With more price drops for the BlackBerry tablet, we've taken yet another look at the Playbook to see if it's finally worth the cash, in light of a 4G PlayBook ..
It's probably fair to say that the BlackBerry Playbook had something of a rocky start to life. Hailed by many as as the first worthy successor to the iPad when it was announced, it eventually arrived with a bit of a crash landing, pulling in average reviews and failing to really attract customers.
In no small part, the problem was that it didn't come across as the kind of complete package that the iPad - released about the same time did. Its lack of third-party apps was a shame, but the fact that it lacked its own email and calendar apps, relying on a BlackBerry phone to provide this functionality, really dragged it down.
It's something of a serious tablet when
compared to the competition running software from Apple and Google and, while
it certainly has games, its biggest strengths are rather more boring. It
does a really great job at displaying Power Point presentations, for
example, and has the security chops to keep last quarter's dismal sales figures
from falling into the wrong hands. Exciting stuff? No, but useful features for
sure, and regardless of whether you find those intriguing or boring this is
RIM's seven-inch, Flash-having but 3G-lacking tablet clad in an unassuming but
extremely sophisticated exterior.
Features :
BlackBerry Tablet OS ,Chip -TI OMAP 4430, CPU - Dual-core 1 GHz Cortex-A9 , GPU-PowerVR SGX540
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