Tested News

Tested: Sony Tablet S with Android Honeycomb

The Tablet S1 is an interesting device — a different device — but curves alone does not a good tablet make.

This is an Android tablet. And as anyone who has followed this industry knows, it takes a lot to make an Android tablet stand out. Some, such as Motorola and Samsung, fight the hardware game, touting dual-core chips and high-end graphics. Other, such as HTC — and supposedly, Amazon — focus instead on software, modifying the Android experience just enough to separate their devices from other tablets on the market.

And then there is Sony, doing a little bit of both — trying to look unique and functionally different, with a radical curved design and Sony software suite. Make no mistake, the Tablet S1 is an interesting device — a different device — but that alone does not a good tablet make. You're still dealing with Android here, which bears the brunt of the Tablet S' problems, and Ice Cream Sandwich won't necessarily make the experience any better.

But the Sony Tablet S1 isn't all doom and gloom. It packs some good hardware, and there's a case to be made for the device's intriguing curved design. If you're in the market for a high-end Android tablet, there are worse decisions you could make — but it does come at a price. Let's take a closer look.

Look and Feel

The Sony Tablet S is not a thin device. Rather, it isn't iPad thin, but Macbook thin, which may be concerning for those of you who like shaving with your tablet's razor-sharp edge. This is intentional, as far as we can tell, though there's a method to the company's madness.

Instead of emulating the analog world with faux-leather UIs and page-flip animations, Sony has built the very notion of reading into the design itself. There is a thick, curved portion at the top of the device, that tapers down to depth of the screen. According to the company's marketing machine, this is meant to emulate the look of a folded magazine, one sided curved beneath the other — as they like to say, "all our innovations folded into one."

And it actually does work, to an extent. Holding the device in one hand, portrait style, feels more comfortable than the comparatively weighty iPad ever did, despite both devices weighing exactly the same — an illusion, where the bump shifts weight to one place. The textured grip on the back of the device also helps to keep things steady.

But that asymmetrical design comes at a price. You can't switch hands on a subway or bus without flipping the device 180°. It's difficult to hold from the thin, tapered side, and placing the device flat is also an impossibility. On the one hand, the curve acts as a built-in stand, raising the device by about 4°, and making the Tablet S inherently useful for landscape typing. But assuming you want to read or type in portrait mode — a legitimate use — the Tablet S bump works against you in this regard.

It's worth restating that the Tablet S is, in fact, the same weight as the iPad, yet feels much cheaper in terms of construction. The tablet is plastic through-and-through, which doesn't instill the greatest confidence for a $500 device — not to mention how hollow it feels when tapping your fingers across its back.

Hardware

From an engineering perspective, the curve serves another purpose. The Sony Tablet S packs a dual-core 1GHz Tegra 2 chipset, the same found in the Motorola Xoom, and Samsung Galaxy Tab 10,1. These aren't necessarily thin devices, but the Tablet S' unique design allows most of those components to be pushed to one place.

The display is a 9.4" 1280x800 pixel LCD panel, using Sony's Bravia-style TruBlack technology — which competes surprisingly well against the iPad 2's IPS display, as far as colour and contrast are concerned. There is, however, one very important caveat. The Tablet S' screen is poorly protected, and an absolute magnet for scratches. One trip inside a messenger bag with a months-old iPad 2 produced a nasty scratch across the type of the device. The fact that Sony already sells a Tablet S screen protector on their website is insulting.

Worse still, a proprietary connector is required to charge the device, despite the existence of a perfectly good miniUSB port on the side. In typical Sony fashion, this can only be used for the purpose of transferring data, meaning you'll be out of luck without Sony's bulky charging brick on hand.

Sony has done well to include an SD card slot on the side of the device, theoretically for the purposes of expanded storage. And in a sense, that's exactly what it does. You can use a spare SD card to store various files, but here's the kicker — you cannot access them without transferring them to them to the device's internal memory first. This makes no sense, considering other Android devices pull this feat off without issue. Some Market apps seem able to bypass this restriction, for whatever reason, though the same can't be said for Sony's pre-loaded apps.

Finally, it's worth noting there are two cameras, a 5 MP back and VGA front. They're nothing special, with low-light quirks, and some serious auto-focusing woes woes in the back, but still there should the urge to capture something strike.

Software

The Tabet S is running Android 3.1, the latest version of Google's Honeycomb OS. That said, you wont find a stock Android experience, but a lightly skinned Sony UI. And it's slow. The stock home screen is sluggish in a way that a dual-core tablet shouldn't be, the app drawer takes its sweet time presenting itself, and perhaps most maddeningly at all, it takes seconds for the power button to activate the display. Actual seconds. The number varies, depending on how long it has been since the tablet was last used, but it's inexcusable in any case.

Unsurprisingly, Sony has seen fit to bundle a variety of Sony-brand media with the device. A sampling of Sony Music artists has been preloaded onto the internal storage, in addition to a trailer for The Green Hornet — all of which can be removed.

What you can't remove, however, are any of the pre-loaded Sony applications. Crash Bandicoot, Pinball Heroes, Sony Reader and more are there to stay. The garish purple color scheme sticks out pretty easily, so you'll know what's been added or skinned, but good luck trying to make them go away.

That's not to say all of these apps are necessarily bad. One bright point — and indeed, the functionality with which Sony has been pushing this tablet the most — is the device's universal remote app, essentially, a glorified IR blaster. In a decidedly un-Sony move, this app is not only compatible with Sony devices, but almost any piece of home theater hardware imaginable. There's a database of codes preloaded onto the device, and more can be added and programmed if needed. We could even emulate an Apple remote and control our MacBook Pro without issue.

Conveniently, Sony is the latest manufacturer to bake DLNA streaming options into the tablet itself — though you'll have to use their own apps to do it. For example, Sony's Music app has the ability to "throw" currently playing songs to a PlayStation 3 or similar DLNA-supported devices. You can also do the opposite, and connect to DLNA servers to play remotely supported content.

We received our first glimpse of Sony's PlayStation Suite initiative with the Xperia play, a modest phone-meets-gamepad with the ability to play emulated PlayStation One titles — capabilities that have now come to the Tablet S. But with the absence of a physical gamepad, the controls have been shifted on-screen.

Sony's built-in Tablet S apps. Chumby, sadly, was not installed on our review unit.
Sony's built-in Tablet S apps. Chumby, sadly, was not installed on our review unit.

Surprisingly, the result isn't so bad. Because most PSX titles are rendered in an aspect ratio of 4:3, there remain black bars on each side of the screen — perfect for which to place on-screen controls. There's still some overlap with the action on-screen, but nowhere near the flurry of thumbs that tend to obscure gameplay on smaller screens. That said, you can still stretch the picture to fit the tablet's native aspect ratio.

However, Sony's Suite is marred by the same problems here as its pocket-sized predecessor — a complete and utter lack of support. Available titles are the same as on the Xperia Play, and the Market has been stagnant and devoid of updates. The sole exception is Pinball Heroes, a quirky PSP title that has been ported to Android.

Conclusion

Perhaps most concerning is what will happen when the next version of Android, Ice Cream Sandwich, is finally released. CES was full of so-called Android tablets, running ill-fitting builds of Gingerbread and lesser Android revisions. The experience was disheartening. And Honeycomb was supposed to fix all of that.

But that's clearly not the case. Months in, there are still no apps. First party functionality — the Google suite of apps that Sony has thankfully left intact — is good as ever. But beyond that, the Sony Tablet S functions like every other Android tablet. There are cosmetic differences, of course — in this case, some good, and some bad — but at its core, it is still an Android tablet. At this point, it's unclear what Ice Cream Sandwich can do.

This isn't all Sony's fault. The Honeycomb experience is simply overwhelmingly middling. It almost makes you wonder if Sony went out of its way to make a curved piece of plastic — a uniquely designed and functional piece of plastic, mind you — for the sake of being different.

The 16GB Sony Tablet S is available for $499.99, with optional dock and wireless Bluetooth keyboard, both of which are pictured below.

ryanallenon Sept. 8, 2011 at 9:40 a.m.

So basically there is still no reason to abandon the iPad for an android tablet.

Outrageron Sept. 8, 2011 at 9:57 a.m.
I wish Apple would adopt using a USB (regular, mini, or micro) port for charging and syncing.
MikeSon Sept. 8, 2011 at 10:12 a.m.

@Outrager said:

I wish Apple would adopt using a USB (regular, mini, or micro) port for charging and syncing.

And I wish Steve Jobs would drive to my house and give me all his shares of the company. Both are about equally likely.

Outrageron Sept. 8, 2011 at 10:14 a.m.
@MikeS: But Steve Jobs is in too poor health to do something like that. And Apple doesn't seem to be going anywhere anytime soon so maybe in the distant future they might. I don't see both scenarios as being equal at all.
shadykx125on Sept. 8, 2011 at 10:18 a.m.

@MikeS: yup

MikeSon Sept. 8, 2011 at 10:21 a.m.

I could see them MAYBE switching to Thunderbolt for charging/syncing.

justinon Sept. 8, 2011 at 10:29 a.m.

physics aren't "an illusion."

bagels staff on Sept. 8, 2011 at 11:02 a.m.

@justin: Hah! I see what you mean. The point I was trying to make is that while the iPad and Tablet S are the same weight, the distribution of that weight on the Tablet S gives it the impression as being lighter. I know it's actually not ;-)

mrv321on Sept. 8, 2011 at 11:04 a.m.
'an illusion, where the bump shifts weight to one place.'
 
Or the fact that the centre mass of the device is closer to the pivet meaning that the force is far smaller. You could not physically hold up an apple if it was piveted on your hand and the apple was a mile away.
justinon Sept. 8, 2011 at 11:06 a.m.

@bagels: i guess my point was really the opposite. it actually is "lighter." putting the weight closer to your wrist means less torque on your wrist. not really an illusion, it really is "lighter" and easier to hold.

StupidGameron Sept. 8, 2011 at 11:18 a.m.

Wow, the review seems extremely slanted for a Tested piece. Right from the get go the reviewer makes it clear he doesn't like Android, and he just repeatedly falls back on that criticism. I'm not personally interested in the tablet, but this review feels off due to the fact that it was predestined to receive a ho-hum reception simply because the reviewer dislikes the Honeycomb OS.

What about those of us that prefer Honeycomb to iOS? Heck, many people highly prefer Honeycomb. How would that change things for the user? The review is ultimately of low value because the reviewer can't objectively look at the hardware from the standpoint of people who may like Honeycomb and offer up thoughts about that.

There's nothing wrong with stating personal preference, but it shouldn't be presented as fact.

Sorry, Tested, I think you guys whiffed on this one.

kiwi_whiskeron Sept. 8, 2011 at 1:53 p.m.

I like honeycomb. There I said it. I don't mind iOS either....

I think iOS has many shortcomings that a lot of people don't think about because its admitidly more responsive to touch so it may 'feel' nicer. While I know the staff at Tested has a contrary stance to me on Android (dismissing it almost instantly every time it is brought up), its a shame to see this reviewed marred by so much hate on honeycomb.

bagels staff on Sept. 8, 2011 at 2:49 p.m.

@StupidGamer: @kiwi_whisker: Here's the problem I grappled with while trying to review this device — aside from the manufacturer-specific apps and UI customizations, there's not a huge difference between Android tablets as it stands. That's the big problem, really. So I tried to focus on the hardware, and those Sony specific customizations. I tried to stay away from discussing Honeycomb itself, because, well, that's been done to death in other reviews, and for other tablets.

When I knocked the sluggishness of the OS, I wasn't directing that at Honeycomb itself, but the UI customizations and changes that Sony had made. And I still stand by what I said at the end of the piece. Beyond Google's first party apps, and a handful of decent examples from NYT, IMDB, Feedly, etc, there's simply not enough Honeycomb apps worth your time. Most of the Twitter clients I tried felt garish and half-baked.

If I come off as dismissive, that's not my intention. I really want to like Android on a tablet form factor, but it hasn't shown much maturity beyond the Google line of apps. And this is coming from someone who uses a Nexus One on a day to day basis, and will probably buy a Nexus Prime at launch. I like Android, just not like this, and Sony didn't do much to make it better.

simplymortifiedon Sept. 8, 2011 at 4:54 p.m.

"Worse still, a proprietary connector is required to charge the device,"

Using a propriety connector OMG how terrible! .........

afrofoolson Sept. 8, 2011 at 7:22 p.m.

@MikeS said:

@Outrager said:

I wish Apple would adopt using a USB (regular, mini, or micro) port for charging and syncing.

And I wish Steve Jobs would drive to my house and give me all his shares of the company. Both are about equally likely.

Never say never, you could be his long lost brother or something /jk

selbieon Sept. 8, 2011 at 9:08 p.m.

As long as Sony keeps a vice grip on its proprietary ports/sockets/storage/whatever, I'm not going to bother looking at it. They always end up hogtying the consumer instead of giving them flexibility.

freakin9on Sept. 8, 2011 at 10:44 p.m.

That design says "open me", but it don't open. I can envision many frustrating attempts with the thing.

grbearon Sept. 9, 2011 at 3:35 a.m.
I read as far as the mention of the screen not being well protected and lost all interest.
kiwi_whiskeron Sept. 9, 2011 at 5:54 a.m.

@Bagels I respect your opinion. If the Sony customizations do weigh on the system as much as you say then perhaps it warrants the scrutiny.

I for one can't wait for Honeycomb (or ICS) source to be released. Getting the equivalent of Cyanogen mod on android tablets has me much more excited than the prospect of ICS. Although this wont mean much for the average consumer.

Drioson Sept. 9, 2011 at 11:53 a.m.
Really odd. I've been watching actual reviews (video reviews) and I am not seeing any sluggishness. Seems odd. 
 
Also, let's keep ICS out of this, since no one has seen it yet. No one. 
 
None the less, I'll take proper multitasking and live widgets over selective multitasking and icon folders.
How To Rip DVDs to Play on Any Device—For Free!

Our ultimate DVD copying guide shows you how to use Handbrake to rip discs for playback on your laptop, Xbox, PS3, iPhone, Zune, netbook, iPad, PSP, iPod, and pretty much anything else

Tested: Apple Mac OS X Lion

The $30 upgrade from Snow Leopard seems like a no-brainer, but that's not the full story. Read the official Tested review.

Apple iPad 2 Review

Our definitive review of the iPad 2.

Tested: Nvidia GeForce GTX 580 Video Card

The green machine comes back swinging.

Apple iPad Wi-Fi Review

Apple's device isn't magical, but it is going to make the tablet a real category--for better or for worse

Video: How To Build the Best $1500 Gaming PC, Step-by-Step

Do you like saving money? What about playing PC games? Have you ever considered building your own PC? We show you exactly what you need to know to build an awesome $1500 gaming PC.

How To Build an Awesome $500 Windows Home Server

We pick the best parts to build a lean media backup and streaming machine.

The Best Android Phone for Your Network (February 2011)

Don't get locked in with the wrong phone.

Why I’ve Switched from Browser-Based Apps Back to Native Software on the Desktop

Moving from powerful, native Desktop clients to clunky web-apps isn’t always a good thing. In fact, it’s often a significant step backwards.

Qualcomm's Snapdragon S4 Integrates LTE, Tops Benchmarks

Qualcomm's latest Snapdragon SoC outperforms 2011's fastest chips by a wide margin and integrates LTE processing in the name of battery efficiency.

Ivy Bridge Chip Delay to Summer Gives Apple a Shot at Early Access

As PC makers hold onto new models in the summer months before Windows 8's launch, Apple will have plenty of time to launch new laptops with new processors.

Nokia Teases "Pure View" Camera, Which Hopefully Isn't Just More Megapixels [Video]

Nokia's next phone could mark the return of the Xenon flash, a large image sensor, or high quality 1080p video recording.

Future SSDs May Suffer from Speed and Reliability Issues

Researchers at the University of California, San Diego project doubled latency and tripled bit errors in SSDs as storage increases.

Purported 2048x1536 iPad 3 Display Spotted--Now Who's Making It?

A quad-pixel iPad display in the flesh, but it is unlikely that Sharp will manufacture it.

How Windows 8 Will Integrate SkyDrive for Cloud Storage and Remote PC Access

SkyDrive's omnipresence in Windows 8 extends from the profile to Metro apps to the legacy desktop.

Major Changes to Flickr to Begin Rolling Out February 28th

The Photo View and Upload pages are getting much-needed redesigns, which Flickr needs to stop the user bleed.

What Kind of Computer User Needs a High-End 17-inch Laptop?

According to Loyd, there exist three key uses that necessitate a high-end 17-inch laptop.

Why I’ve Switched from Browser-Based Apps Back to Native Software on the Desktop

Moving from powerful, native Desktop clients to clunky web-apps isn’t always a good thing. In fact, it’s often a significant step backwards.

Future SSDs May Suffer from Speed and Reliability Issues

Researchers at the University of California, San Diego project doubled latency and tripled bit errors in SSDs as storage increases.

Comcast Announces Its Netflix Rival: Xfinity Streampix

The streaming video service is launching this Thursday for existing Comcast subscribers.

Tested: The New and Improved Swype Beta on Android 4.0

After acquiring Swype, Nuance had updated the app for Android 4.0 and added some new features.

Everything You Need to Know About Ubuntu for Android

Linux gets more Linux-y when Android gets mashed up with Ubuntu.

Purported 2048x1536 iPad 3 Display Spotted--Now Who's Making It?

A quad-pixel iPad display in the flesh, but it is unlikely that Sharp will manufacture it.

Siri On OS X: Will Most Users Even Care?

One notable feature missing from the upcoming Mountain Lion release of OS X is Apple's Siri.

Submissions can take several hours to be approved.

Save ChangesCancel