benchmarks. On&nbsp;Linpack, an&nbsp;overall performance benchmark, the&nbsp;Xyboard scored 45,56 in&nbsp;single-threaded mode and&nbsp;39,28 in&nbsp;multi-threaded mode. While the&nbsp;single-threaded number compares favorably to&nbsp;the Tegra 2-powered ThinkPad Tablet&#8217;s score of&nbsp;36,8 and&nbsp;the Samsung Galaxy Tab&nbsp;10,1&#8217;s mark of&nbsp;29,4, those tablets scored much-higher marks of&nbsp;63,3 and&nbsp;53,7 in&nbsp;multi-threaded mode. The&nbsp;quad-core Tegra 3&nbsp;Eee Pad&nbsp;Transformer Prime blew them all&nbsp;away with a&nbsp;single-threaded score of&nbsp;47,36 and&nbsp;a multi-threaded score of&nbsp;70.27.</p>
<p>On the&nbsp;graphics benchmark An3DBench, the&nbsp;Xyboard scored a&nbsp;respectable 7,237, just about even with the&nbsp;7,156 tablet category average, but&nbsp;a bit&nbsp;below the&nbsp;Samsung Galaxy Tab&nbsp;10,1 (7,616) and&nbsp;the Lenovo ThinkPad Tablet (7,703). The&nbsp;Eee Pad&nbsp;Transformer Prime&#8217;s score of&nbsp;8,050 was&nbsp;miles ahead.<br />
Camera</p>
<p>Motorola Droid Xyboard 10,1 (Verizon Wireless)Click to&nbsp;EnlargeThe 5-megapixel back camera on&nbsp;the Droid Xyboard 10,1 captured sharp, colorful images that had&nbsp;no trace of&nbsp;white washing like we&#8217;ve seen on&nbsp;some other tablets such as&nbsp;the Toshiba Thrive 7-inch. Pictures of&nbsp;a cityscape taken in&nbsp;mid-afternoon light were extremely detailed, and&nbsp;colors-such as&nbsp;the green on&nbsp;a roof-really popped.</p>
<p>The camera shot equally colorful and&nbsp;detailed 720p video. When we&nbsp;captured a&nbsp;clip of&nbsp;the same cityscape, images were just as&nbsp;crisp; the&nbsp;camera remained focused even as&nbsp;we panned around quickly.</p>
<p>The 1,3-MP front camera took reasonably detailed images of&nbsp;our face, even in&nbsp;low light. When we&nbsp;conducted a&nbsp;Google Talk video call from our&nbsp;dimly lit&nbsp;living room, our&nbsp;face was&nbsp;fairly bright and&nbsp;motion was&nbsp;smooth, though it&nbsp;appeared blocky to&nbsp;other callers over both 4G&nbsp;LTE and&nbsp;Wi-Fi.<br />
Battery Life and&nbsp;Charging</p>
<p>The Droid Xyboard 10,1 is&nbsp;one of&nbsp;the slowest-charging devices we&#8217;ve ever tested. Even after being plugged into an&nbsp;AC outlet for&nbsp;5 hours, the&nbsp;tablet had&nbsp;only gone from a&nbsp;15- to&nbsp;90-percent charge, and&nbsp;then it&nbsp;got stuck at&nbsp;90 percent and&nbsp;would not&nbsp;charge all&nbsp;the way&nbsp;to 100&nbsp;percent. Though the&nbsp;device is&nbsp;supposed to&nbsp;charge all&nbsp;the way&nbsp;to 100-percent capacity, a&nbsp;Motorola representative confirmed that charge times of&nbsp;5 hours are&nbsp;typical and&nbsp;it could take even longer if&nbsp;you use&nbsp;the tablet while it&nbsp;is charging.</p>
<p>On the&nbsp;bright side, unlike most tablets, the&nbsp;Xyboard can&nbsp;charge when connected to&nbsp;your computer&#8217;s USB&nbsp;port. However, it&nbsp;charges much more slowly, if&nbsp;at all. We&nbsp;used the&nbsp;tablet for&nbsp;2 hours connected to&nbsp;our PC&#8217;s USB&nbsp;port and&nbsp;the charge level remained at&nbsp;40 percent the&nbsp;entire time.</p>
<p>How much battery life do&nbsp;you get&nbsp;for all&nbsp;that charge time? On&nbsp;the LAPTOP Battery Test, which involves continuous web&nbsp;surfing at&nbsp;40-percent brightness, the&nbsp;Xyboard 10,1 lasted a&nbsp;modest 5&nbsp;hours and&nbsp;54 minutes, which is&nbsp;way behind the&nbsp;8 hours that the&nbsp;original Xoom lasted over 3G, but&nbsp;on par&nbsp;with the&nbsp;6 hours and&nbsp;8 minutes the&nbsp;Samsung Galaxy Tab&nbsp;10,1 got&nbsp;over LTE. The&nbsp;Xyboard might have done better if&nbsp;it could charge past 90&nbsp;percent.</p>
<p>We&#8217;ll update this review when we&#8217;ve been able to&nbsp;test the&nbsp;Xyboard 10,1&#8217;s battery life over Wi-Fi, but&nbsp;we expect that time to&nbsp;be much longer that its&nbsp;4G endurance, because LTE&nbsp;radios use&nbsp;a lot&nbsp;of power.<br />
Pre-loaded Apps and&nbsp;Business-Ready Features</p>
<p>Motorola touts the&nbsp;Droid Xyboard 10,1 as&nbsp;a &laquo;business-ready&raquo; tablet because it&nbsp;comes with a&nbsp;number of&nbsp;apps that corporate users will appreciate. However, almost all&nbsp;of these programs are&nbsp;available free to&nbsp;anyone with an&nbsp;Android device, which makes them a&nbsp;weak selling point for&nbsp;this tablet.</p>
<p>Citrix Receiver allows users to&nbsp;connect to&nbsp;virtual machines on&nbsp;their corporate networks. GoToMeeting lets you&nbsp;to connect to&nbsp;or host online meetings, using its&nbsp;paid service. Fuze Meeting is&nbsp;another paid online meeting service. Polycom RealPresence Mobile lets you&nbsp;connect to&nbsp;your enterprise&#8217;s Polycom video-conferencing solution from your Xyboard 10.1.</p>
<p>Of the&nbsp;pre-loaded business apps, only Quick Office HD&nbsp;is not&nbsp;available directly from Google&#8217;s Android Market, but&nbsp;it&#8217;s just a&nbsp;lite version of&nbsp;Quick Office that can&nbsp;only view, not&nbsp;edit, documents and&nbsp;spreadsheets. If&nbsp;you want to&nbsp;edit or&nbsp;create a&nbsp;new file, you&#8217;re invited to&nbsp;pay $14,99 for&nbsp;Quick Office HD&nbsp;Pro.</p>
<p>Motorola Droid Xyboard 10,1 (Verizon Wireless)Click to&nbsp;EnlargeIn addition to&nbsp;the business apps, the&nbsp;Xyboard 10,1 comes with a&nbsp;handful of&nbsp;other pre-loads, most of&nbsp;which are&nbsp;either freeware or&nbsp;trialware. ColorNote lets you&nbsp;write post-it notes, but&nbsp;doesn&#8217;t support pen&nbsp;drawing. Evernote is&nbsp;a free note-taking service that syncs with the&nbsp;cloud. Skitch lets you&nbsp;make simple drawings using the&nbsp;pen or&nbsp;your finger. Dijit enables you&nbsp;to use&nbsp;the infrared port as&nbsp;a remote control (see above). For&nbsp;gamers, Motorola includes trial versions of&nbsp;Let&#8217;s Golf 2&nbsp;and Madden NFL&nbsp;12. As&nbsp;with many other Android tablets, the&nbsp;Amazon Kindle and&nbsp;Blockbuster apps are&nbsp;also pre-loaded.</p>
<p>Motorola Droid Xyboard 10,1 (Verizon Wireless)Click to&nbsp;EnlargeIf you&#8217;re not&nbsp;happy with the&nbsp;pre-loaded apps or&nbsp;the massive selection at&nbsp;Google&#8217;s Android Market, Motorola also pre-loads MotoPack, its&nbsp;own app&nbsp;store. MotoPack has&nbsp;a large and&nbsp;colorful interface and&nbsp;is neatly divided up&nbsp;into helpful categories such as&nbsp;For Kids, Home Office, and&nbsp;On Campus, but&nbsp;we didn&#8217;t find any&nbsp;apps here that we&nbsp;couldn&#8217;t have downloaded from the&nbsp;Android Market.<br />
Motocast</p>
<p>Motorola Droid Xyboard 10,1 (Verizon Wireless)Click to&nbsp;EnlargePerhaps the&nbsp;best and&nbsp;most unique piece of&nbsp;software that comes pre-loaded on&nbsp;the Xyboard 10,1 is&nbsp;Motorola&#8217;s MotoCast, which allows you&nbsp;to stream music, videos, and&nbsp;photos directly off&nbsp;of your PC. In&nbsp;our tests, setting up&nbsp;a MotoCast account took only a&nbsp;couple of&nbsp;minutes, and&nbsp;our tablet had&nbsp;access to&nbsp;our PC&#8217;s music, photos, and&nbsp;video folders right away. Impressively, all&nbsp;the files remained available on&nbsp;the Xyboard, even after we&nbsp;disconnected our&nbsp;PC from the&nbsp;Internet, meaning that they had&nbsp;been cached on&nbsp;the tablet&#8217;s memory.<br />
Plans, Configurations, and&nbsp;Value</p>
<p>Though our&nbsp;32GB review unit of&nbsp;the Droid Xyboard 10,1 costs $629 with a&nbsp;two-year contract and&nbsp;$799 without, the&nbsp;base 16GB model costs $529 with a&nbsp;two-year contract and&nbsp;$699 without. Those who&nbsp;want a&nbsp;ton of&nbsp;local storage can&nbsp;get the&nbsp;64GB model, which costs $729 with a&nbsp;two-year contract and&nbsp;$899 without. The&nbsp;Samsung Galaxy Tab&nbsp;10,1 on&nbsp;Verizon also costs $529 with contract/$699 without for&nbsp;the 16GB model, but&nbsp;the 32GB model can&nbsp;now be&nbsp;had at&nbsp;a promotional discount of&nbsp;$529.</p>
<p>Wi-Fi-only competitors give you&nbsp;a lot&nbsp;more device for&nbsp;less money. The&nbsp;ASUS Eee&nbsp;Pad Transformer Prime, our&nbsp;favorite Android tablet, costs just $499 for&nbsp;the 32GB version and&nbsp;has a&nbsp;quad-core Tegra 3&nbsp;CPU.</p>
<p>Verizon offers a&nbsp;choice of&nbsp;three different monthly data plans for&nbsp;the Xyboard 10.1. The&nbsp;basic plan gets you&nbsp;2GB a&nbsp;month for&nbsp;$30, $50 a&nbsp;month buys 5GB, and&nbsp;$80 a&nbsp;month purchases 10GB. The&nbsp;carrier charges a&nbsp;$10 per&nbsp;GB overage fee. Wi-Fi hotspot service is&nbsp;included in&nbsp;all of&nbsp;the plans. Verizon has&nbsp;confirmed that it&nbsp;will be&nbsp;rolling out&nbsp;so-called family data plans in&nbsp;2012 that will allow users to&nbsp;pay one&nbsp;price for&nbsp;4G access on&nbsp;multiple devices.</p>
<p>Buying the&nbsp;Xyboard with contract means committing to&nbsp;a minimum of&nbsp;$720 in&nbsp;data fees over 24&nbsp;months on&nbsp;top of&nbsp;the cost of&nbsp;the tablet. Unless you&nbsp;plan to&nbsp;use your tablet very frequently in&nbsp;areas where you&nbsp;can&#8217;t get&nbsp;Wi-Fi, it&#8217;s hard to&nbsp;justify this expense, particularly if&nbsp;you&#8217;re already paying for&nbsp;data on&nbsp;your smartphone. Users who&nbsp;need the&nbsp;Wi-Fi hotspot feature to&nbsp;get their laptops online might be&nbsp;better off&nbsp;purchasing a&nbsp;dedicated hotspot device, which is&nbsp;much more portable.<br />
Verdict</p>
<p>Motorola Droid Xyboard 10,1 (Verizon Wireless)The Droid Xyboard 10,1 is&nbsp;a vast improvement over the&nbsp;Motorola Xoom. It&#8217;s dramatically thinner and&nbsp;lighter, offers a&nbsp;much better display, and&nbsp;boasts best-in-class sound. We&nbsp;also appreciate the&nbsp;super-fast 4G&nbsp;LTE speeds and&nbsp;this slate&#8217;s ability to&nbsp;double as&nbsp;a remote control for&nbsp;your TV. However, the&nbsp;Xyboard&#8217;s sometimes-laggy performance and&nbsp;glacial charge time give us&nbsp;pause, especially when a&nbsp;minimum commitment of&nbsp;$1,249 over two&nbsp;years is&nbsp;involved. If&nbsp;you don&#8217;t need 4G&nbsp;in your tablet, we&nbsp;prefer the&nbsp;quad-core-powered ASUS Eee&nbsp;Pad Transformer Prime, which offers an&nbsp;optional keyboard. And&nbsp;if you&nbsp;do want 4G&nbsp;LTE, we&#8217;d wait until Motorola upgrades this slate to&nbsp;the new&nbsp;Ice Cream Sandwich software and&nbsp;Verizon debuts a&nbsp;family data plan that lets you&nbsp;share gigabytes between your phone and&nbsp;tablet.</p>
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		<title>Motorola MILESTONE with Android 2,1</title>
		<link>http://www.digicomgroup.com/2010/02/24/88/index.html</link>
		<comments>http://www.digicomgroup.com/2010/02/24/88/index.html#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Feb 2010 15:05:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>vika</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Mobile]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[1]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Android 2]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Motorola MILESTONE]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.digicomgroup.com/?p=88</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Motorola, Inc. (NYSE: MOT) today announced the&#160;launch of&#160;MILESTONE™ in&#160;Spain to&#160;become the&#160;first Android 2,1 phone in&#160;this market. MILESTONE will be&#160;available for&#160;all the&#160;Spanish consumers from mid-march. MILESTONE is&#160;without compromise, setting new&#160;standards for&#160;how fast, smart and&#160;multi-tasking a&#160;modern smartphone should be. Powered by&#160;Android 2,1, it&#160;offers the&#160;ability to&#160;use multiple applications at&#160;once1 and&#160;the world’s thinnest QWERTY slider (13,7mm). The&#160;MILESTONE also boasts [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Motorola, Inc. (NYSE: MOT) today announced the&nbsp;launch of&nbsp;MILESTONE™ in&nbsp;Spain to&nbsp;become the&nbsp;first Android 2,1 phone in&nbsp;this market. MILESTONE will be&nbsp;available for&nbsp;all the&nbsp;Spanish consumers from mid-march.<span id="more-88"></span></p>
<p>MILESTONE is&nbsp;without compromise, setting new&nbsp;standards for&nbsp;how fast, smart and&nbsp;multi-tasking a&nbsp;modern smartphone should be. Powered by&nbsp;Android 2,1, it&nbsp;offers the&nbsp;ability to&nbsp;use multiple applications at&nbsp;once1 and&nbsp;the world’s thinnest QWERTY slider (13,7mm). The&nbsp;MILESTONE also boasts a&nbsp;hi-resolution, multi-touch, pinch and&nbsp;zoom display with twice the&nbsp;pixels of&nbsp;the leading competitor.</p>
<p>A suite of&nbsp;Google™ mobile applications including Google Search™, Google Maps™, GMail™ and&nbsp;YouTube™ are&nbsp;also integrated onto the&nbsp;device. Plus users have access to&nbsp;thousands of&nbsp;apps and&nbsp;widgets from Android Market™1.</p>
<p>&laquo;MILESTONE is&nbsp;a smart phone without compromise, delivering a&nbsp;wiser, richer web&nbsp;and messaging experience. This is&nbsp;possible through the&nbsp;combination of&nbsp;Motorola’s expertise in&nbsp;design and&nbsp;a truly differentiated Android experience,&#8221; said Oscar Roriguez, General Manager at&nbsp;Motorola Spain.</p>
<p>&laquo;As an&nbsp;Android 2,1 device, MILESTONE does what other smartphones don’t. It&nbsp;was designed to&nbsp;enhance consumer experiences&nbsp;&#8212; and&nbsp;its full screen web&nbsp;browsing experience, ability to&nbsp;juggle between multiple apps, and&nbsp;suite of&nbsp;Google applications deliver. We&nbsp;have been delighted with the&nbsp;anticipation and&nbsp;demand for&nbsp;MILESTONE across the&nbsp;world and&nbsp;pleased to&nbsp;announce its&nbsp;arrival in&nbsp;Spain in&nbsp;mid-march.&#8221;</p>
<p>Key MILESTONE features include:</p>
<p>• 3,7&raquo; widescreen display with 854&nbsp;pixel width and&nbsp;more than 400,000 total pixels</p>
<p>• High-speed, cortex A8&nbsp;processor</p>
<p>• Multi-touch, pinch and&nbsp;zoom, double tap&nbsp;zoom</p>
<p>• 5&nbsp;megapixel camera with dual-LED flash</p>
<p>• Motorola Media Link and&nbsp;Motorola Phone Portal to&nbsp;manage and&nbsp;share media content across desktop, phone and&nbsp;the Web2</p>
<p>• Stereo Bluetooth<sup>&#174;</sup> / BT&nbsp;2,1, USB&nbsp;2,03</p>
<p>• 3,5mm headset jack</p>
<p>• CrystalTalk™ Plus for&nbsp;superior talk quality</p>
<p>• 8GB&nbsp;memory card</p>
<p>Additional functionality and&nbsp;apps include:</p>
<p>• Full suite of&nbsp;the Google applications: Google Search, Google Maps with Latitude, Google Mail, YouTube, and&nbsp;Google Talk™,</p>
<p>• Unified Google and&nbsp;Microsoft Office Contacts</p>
<p>• Navigation: GPS, MOTONAV * turn-by-turn navigation, Google Maps, E-Compass Latitude</p>
<p>• Email Support: IMAP and&nbsp;POP, GMail</p>
<p>• IM&nbsp;Support: Google Talk</p>
<p>• Calendar: Exchange, syncs with Google Calendar™</p>
<p>Accessories included:</p>
<p>• Use&nbsp;the multimedia station to&nbsp;transform MILESTONE into a&nbsp;clock, movie player or&nbsp;digital picture frame.</p>
<p>Optional accessories include:</p>
<p>• Place MILESTONE in&nbsp;the car&nbsp;mount to&nbsp;instantly launch a&nbsp;full-blown GPS&nbsp;navigation device.</p>
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