Nexus 7 review

£199
Price when reviewed

UPDATE: Our Nexus 7 review has been updated with information about the Android 4.2 (Jelly Bean) update. Scroll to the end of the review to read more.

After several years watching manufacturers achieve mixed results with Android tablets, Google has finally had enough. Much like Microsoft’s forthcoming Surface tablets, the Nexus 7 is an attempt to marry the company’s popular OS with the quality of hardware it deserves – and at the right price.

It isn’t technically a Google tablet. In fact, you won’t find the company’s name anywhere on the device. Instead, Google pounced on an Asus tablet first shown at CES in January, and the pair reworked the exterior and came up with something they were happy with, which is why there’s a discreet Asus logo at the foot of the rear panel.

Whoever takes the credit, the Nexus 7 has certainly attracted plenty of attention with its mouth-watering sub-£200 price tag. For that money, you get a narrow device with a 7in widescreen display, a first look at Android’s 4.1 Jelly Bean update, and even a £15 Google Play voucher to start you off.

Nexus 7 logo

Little wonder

It’s immediately obvious that the Nexus 7 is a cut above most budget tablets. It’s just the right size and weight (340g) to fit in the hand, and its mottled rear panel feels soft on the palm. A speaker grille sits just below the Asus logo, with power and volume controls on the right edge and headphone and micro-USB sockets on the bottom edge. It’s sparse, but its gentle curves mean that it feels far from cheap.

UK user?

Find out how to get the US-only Google Music on your Nexus 7

The screen is a 1,280 x 800 IPS panel, making for a pixel density of 216ppi – not up with the iPad but higher than any smaller tablet we’ve seen. It’s pretty sharp and readable, and the wide aspect makes movie watching a treat. We measured the maximum brightness at 330cd/m[sup]2[/sup] and contrast at 1,100:1, and our only complaint is that colours lack punch, with a washed-out look that’s noticeable next to dearer tablet screens. The speaker on the rear is listenable but not particularly loud or full-sounding, so you’ll want to keep headphones to hand.

Inside, Asus has installed one of the latest quad-core 1.3GHz Tegra 3 chips and 1GB of RAM, so this is a blisteringly fast device. The Nexus 7 scored 3,687 in the Quadrant benchmark and took 1,799ms to complete the SunSpider JavaScript test – both as fast as tablets at twice the price – and stayed relatively cool while doing so: even after a stress test the highest temperature we measured on the back was 42°C. It effortlessly ran every app we threw at it, including the intensive Shadowgun and the oddly demanding Angry Birds Space, and everything about the main OS feels smooth and responsive in a way Android just hasn’t been until now – Jelly Bean’s Project Butter advancements have clearly smoothed many things out.

Nexus 7

With all that power crammed into such a small device, the battery life is hugely important. Asus has squeezed in a non-removable 4,325mAh battery, and the Nexus 7 ran dry after 8hrs 48mins running a video on loop at half brightness with Wi-Fi disabled. That isn’t anywhere near the best in its field, but it’s perfectly acceptable for a travelling device.

There are only three places the budget obviously shows. First, there’s no camera on the rear, leaving you with only a pretty middling 1.2-megapixel front-facing camera. Second, although it’s advanced enough to include NFC, there’s understandably no 3G option. Finally, there’s the issue of storage: the Nexus 7 comes in 16GB (£199) and 8GB (£159) flavours, with no card slots to add to that. Even at its remarkably modest price we’d be reluctant to buy the cheaper model – with the focus on content consumption you’d fill that 8GB in no time at all.

Magic Jelly Bean

You unlock the Nexus 7 by swiping in any direction on the lockscreen (except up, which we’ll come to later), and instead of the kind of reskins we’ve come to expect from HTC and Samsung, this is as clean as Android gets. That’s a good thing, as a pared-down Jelly Bean is wonderfully accessible. In a nod to the direction Google is taking with the Play store, there’s a main homepage for media content, with tiles for books, albums and movies, and everything can be moved and resized at will: if you don’t like the full-width recommendation tiles, just drag them smaller.

Nexus 7 home screens

As with Ice Cream Sandwich, there are three main controls at the bottom of every screen – back, home and recent apps – and an iOS-style row of favourite apps above that. The excellent Google Chrome browser is loaded as standard – although manufacturers can stick to the old Android browser if they wish – and alongside quick shortcuts for various types of media, there’s now also a useful expandable folder for your favourite apps.

One major new feature added in Jelly Bean is Google Now, which you access by swiping up to unlock – or indeed by swiping up from the Home button on any screen. It brings up a nicely contrasting white screen made up of cards: initially you’ll have the local weather, but Google Now can add flight details near an airport, transport times near a tube station, information about nearby museums and restaurants, meeting appointments, and so on. Better still, its voice search works quickly and accurately in our experience. It’s like a cross between Siri and one of the many location-aware activity apps, with one key failing: with no 3G, it’s largely useless if you want to use it out and about.

Nexus 7 Play store and Google Now

The rest of the Nexus 7 experience will come largely via Google Play, as this is very much a content-consumption device in the mould of the Kindle Fire. As we’ve already said, watching rented movies is very enjoyable with a good set of headphones, and games run fine – it almost feels like a portable games console given its dimensions. We’re slightly less enamoured with the reading experience, but perhaps that’s just by comparison with the sharpness of the iPad. Books come with large text and a nice page-turn animation, and they’re perfectly readable, so for all but the longest journeys we’d consider leaving the Kindle at home.

The verdict

The Nexus 7 isn’t a budget tablet in anything but price. It’s fast, it has a perfectly good screen, and it’s built to a quality rarely seen from such a cheap device. Android’s Jelly Bean update brings its own advancements, and for the first time we can look at an Android tablet as a whole package and say: it all works. The fact that we’re saying that about a £199 device is remarkable.

For the sofa, there’s no doubt an iPad remains a far more comfortable size, with a screen better suited to web browsing and reading text. But Google and Asus’s little beauty easily has the edge as a travelling companion. It’s the perfect size to hold in one hand, and Google Play’s books and movies make it great for flights and hotel rooms.

Despite a few minor flaws, it completely redefines what we should expect from a budget tablet. If this is the outcome, Google should take matters into its own hands more often.

UPDATE:

Four months after the release of the Nexus 7, the device received a free update to Android 4.2. Performance wasn’t significantly improved: we saw Quadrant scores remain unchanged after the upgrade, while SunSpider accelerated only slightly from 1,799ms to 1,683ms.

But the latest version of Jelly Bean brings some major new features, including multi-user support, where each person using the tablet has a separate login, complete with its own home screen, accounts, and collection of apps.

Our favourite aspect of the upgrade is the new keyboard, which allows you simply to drag your finger from letter to letter, just like Swype, rather than having to tap each virtual key in turn – a system that works with impressive speed and accuracy.

Android 4.2 also tidies up the menus that pull down from the notification area: dragging down on the left side exposes the familiar stack of app notifications and events, while dragging on the right side gives instant access to commonly used settings, including brightness, wireless, rotation lock and user switching.

The Nexus 7 is no longer the only device of its kind. The Amazon Kindle Fire HD, Nook HD and the Kobo Arc all now offer alternatives at similar prices; but these are conceived as ebook readers rather than general purpose tablets. The Nexus 7’s Jelly Bean front-end is a slicker, more versatile system than any of them – and the rapid arrival of Android 4.2 suggests the device may be first in the queue for future updates too.

In short, if you’re in the market for a regular Android tablet, the Nexus 7 remains the one to go for. The OS update has cemented the device’s appeal, and storage space has doubled since our original review, too, so it’s better value than ever. There’s also now a 3G model available at a tempting £239, which can serve as a true on-the-go companion.

Detail

Physical

Dimensions 120 x 199 x 10.5mm (WDH)
Weight 340g

Display

Primary keyboard On-screen
Screen size 7.0in
Resolution screen horizontal 800
Resolution screen vertical 1,280
Display type Colour touchscreen LCD
Panel technology IPS

Battery

Battery capacity 4,325mAh

Core specifications

CPU frequency, MHz 1.3GHz
Integrated memory 16.0GB
RAM capacity 1.00GB

Camera

Camera megapixel rating N/A
Focus type N/A
Front-facing camera? yes
Video capture? yes

Other

WiFi standard 802.11n
Bluetooth support yes
Upstream USB ports 1
HDMI output? no
Video/TV output? no

Software

Mobile operating system Android 4.1

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