
Motorola Xoom tablet comes with 10.1-inch screen, front and rear cameras, HDMI output, a dual-core processor, and Google's tablet-optimized version of Android. Motorola Xoom is reported as the best competition Apple's iPad has ever seen.
Motorola Xoom is located connections for Micro-USB, Micro-HDMI, a socket for the included power adapter, and a pinhole microphone on the bottom. Up on the top edge you'll find a standard headphone jack packed conspicuously in the middle and a removable door to its left that conceals the microSD expansion port and a place for a 4G SIM card, both of which were disabled at launch. Motorola is promising microSD card support (up to 32GB) shortly after the product launch, enabled by an over-the-air update. Support for Verizon's 4G network is also forthcoming, though later in 2011, and not without submitting your Xoom to an authorized dealer for a hardware update.
Motorola Xoom features a 5MP camera and dual-LED flash, a stereo pair of speakers, and a sleep/wake button on the back. Motorola Xoom also features a front-facing 2MP camera which geared for video chat. The camera is work with Google Talk app, and it worked without a hitch over both Wi-Fi and Verizon's 3G data connection.
Motorola Xoom is priced at $800 off-contract or $600 with a two-year commitment from Verizon. Motorola Xoom tablet technically offers a more powerful, more capable alternative to Apple's iPad with Google's next generation of Android, Motorola's knack for great hardware, and Verizon's promise of 4G network compatibility. It’s a recommended gadget to date.
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