Testseek.com have collected 270 expert reviews of the Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.0 inch GT-P1000 / P1010 and the average rating is 75%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.0 inch GT-P1000 / P1010.
October 2010
(75%)
270 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
-
0 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
750100270
The editors liked
7″ design is excellent
A great form factor for tablets
Hardware
Software and data is fast as can be
Excellent battery life
Size is great for portability
And build quality is as rigid as a Samsung device has ever felt. The hardware is excellent and runs Android 2.2 with TouchWiz smoother than ever
Web browsing is a dream with fast page loads and smooth scrolling/zooming. The screen real estate makes enough of a difference that browsing on a smartphone just won’t cut it anymore
Frontfacing camera opens up twoway v
Lightweight and easy to pick up on the way out of the door
Still big enough to not feel constrained
Good battery life
(very) bright screen
TouchWiz works and looks well on tablet form
Easy to type on
Very nice build quality
Expandable memory
Very loud speaker
Great for navigation.
Very portable
Fast
Bright
High-res screen
Not locked into contract
Attractive design
Tablet-optimized apps included
Great plan pricing for medium-to-heavy users. Custom app store has potential to showcase tablet-centric apps.
Still the best non-iPad tablet. Plans include Wi-Fi hotspots. Not much bloatware.
Still the best noniPad tablet. Plans include WiFi hotspots. Not much bloatware
Contrary to what Steve Jobs has said
You don't have to sand your fingers down to use the Samsung Galaxy Tab. The 7inch screen works fine. So it's not as big at the iPad's 9.7inch display
But it doesn't feel as cramped as certain people would have you th
Sleek design
Two cameras
Flash compatibility
WiFi hotspot
The Samsung features the Android 2.2 operating system
Sleek and solid design
Thumb-friendly keyboard
Bright and crisp display with good viewing angles
Core applications optimized for tablet use
Dual cameras with video calling
Fairly loud speakers
Fast. Well built with a slick design. Runs almost all Android apps. Supports Adobe Flash 10.1.
More storage and faster Internet than the Sprint version.
Manageable size is conducive for onehanded use
WiFi sharing included in TMobile's monthly plan
Has a MicroSD Card slot
Brilliant
Bright screen
Strong network connection
Good price over 2 years for light surfers
Long battery life
Free mobile hotspot
Attractive
Textured back cover
Manageable size is conducive for one-handed use
Comes with 16GB MicroSD Card
Free text messaging
Good selection of bundled apps
More portable than iPad
No charge for mobile hotspot feature
Reasonably fast
Android is flexible and somewhat optimized
Dual cameras with reasonable quality
MicroSDHC card slot
Flash as an option
Great for optimized games
No bloatware. Inexpensive low-data plan. Carrier gets great subscriber ratings.
Nice display and form factor
Great browsing experience
Forward facing camera
Excellent size for portability and one-handed use
Powerful and customisable Android 2.2 OS
Full featured ereading app and store
Responsive touch-screen with intuitive keyboard
Can make video calls
Supports wide range of video formats...
Fast 1GHz Hummingbird processor
Thin & lightweight
Beautiful display
MicroSD slot
Dual cameras
High quality Android 2.2 tablet with 3G data
High qual
Excellent build
Powerful processor keeps things running smoothly
Great battery life
Kickass screen
Lightweight and portable
Flexibly and customizable OS
Great connectivity
Phone/video calls
Flash support
X.
Compact and extremely solid build Great quality 7-inch
Capacitive touchscreen Two cameras
Smaller form factor offers much better portability. Bright
Highresolution screen. Runs Flash? Oh
Yeah
The Galaxy Tab Wi-Fi Android tablet offers a bright
Responsive 7-inch screen
GPS
Bluetooth
And full access to Google's suite of mobile apps
Including Android Market
Fits in an inside jacket pocket
7-inch screen has perfect aspect ratio for widescreen movies
Android 2.2 Froyo OS
Snappy Web browsing
Samsung's 7-inch Android tablet is a serious contender to the Apple iPad
3.2MP main camera and a secondary one for video chat
Flash Player 10.1 support
Multitasking Enabled
Supports Swype Text Input
Sim and MicroSD Card Slots are Well Placed
HDMI Output via Micro USB Cable
Various Accessories
Telephone/VOIP Supported
Convenient Digital Camera
Screen-Side Camera for Video Chatting
Tou
The editors didn't like
Android OS currently has no benefits for tablets
Makes it a glorified smartphone
Proprietary connector makes it feel like an iPad
But without any spare cables lying around
No WiFi only model
High prices on most carriers
There are moment where we definitely feel that Android 2.2 is not for tablets. Some applications are shrunk down and don’t use the full breadth of the screen
The whole thing feels like a big phone without the ability to make calls
Not enough done with the interface to differentiate from Samsung’s Galaxy S line of phones. Hopefully future updates will bring Android Honeycomb to round out the ta
Proprietary Samsung port for charging
Mediocre camera on back
Flash-enabled
Slows browsing speeds
No Netflix Instant Watch
Fingerprint magnet
Heavy price tag at $599 requires data plan activation
Eats up data quickly.
No wifi only version available
2GB monthly data cap
Slow connection speeds in NYC
No mobile hotspot feature
Right now
Verizon's custom app store is a dis-app-ster. No discounted two-year contract option. Less storage than T-Mobile's model.
High up-front price. Blocks non-Android Market apps. AT&T's own apps are subpar.
High upfront price. Blocks nonAndroid Market apps. AT&T's own apps are subpar.
So the Samsung Galaxy Tab can make calls and take pictures things that the iPad can't do. All well and good
But we found that the quality of voice calls was average at best and the pictures taken on the 3megapixel camera to be not that great.
Android OS not entirely tablet ready
Shorter than expected battery life
Yet another monthly fee (3G version)
This tablet lacks HD video recording capabilties.
No 4G
Skimpy tablet app selection
Shorter battery life than iPad
Mail program does not support Google Apps accounts
Not enough tablet-centric software. Reflective screen. Slick back.
Service plans aren't optimal. Still not enough apps.
Proprietary connection port
Screen doesn't support highdefinition video
Slow to recharge
No video chat support right now
Pricey up-front cost
Text messages not included in data plan
Sprint charges extra for mobile hotspot feature
Screen doesn't support high-definition video
Limited data plan options
Slower connection speeds than Verizon
Too close to a smartphone in size
Some OS elements
Many apps not optimized for tablets
Slow
Sometimes stuttery web browsing
Flash often a liability
Not a help
Slightly awkward button layout
Expensive versus an iPad for what you get.
Expensive service plan for moderate data users. Questionable upgrade path with the 'Honeycomb' Android upgrade coming in 2011.
Few tabletfriendly apps
No mini/microUSB port
No HD video recording
Music and movie player interfaces somewhat clunky
Occasional lags when scrolling
Some unintuitive features Look and Feel...
No USB port
Screen will attract fingerprints
No user-replaceable battery
Expensive
Especially without a contract. And who wants yet another phone contract?
Especially without a contract. And who
Not many standout features
Horrendous keyboard
Way too expensive for what it is
Sound quality
Poor battery life
Screen smudges too easily (like the iPad)
Poor Camera performances
Android not as polished and intuitive as iOS
Still missing Kick ass Apps.
Not all apps scale to the screenLittle support from GoogleNo decent video calling software
Some stability concerns. Proprietary connector and cable (looks like an iPod port
But ain't). Battery is nonreplaceable
This Galaxy Tab is an Android 2.2 tablet living in an Android 3.0 world
And bigger and better tablets are priced in the same ballpark
Poor 3.2 MP camera with no zoom
HD video recording
Little Android optimization for larger screen
No Wi-Fi-only versions available
Screen washes out at off angles
Proprietary dock connector instead of microUSB
Overpriced
The Tab behaves more like a supersize Android phone than a Netbook alternative. The Android OS and its apps aren't yet optimized for the larger screen. Depending on your plan
You may be in for a two-year contract and a commitment to monthly charges
Abstract: Das Warten hat ein Ende: Samsung stellt seit Anfang Februar ein Android-Update für das ursprüngliche Galaxy Tab P1000 bereit. Nach der Aktualisierung laufen nun auch Geräte ohne Netzbetreiber-Branding mit Android 2.3.6. Bislang gab es die neue Firmwar...
Abstract: Es ist an der Zeit fuer den ultimativen Vergleichstest zwischen Smartphone und Tablet anzutreten und da Nicole und ich taeglich auf diese beiden Plattformen angewiesen sind, haben wir in 7 Kategorien die “wichtigsten” Eigenschaften vorgestellt. Beide Hand...
Abstract: Wer wie ich zu den stolzen Besitzern des ersten Samsung Galaxy Tab mit 1Ghz Singlecore Cortex-A8 SoC gehoert, sollte sich jetzt mal 10 Minuten Zeit nehmen, denn in der nun 1.5 Jahre alten Plattform steckt richtig viel Dampf! Ich ziehe mir vorab schon einm...
Abstract: as Amazon Kindle Fire kam gestern endlich an und ich konnte es in den letzten 24h ausfuehrlichst testen. Bevor im Laufe des Tages dann ein episches 30 Minuten Video auf euch zukommt, gibt es nun erst einmal das Unboxing fuer euch und einen ersten Groessen...
Published: 2011-09-15, Author: Daniel , review by: android-user.de
Gute Verarbeitung, Günstiger Preis
Update nur über Kies, Stark spiegelndes Display, Unsichere UpdatePolitik
Geschwindigkeit Das Galaxy Tab reagiert sehr flott und flüssig, nur selten ruckelt es ein wenig (zum Beispiel bei der Einschaltanimation). Surfen macht Spaß mit dem Gerät, der große, gute Bildschirm und die Tatsache, dass man es bequem in einer Hand halte...
sehr dünn und leicht, sympatische Abmessungen für den Betrieb unterwegs, helles, farbenfrohes Display, sehr gute Ausstattung,
Akkulaufzeit könnte zu niedrig sein,
Das Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.7 hat die sympatisch-portablen Abmessungen des ersten Galaxy Tab. Ansonsten orientiert es sich sowohl technisch als auch optisch eher am deutlich moderneren großen Bruder, dem 10.1: flotter Dual-Core-Prozessor, aktuelle Androi...
Abstract: Es ist ultraleicht, sehr dünn und nahezu perfekt verarbeitet: Das Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.7 war neben dem Smartphone-Tablet-Mischwesen Galaxy Note das Highlight auf dem Messestand von Samsung auf der IFA in Berlin - bis die Koreaner ihr neues Tablet aufgr...
Published: 2011-07-28, Author: Peter , review by: mobi-test.de
Tja, dann wollen wir mal die Frage aller Fragen versuchen zu beantworten. Lohnt sich der Mehrpreis für ein hochwertiges Tablet oder reicht für den normalen Gebrauch ein günstigeres Modell?Wer wirklich nur ab und zu mal auf der Couch, im Zug oder sonstwo u...
Abstract: Im dritten und letzten Teil unserer “Tablet Wars” reihe, nehmen Chippy und ich uns nun die 7-inch Kategorie zur Brust. Auf dem Speiseplan stehen demnach das Samsung Galaxy Tab, HTC Flyer und BlackBerry PlayBook. Nehmt euch ein wenig Zeit und goennt euch d...