Over the past few years the 7 inch tablet market
has grown from a small niche with few buyers into one of the fastest growing
segments in consumer electronics. The introduction of the iPad created consumer
demand where there had been none before and naturally a host of competitors soon
followed. The most successful of those competitors are powered by Google's
touch-based Android operating system, which is now run on dozens of devices,
including smartphones and tablets.
Android has delivered on its promise
to provide inexpensive devices that rival those built by Apple, and as a result
someone looking to buy a tablet on a budget now has some legitimate options from
which to choose. Take for example the Genesis Prime from Ematic, a device whose
biggest selling point is its very affordable price.
At its core, the
Genesis Prime is a 7-inch tablet with a 1.1 GHz processor, 4GB of storage and a
front-facing VGA camera. It runs Android 4.1 (Jellybean) and has full access to
the Google Play store, giving users the ability to download games, apps, books,
music, movies and more. The device is just .4 inches thick and tips the scales
at a svelte 9.6 ounces, which makes it thinner and lighter than most other
10 inch
tablets on the market.
All of these features are pretty
much the minimum of what you would expect out of any Android tablet these days,
although the Genesis Prime does have one feature that helps it stick out from
the crowd – its price. Ematic sells the device for just $79.99, which puts it
squarely into the "budget" category and well below most of its
competitors.fsfd3WD3x
In order to reach that price point some
compromises obviously needed to be made with the technology incorporated into
the 8 inch
tablet. How much of a deal breaker those compromises are depends on
the value you place on having cutting edge technology in your gadgets. For
instance, the 7-inch touch screen on the Genesis Prime runs at a resolution of
just 800 x 480 – which is well below the 1024 x 768 display found on the iPad
Mini or the 1280 x 800 screen that Google puts in it's own Nexus 7 tablet.
Ematic also skimped on storage space, offering up just 4GB out of the
box, although that can be expanded up to 32GB using MicroSD cards. But that's
not all, the processor used to power the Genesis is on the slow side, the built
in camera is sub-par and the battery life is just a shade over four hours, which
isn't even enough to complete a cross-country flight.
With all of that in
mind, I tried to approach my review on the Genesis Prime from the perspective of
the consumer who isn't necessarily in the market for Apple's high-end devices or
even Google and Amazon's mid-range tablets for sale. I
put myself into the shoes of someone who wanted a tablet but didn't want to blow
their budget acquiring one. Even coming at it from that angle, I found that I
needed to set my expectations accordingly in order to not be disappointed.
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