255 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
255 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 1377
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Title: HPR1377: Zareason ZaTab 2 Android Tablet
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1377/hpr1377.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 00:27:14
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---
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Hello, this is Frank Bell, and today I want to talk about my new Zahrizan Zahtab ZT2 tablet.
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I recently purchased one of these.
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I've never had a burning desire to have a tablet, just to have one.
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I see too many folks come into a location, they grab their tablet, they attach a keyboard
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to it and voila, instant netbook.
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But I, from time to time, find myself in situations where I would like to have connectivity
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and wireless is available, but the geography is not favorable.
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That's a fancy way of saying they're chairs, but no tables.
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I'm considering getting my next laptop from Zahrizan, and it occurred to me that trying
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out their tablet, which is rather reasonably priced, would be a good way of evaluating
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their workmanship, since they are rather pricey compared to say Dell and some of the other
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mass produced PC vendors.
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Zahrizan, as some of you may know, along with System76 are two of the major vendors who
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cater to the Linux market.
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Unlike System76, which is an Ubuntu shop, Zahrizan allows you within limits to pick the
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distro that you want installed on your new machine.
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And since I have long ago become fed up with the antics of canonical and the direction
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that Ubuntu has been heading in for the last two years, I don't want to spend my money
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on an Ubuntu box if I can avoid it.
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This tablet arrived about a week ago, I've been playing with it ever since, and so far
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I'm quite happy with it.
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It seems to be a nice piece of work, and I'm also positively impressed with the workmanship.
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A little bit about it to start with the dimensions, and by the way, the information I'm giving
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you, I put in a handout, I will be presenting about this device to my lug meeting.
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The lug meeting hasn't happened yet, although by the time this post, it should have taken
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place, there will be a link to download the handout if you're interested in the show notes,
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as well as a link to Zahrizan's presence on the web.
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The overall dimensions, the outside dimensions, is 10 and a quarter inches by 6 and 7 eighths,
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and approximately 3 eighths of an inch thick.
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That's about 26 by 17 and a half by slightly under one centimeter.
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The screen itself is about 9 and a half by 5 and a quarter inches, or approximately
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24 by 13.3 centimeters.
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All the ports are down on the right hand side, if you're holding it with the camera lens
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at the top, and some of the ports have a cover on them, others do not.
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A little about the text specs, you can get the full rundown at the website, but here
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are the highlights.
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It's running Android 4.1 Jelly Bean, it's got an all-wear 4-core CPU chip, that's a brand
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I hadn't heard of before, but it seems to function quite nicely, a touchscreen, certainly.
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It's got 8 gigs internal storage, plus a micro SD card slot, and this is nice, 2 gigabytes
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of RAM.
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All those RAMs make it very responsive.
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It's got A02.11 BGN wireless connectivity, and the wireless antenna seems to work quite
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nicely.
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It's got a camera with both front and back lenses, more about the camera later.
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And as a nice sturdy metal back, and as I say, it seems like a very solid machine.
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In addition to the micro SD card port, it's got a headphone port, a mini HDMI video out,
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and a micro USB port.
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micro USB is the type of port that comes on most of the new Android phones, since the phone
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manufacturers have finally given in to standardizing.
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I have tested this with the USB cable that came with my girlfriend's phone, the one that
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came with my phone, and they were made by different manufacturers, as well as obviously
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the one that came with the tablet, and all the cables fit.
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We're not stuck to using a cable that comes from the manufacturer.
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You can use it, apparently, with any modern cell phone USB cable.
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In addition to the USB connection, it does have a DCN port.
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It comes with a wall wart for convenient charging at a wall outlet.
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The default application load seems to be a fairly standard Android load.
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There doesn't seem to be anything that has been added by Zah Reason in the way of branding,
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unlike the typical cell phone that will come with apps from your cell phone carrier, at least
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here in the States.
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There's a video player, the calculator, unlike the calculator on my Android phone.
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When I start this calculator, it has various mathematical and scientific functions, in addition
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to the normal, add, subtract, multiply, and divide.
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I would guess simply because there's enough screen real estate to display these options.
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It has various Google functions, aren't it, like Google Chrome, Google Play, the Google
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Map, the Google Play Store, Google Music, and so on and so forth, and it comes with Chrome.
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In addition, it also comes with Firefox.
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There's also a number of default widgets, which you may or may not choose to use, such
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as a calendar viewer.
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I tested that out.
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What the calendar viewer does is put a thing on the desktop where you can actually see some
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of your calendar appointments and scroll through them.
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There's an analog clock, directions and navigations, an email viewer where you have a little picture
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of your inbox.
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I don't use these things.
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I am not a widget kind of guy, but if you like widgets, there are these and altogether
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about 20 body fault.
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In addition, certain programs you may install may also put in their own widgets.
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As for navigation, when you first fire this up, you'll be looking at a blank workspace.
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On the upper left, there's a quick link to Google.
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There's an icon to start the voice recognition, and the upper right, there are six little
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dots arranged in a rectangle, which open up the program menu display.
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In the bottom left are various navigation buttons and software volume controls, and in
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the bottom right is the notification panel showing the wireless, the little wireless antenna
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radiating out, and that's where the pop-ups will appear if you get emails or something
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of that sort.
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If you tap the menu item and open up the program menu, you'll see an arrangement of icons
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for your programs.
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At the top of the display, there's the word apps in the left, and right next to it,
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the word widgets.
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You can navigate to the widget screen by tapping the word widgets, or you can take your
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finger, swipe it across the screen to the left, and that will send the program screen off
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the side.
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It falls off into nothingness, and you're looking at the widget screen.
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Swipe right, it brings the program screen back.
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Then you can scroll through the various widget screens the same way by swiping to the
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left or to the right.
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There are four default workspaces.
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I looked in the settings.
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I could not find an item to increase or decrease the number of default workspaces.
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That doesn't mean it's not there, it probably just means I didn't look hard enough to put
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an icon or a widget on a workspace.
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In the menu panel, press and hold that icon, or press and hold that widget, and it'll
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flash.
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When it flashes, you can then drag it off and place it on the workspace.
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If you have second thoughts, and you want to remove it from the workspace, press and hold
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it, and at the top of the screen, the letter X will appear with your finger, drag it to
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the X.
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Not a trashcan at the bottom, as has been common on the Android phones I've seen, it's an
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X at the top, and it's not terribly prominent.
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So the first time you might have to look for it a bit.
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And you can swipe left or right to change your workspaces.
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You touch an icon to start a program.
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If you want to close a program, you touch the back button in the bottom left.
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It looks like a little arrow looping off to the left.
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Android phones I've seen will have these buttons too, either hardware buttons or software
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buttons, but the symbols are always the same.
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If you want to go to your blank screen, close the program and go home, you tap the home
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button, which cleverly looks like a picture of a bungalow from the side.
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And there's also a button I haven't seen on my phone, and that's a recently used programs
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button.
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It looks like two overlapping rectangles.
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You press that along the left side, we'll open up a display showing the programs you've
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recently used.
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If you want to go back to one, say you were looking at your email program, you went off
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to do something else.
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You want to go back to your email program, just tap it, and it will be restored in the
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same state it was in when you left it.
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Some other general observations, boot times approximately 45 seconds, shutdown time,
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is approximately 5 seconds, as with Android phones to put it to sleep or to wake it up.
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You tap the power button very briefly.
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If you're waking it up, unless you have said it to have no lock on the screen, it will
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wake up to the unlock screen and you'll need to unlock it using the method of your choice.
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Password, swipe, pattern, whatever you may have chosen.
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The battery life seems to be very good.
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When I first got it, the first thing I did was to plug it into charge.
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And the battery indicator at that time told me that it was close to fully charged, even
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though it had spent a week traveling across country.
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So rather than charging it, I immediately started to beat it to death, installing the
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programs that I particularly like to use, learning how to navigate the screens, setting
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up my email, hopping back and forth one program to the other, very intensely.
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And I was able to beat it to death like this for almost 3.5 hours before I got the 15%
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battery left, please charge me now message.
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So I plugged it in and charged it up.
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It took about 4 hours to charge up to a full battery.
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And then that evening, shortly before I went to bed when it was fully charged, I turned
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it on, I played with it for half an hour or so, then left it on standby.
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I didn't touch it again to late the next afternoon and at that point, it still had 44%
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of the battery left, even though it had been used for half hour or 45 minutes, I was reading
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an ebook and then sitting on standby for that time.
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I have not had the patience to just put it on standby and leave it and see how long
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it lasts.
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I haven't been able to keep my hands off it long enough to do that, but I think this
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is quite good.
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It certainly exceeds the battery life of any phone I've had.
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It has the standard Android keyboard.
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Any user of an Android phone will recognize it when you tap on to a text field or a number
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field or a URL or an editor application.
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What appears is the bottom four rows of the query keyboard without the number row.
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And there are a couple of tailored keys such as this as a .com key.
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So if you're typing in a URL, you can simply hit the .com key to fill in the .com.
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And then there are two keyboard displays for numbers and symbols.
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You tap the .123 key on the left and you get to the first number and symbol key.
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And then you would type another key to go to the second symbols keyboard.
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And then from either of those, there's an ABC key to tap to return to the letter keyboard.
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This also has, and I haven't mentioned this before, but this device comes rooted.
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It also has built-in screenshot capability.
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In the settings, you go to display screenshot setup and you can turn on the screenshot button.
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And that appears in the bottom left, just to the left of the two volume buttons.
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And with that button enabled, if you are looking at something and want to take a screenshot,
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you simply tap on it and the device takes and saves the screenshot.
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I have not found a way to set a delay.
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So if, for example, you wanted to take a screenshot of the recently used programs panel,
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if you tap on the screenshot button, the recently used programs panel goes away.
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So I looked around to see how I could do that.
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I couldn't find a way to do a delay so that I could say take a screenshot in five seconds
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and then start up the recently used programs panel and have it see if it would take it
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while it was on the screen.
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So I tried a screenshot trial out from the Play Store and was able to get a screenshot
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of that recently used panel using it.
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Then the trial expired and so did my usage of that program.
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The screens seem to have excellent resolution.
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I have been quite satisfied with it in my eyes or not the best.
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If you rotate the device, there's a smooth and fast rotation.
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It doesn't care which end is up.
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You can have it rotated in any orientation and it seems to work just fine.
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The only way I can tell when I'm using it, which side is supposed to be the top,
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is I look for the little tiny camera lens and where the camera lens is, that's the top.
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A little bit about the camera.
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It defaults to the back lens.
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There's a rotation icon to change from the back to the front or from the front to the back.
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To test the camera, I went out on my deck for the for the fall colors
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and took a picture with it set on the highest and the finest resolution
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and the results were not quite what I would hope.
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The picture was the details were blurry and I loaded up the picture in the
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gimp and the details were also blurry and beyond the ability of the gimp sharpened function
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to make them become unnoticeable.
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As for the camera, it looks like it's okay if you want to take pictures and email them
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to your friends of people having pratfalls or your friendly local car rack or something like that
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but it doesn't look like it's something that I would choose to use if I wanted to take a picture
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and post it on my website or put it in a document.
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Regarding the USB mount, the device must be powered on for you to mount it as a drive.
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If you connect it to the USB cable and the USB cable connected to the computer,
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it will pop up a message asking if you want to turn on USB storage and warns you that certain
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applications may not be available while USB storage is turned on. It mounted very quickly.
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I tested both with Slackware Linux where it mounted almost instantaneously and with Windows 7
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where Windows 7 had to go through a little drill.
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Oh, you hardware is detected. Oh, whatever shall I do? Oh, there's a driver right there in my closet.
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It was far easier than when I tried to get my girlfriend's phone working with her Windows
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computer which turned into a half an hour or a deal of going out and downloading a driver from
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her phone manufacturer. So the USB mount was quite satisfactory. It will also charge through the
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USB port. You don't have to charge it with the wall wart. You can use the USB port. Overall,
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I'm quite satisfied with my purchase. It was not as expensive as some of the high end tablets
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that you get from your cell phone carrier. The trade-off is there's no cellular connectivity,
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although according to the docs, it will support those 3G dongles that you can get from cell phone
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carriers. The touchscreen is fast and responsive. It's easy to read. The programs install and load
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very quickly. I'm sure the two gigabytes of RAM have quite a bit to do with that. I works very
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nicely as an ebook reader. I use the FB reader program. I've used it for years, both on my phone
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and on my computers. But on this tablet, the touchscreen found its natural environment.
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The criticisms I have in their rather minor, the ports are difficult to see, especially
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in bad light. And the labels are difficult to read, especially when you open the cover,
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they cover the microchip, the USB port, and the HDMI port. The labels underneath the cover are
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very difficult to read. I had a couple of times got a flashlight so I can make sure I found the
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right port. Now with usage, of course, you learn which port is which. The supplied earbuds for the
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headphone ports have a very short lead. It's only about two feet long. I think it's overly short.
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When I use it with my MP3 player, it's not long enough for me to put the my MP3 player in my pocket.
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I have to put it in my shirt pocket. If I don't have a shirt pocket, I'm out of luck.
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It was very inexpensive to get replacement earbuds. I've got so many earbuds lying around here.
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You'd think I was an ear of corn. And there was no manual or quick start guide.
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Now when you consider it's our reasons target audience, which is Linux people.
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They're generally folks who are used to figuring stuff out and know what they're doing.
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So from one way it makes sense, but at least suddenly you had a diagram of the ports
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and the picture of the screen so that the first time I turned it on, I wouldn't have had the
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hunt around. A little quick start guide would have been nice. As I say, not essential,
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but it would have been nice. But if those were the only criticisms I can come up with about this
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device, I'd say overalls our reasons done a pretty good job. And I'm looking forward to having
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a lot of fun with this tablet. If you want to email me, you can email me at Frank at PineViewFarm.net.
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PineViewFarm is all one word, no spaces, no punctuation. And my website is www.pineviewFarm.net. Thank you very much.
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You have been listening to HackerPublic Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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