May 7th 2012 Can a $150 tablet be any good? We recently had a chance to spend some quality time with the Ainol Novo 7 Elf, and, we must say, for the price, it’s an excellent tablet.
Almost everything is made in China these days. The combination of low cost resources and cheap labor seems to be an irresistible draw for most companies in the tech industry. Hot out of the furnace of an industrialized and modernized China, rises an unlikely competitor in the tablet arena. One that seeks to provide acceptable quality products at affordable prices. All that without the “bleeding edge” factor of high end products.
Ainol is a Chinese company, and when we heard that our friends at The Taken Shop were stocking some Ainol Novo 7 tablets, I jumped at the chance to do a review for all of you. Can cheap android tablet really be good? Let’s see.
Acceptably Fast
It is surprising that this device is fast and smooth, considering it’s powered by a single core Ice Cream Sandwich tablet. Frankly, it worked just like any dual-core tablet out there, except for an expected processor bottleneck when doing some more serious multitasking. The stock ROM is decent, and packs a punch. It’s equipped with the full Google services set, but the guys at The Taken Shop said that they could root your device and install a pure Google ROM instead. That’s pretty useful, since Chinese OEMs often struggle with poor software implementation.
Unlike other China-made tablets, the Ainol Novo 7 elf 7 inch android tablet comes with 1GB DDR3 RAM and a powerful Mali 400 GPU. That looks very impressive on paper, but it turns out average in real life. App switching is brilliant, but that CPU bottleneck does little for power users.
On the media side, the Novo 7 Elf puts many other tablets to shame as it plays 1080p videos perfectly – surprising, since the tablet’s display is a 1024×600 resolution. There’s no noticeable lag, and it’s a great entertainment device. Casual gaming is great on this tablet, though high-end 3D gaming will leave much to be desired.
Display
On its own, the display is fitting for daily use. It’s sharp and crisp, but the LCD falters in direct sunlight, but it’s not like you’ll use a tablet under the sun that much. The tablet’s screen is vibrant enough for web surfing and entertainment.
Connectivity
The Ainol Novo 7 Elf android 4.0 tablet only comes with WiFi. There’s no Bluetooth. There’s no 3G. If WiFi is all you need, then that’s great. You’ll either find yourself enjoying the simplicity of it, or you’ll be scrambling around for an internet connection. The bundled on-the-go USB cable does help a lot, though. There’s a 3.5mm jack for audio, as well as mini usb support and mini HDMI support.
Storage
The Novo 7 Elf has a basic 8GB internal storage, with about 5.8 GB of free storage. However, it supports a micro SD on the side of the tablet that lets you bump up the storage capacity with up to an additional 16GB.
Camera
This is one tablet without the extras. There’s no rear camera for any photography, which I must say is the right track. I think that’s it’s not practical nor fun to shoot photos and videos on a tablet. That’s what your smartphone is for. Instead, the Chinese were smart enough to incorporate a 2MP front facing camera that’s good enough for Skyping and video chatting.
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