Brought to you by

Samsung Galaxy Tab 8.9 Review: The New Best Android Tablet, Again

I had major deja vu writing this. That’s because as cool as the Galaxy Tab 8.9 is, it’s basically just the Galaxy Tab 10.1, but slightly smaller. Which actually makes it noticeably better.

AU note: Samsung and Apple are still battling it out in court in Australia, so there’s no word yet on local pricing or availability.

Why It Matters

Samsung’s Galaxy Tab 10.1 is the best Android tablet I’ve used. It’s light, slim, quick. The Galaxy 8.9 Tab is almost perfectly identical to the 10.1, they just managed to get the same goodness into a smaller package.

Using It

Everyone I’ve handed the 8.9 to has had this moment of, “Oooh, this feels nice!” It really does. It’s an extremely tight package. The 10.1 felt a little flimsy, but despite having a similar plastic back plate, this one just feels much stronger. I don’t know if they’ve upgraded the plastic, or if it’s just stronger because it isn’t stretched across as large an area, but that worrisome flex is gone, and that’s a very good thing.

It comes running Android 3.2 (Honeycomb) with Samsung’s TouchWiz UI overlay. I’m not generally into these third-party skins, but this is one of the least offensive ones. It comes preloaded with some of Samsung’s proprietary software like Media Hub, Music Hub, and Social Hub, none of which are particularly compelling, and it just emphasises why I kinda wish Samsung would stick to hardware. It does come with a full version of Polaris Office, which is excellent for creating/editing documents on the go.

Like

I’m loving the 8.9-inch screen. It really feels like they’ve hit the sweet spot, size-wise. It’s big enough that watching movies and playing games looks good, but it’s small and light enough that it’s super portable. I can fit it in my jacket pocket and walk out the door, which is more than I can say for some 7-inch tablets that are thicker. Also, while the screen is smaller it has the same number of pixels as its 10.1-inch brother, giving it a little better pixel density. It’s no retina display, but it’s damn good. It’s also light enough (0.4kg) that, though it’s bigger than 7-inch tablets, it’s easier to hold than most of them. This will provide a great digital magazine experience.

This thing is just as fast as its big brother, making it one of the fastest tablets you can get your hands on. Even with a ton of apps running at the same time, it was nearly impossible to slow this tablet down, and when it did slow down, it wasn’t by much. The slightly reduced size makes it better for typing, too. Battery life was excellent. With moderate use I was able to get three or four days on a charge, no problem, and standby time is even better.

Specs
8.9 inch 1280×800 screen
1GHz NVIDIA Tegra 2 processor
1GB RAM
3MP rear-facing camera, 2MP front-facing
No expandable storage
Wi-Fi only
Weight: 0.4kg
Price: 16GB/$US469 32GB/$US569

No Like

The one thing that seems to have suffered for this size reduction is the audio. The speakers weren’t great on the 10.1, but they sound even tinnier on the 8.9, which is too bad. It employs the same rear camera as the 10.1 which isn’t great. That said, you probably don’t need it for much more than taking a picture of a business card or something, and the 2MP front-facing camera is plenty capable for video chat. One thing I did notice is that sometimes the screen seemed to miss touches. It wasn’t constant, but it was enough to kill me a few times while playing Samurai II: Vengeance (which is awesome, by the way).

While it feels stronger than the 10.1, I’d still feel much better about this thing if the whole body were aluminium, not plastic. The only ports the 8.9 has is a headphone jack and a proprietary connector. If you want to connect your tablet to an HDMI display, you have to buy a special adaptor. Yeah, I’d really rather not, thanks. (It’s DLNA compliant to stream content over Wi-Fi, but most consumers don’t have DLNA TVs and stereos yet.) There’s also no removable storage slot, so you’re stuck at the capacity you buy, and there’s no USB port (mini, micro, or otherwise). This makes putting your media on the device more of a chore than it should be. Oh, and maybe most significantly, at $US469 for the 16GB model and $US569 for the 32GB version, it’s just too expensive.

Verdict

If this tablet cost $US300, I would recommend the crap out of it. Of all the Android tablets I’ve played with, this is my favourite (with the Sony Tablet S coming close). For 470 bucks, though, it just doesn’t make much sense. Obviously this is a more capable device than the Kindle Fire, but the Kindle Fire is only $US200. Is this thing really $US270 dollars more capable? No, it isn’t. It’s about $US100 more capable. Also, in the coming months we are going to be seeing tablets that are way better. My crystal ball tells me there will be quad-core processors and true HD displays. Those much beefier tablets will probably launch right around this price-range, too. Tech moves too fast. $US470 and $US570 just barely made sense in January of this year, but here in October it makes no sense at all. As soon as there’s a real, significant price-drop, then I’d absolutely recommend it. If Samsung is smart, they won’t wait.

Discuss

(17 Comments)
  • [–]

    James

    Tuesday, October 11, 2011 at 10:50 AM

    Welcome to the game…… too late and too expensive. Good luck with that.

  • [–]

    Mike

    Tuesday, October 11, 2011 at 12:33 PM

    Proprietary connector, no USB, no removable storage, hey maybe they DID copy Apple! :D

    • [–]

      RB

      Tuesday, October 11, 2011 at 1:19 PM

      So all they needed to do was put a microSD card slot on there and they would have avoided all this legal BS (and I probably would have bought one)…

      *sigh*

      • [–]

        rei-gouki

        Tuesday, October 11, 2011 at 5:10 PM

        Well, I’m not much for the “proprietary connector” but shaving that weight off makes sense in most situations a tablet should be found in. I wouldn’t mind some sort of ports “dock”, though, with, say, slots for the different memory cards, a couple of USB/Firewire ports that just runs the length of one side plugged into the “proprietary port”. That said, it shouldn’t be long before they have a wireless/connectorless “dock/adaptors” for convenience and a wired one like they have now for those fast and important jobs.

        As to the microSD slot, yea, that’s a given. Leaving that out was a mistake. The ability to store things on removable media conveniently is one of the most important things to have on any computer.

      • [–]

        Steve

        Tuesday, October 11, 2011 at 8:27 PM

        We don’t know that. Even if they did install a MicroSD slot, Apple probably would have pressed the injunction anyway. They’ve basically openly admitted to only filing the case to “maintain the status quo” (their words, not mine)

  • [–]

    Alex

    Tuesday, October 11, 2011 at 1:48 PM

    no extra storage… crap price
    no thx

  • [–]

    Lebowski

    Tuesday, October 11, 2011 at 3:28 PM

    Seriously though, who the fuck uses the speakers on a tablet? And how can you have any expectation of good sound from something of that size? Basic physics prevents something that small and thin from ever producing a decent noise.

    • [–]

      James

      Tuesday, October 11, 2011 at 3:30 PM

      yeah, ummm I do…. all the time. Like, everytime I use it. Do you think I want to carry around separate speakers?

      • [–]

        James

        Tuesday, October 11, 2011 at 3:32 PM

        and for your information, the sound that comes out of the iPad speakers when watching movies is quite exceptional for such small speakers. More than adequate.

      • [–]

        MotorMouth

        Tuesday, October 11, 2011 at 4:00 PM

        You’re forgetting about headphones/earbuds, which make far more sense than built-in speakers. I don’t even use the built-in speakers on a laptop, I don’t know why they bother with them at all on a tablet.
        And James, “for small speakers” is the caveat, isn’t it? Earbuds are much smaller speakers but will sound several orders of magnitude better.

        • [–]

          James

          Tuesday, October 11, 2011 at 4:06 PM

          the only time I use earbuds is when requiring the best sound quality for recording through garageband.

          every other time, just using the speakers. They’re just fine.

          • [–]

            rei-gouki

            Tuesday, October 11, 2011 at 5:18 PM

            Given those comments, a comparison of iPad2, 10.1 and 8.9 sound quality would be the go here.

            That said, I don’t really mind tinny or otherwise as long as the sound is recognisable and not clipped or something to the point that it’s just noise, which I had the misfortune of experiencing years ago when a friend tried to turn up the volume of her Toshiba Satellite laptop it just turned into noise. This was at about 50% and above on the volume control.

          • [–]

            MotorMouth

            Tuesday, October 11, 2011 at 8:19 PM

            So the rubbish you come up with on a toy like Garageband is worthy of decent sound quality but music made by the world’s best artists and producers, people who do it for a living, only deserves the iPod speakers? Yeah, right.

            • [–]

              Steve

              Tuesday, October 11, 2011 at 8:28 PM

              Ahahha.

  • [–]

    Steve

    Tuesday, October 11, 2011 at 8:29 PM

    “While it feels stronger than the 10.1, I’d still feel much better about this thing if the whole body were aluminium, not plastic”

    Apple would blow a goddamn gasket if this happened. Apparently you can patent metals.

    • [–]

      rei-gouki

      Wednesday, October 12, 2011 at 2:16 AM

      From some of the links I’ve seen, anything can be patented like registered trademarks, even something ubiquitous. Remember the yanks and our UGG boots?

  • [–]

    Big Windows

    Wednesday, October 12, 2011 at 2:14 PM

    Too small for comics though… Until there is better interactivity with them rather than just reproduction of the printed versions.

Join The Discussion