I have both the white 7″ Novel and 9″ Novel discussed in this review. If you’re trying to decide between the larger and smaller Novels, let me assure you that the extra few inches of screen real estate is worth it. I think I’ve made it clear that I really like this tablet. You can use your fingers to scroll around the screen while zoomed, and yes, you can reflow a PDF. I also want to mention that the PD reading app does a very good job with PDFs on the 9″ screen. Now that I’ve imported my ebook library, I’m happy with the tablet. I went and got Aldiko and Kindle right away. The Novel shipped with Pandigital’s usual reading app, of course, but I never like it. But there’s a headphone jack, so it’s not a serious problem. Sound quality was okay, but the built in speaker wasn’t nearly loud enough even for a quiet room. The videos streamed without pause or jumps. I also tested it with some Youtube videos. It had trouble playing the sample video (640×480 at 30fps) that shipped with the tablet without dropping frames, and it completely failed on my test videos (720p MOV). I tested the 9″ Novel with my usual videos. Actually, it’s so good that I stopped installing my usual web apps so I could replace them with Dolphin. Do you want to know how good it is? This is the first time that I’ve mentioned browsing as a strength of Android tablets. I recently discovered a web browser called Dolphin. I have my usual apps, but there’s one in particular that I’d like to mention. I didn’t have any trouble finding apps for this tablet becuase I used to be my favorite app store, SlideMe. And like the other Novels this tablet doesn’t have the Android market. It ships with the same apps as the other Novel tablets, of course: browser, email, Facebook, etc. And this is the first Android tablet that I thought was worth using for this purpose. I don’t think i could use this tablet for a full blog post, but for short stuff it’s great. With the WordPress app I can visit TDR and approve posts as well as leave short responses. I’ve been using this tablet late at night. The geometry is a little odd, I must admit, but it works. I expect that the only ones who will notice and be bothered by the screen resolution are tech snobs (like me). Oh, and if you are concerned about the screen resolution, I have to say that I wasn’t bothered by it (and I’m picky). I was quite content with using my fingers. And as much as I appreciate the case I do wish it didn’t stink so much fortunately the smell faded after a few days. It ships with a case, power supply, USB cable, and an 8GB microSD card. There are 4 buttons on the front below the screen: back, home, menu, and forward. On the left edge is the power jack, and on the right edge is the power button, volume buttons, and headphone jack. On the upper edge is the Sd card slot and the USB port. It runs Android v2.0 (which means you’ll be able to install most apps). The 9″ Pandigital Tablet is based on a 9″ LCD screen (800×480) with a resistive touchscreen, Wifi, accelerometer, stylus, SD card slot, and 2 GB Flash. On several occasions I’ve opened the case in the morning and found the battery depleted. My tablet kept turning itself on when left unsupervised. Yes, that’s what I think of this tablet.īut I feel that I should also add that I keep seeing a hardware problem. I’m planning to go laptop-free on the show floor and only carry this tablet and a Mifi (for the web connection). If you want to know how good, this is the device I plan to carry around at CES 2011. There’s a new hacked firmware for the 9″ Novel that adds Android Market and other apps. Update: This review is over a year old and slightly out of date. I do find that a little odd, considering that this is the best tablet in its price range. It popped up on the FCC website a few months ago, and then it popped up on QVC.com without any actual announcement from Pandigital. The 9″ Pandigital Novel is not one of those gadgets that get launched with a lot of fanfare.
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