Testseek.co.uk have collected 24 expert reviews of the Motorola Droid Xyboard 8.2 and the average rating is 66%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Motorola Droid Xyboard 8.2.
(66%)
24 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
-
0 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
66010024
Reviews
page 1 of 3
Order by:
Score
Published: 2012-04-10, Author: James , review by: gadgetreview.com
The fastest web browsing available on any tablet or smartphone today, High quality display and sound for watching movies, Simple design that uses one MicroUSB port for everything
No Android 4.0, Physical buttons have odd placement, take time to adjust to, Graphics performance is identical to Motorola's smartphones, shows no improvement
A great Android tablet that hits all of it's marks for a fine media playback and internet experienc...
Great IPS display, good size compromise, rugged, 4G LTE, Great IPS display, good size compromise, rugged, 4G LTE, Great IPS display, good size compromise, rugged, 4G LTE, Great IPS display, good size comprom
Expensive without contract, Expensive without contract, Expensive without contract, Expensive without contract
The Motorola Droid XYBoard's unique size and quality combo set it apart from the me-too tablet fray. It's portable but the screen is roomy enough for enjoyable web browsing and gaming. And that display is extremely sharp and bright thanks to the IPS 1...
Abstract: and QualityBoth tablets feel like quality pieces, yet their design philosophies are entirely different. Samsung goes for their usual uber-thin and sleek design while the Droid XYBoard is rugged and macho. The Motorola is certainly unique looking with its...
Compact 8.2-inch screen, High resolution for screen size (1280 x 800), Thin and lightweight, Ergonomic design with thin bezel, 4G LTE connectivity
$400 is a lot for an Android tablet, Specs are decent but not impressive, No microSD or external storage, Camera sucks, Battery life could be better
If you want a solid Android tablet that's smaller than those huge 10.1-inch devices and has a good portable, lightweight feel, and 4G LTE connectivity, this is probably your best bet. ...
Abstract: The Motorola Droid XYBOARD 8.2 is the sequel to the ill launched Motorola Xoom, and the first Motorola Tablet to take the Droid name. This tablet packs the regular features you will find in an standard Android 3.2 tablet. it sports a 1.2Ghz dual-core proc...
Published: 2012-01-25, Author: Robert , review by: talkandroid.com
Abstract: Shortly after last February's release of the XOOM , Motorola Mobility CEO Sanjay Jha hinted they would release tablets with different form factors later in the year. The XOOM was Motorola's entry into the tablet world, and it was a great product at the ti...
Published: 2012-01-08, Author: Robert , review by: talkandroid.com
Abstract: It was back in February 2011 when Motorola launched the XOOM tablet with the promise of different form factors later in the year. They finally came through last month with the launch of the first DROID branded tablets, the XYBOARD 10.1 and XYBOARD 8.2 . T...
Go Back to Top. Skip To: Start of Article, android, Droid, honeycomb, Motorola, tablets, Verizon
Battery life is pretty weak — around 4 hours for video at the highest brightness setting. Ships with Honeycomb, not ICS (although it is upgradeable). Price is too high
Slick design, Excellent screen, MotoCast app works great for secure content streaming
Poor button placement, Lousy battery, Expensive with data contract
My affinity for the Xoom aside, Motorola did the right thing by ditching the Xoom moniker in favor of the familiar Droid branding, and the Droid Xyboard 8.2 is still a big improvement over the underrated original Honeycomb tablet. The overall design and ...
The clipped corners and rubberized back make the Xyboard a joy to hold, even if it looks weird at first. The 1280x800 screens are nothing revolutionary, but they're good and bright, and colors are generally pretty accurate. The 8.2 can fit in a large jack
Despite their 1.2Ghz dual-core processors, speed remains a problem. There's some herky-jerkiness when scrolling that just shouldn't be there. This is the curse of Honeycomb, which, even after a year still isn't ready for primetime, Advertisement, While I
If you want a 10.1-inch tablet, there arent really many compelling reasons to buy this over the Transformer Prime, unless you really want the freedom of having 4G radios or an IR blaster. For about the same price the Transformer is just faster, more futu...