Among the best tablets, audio quality isn’t exactly a much-hyped feature — in fact, it’s probably the biggest weakness for any tablet. There’s only so much you can do on something that’s thinner than a pencil.  So, you’re either stuck with a large tablet with good audio that you can’t move anywhere, or a large tablet that is mobile, but with poor audio quality. The new Google Pixel Tablet looks like it will offer the best of both worlds — a tablet that’s portable, but one that offers great audio quality, too (albeit, when docked).  The Pixel Tablet (which will be powered by Google’s Tensor G2 chip), will be able to do pretty much everything that a Pixel phone can. However, when it’s docked, Google says it can act as a digital photo frame, and give you ready access to smart home controls. I imagine it will look similar to what you can already do with Google’s smart displays, so you’ll get a control panel with dials to adjust the brightness of your lights, change the thermostat, and more. And, Google says it will also let you use Google Assistant hands-free.  Nothing here is radically different from what you already get with the best smart displays, but how Google intends to present all of this on the tablet is up for conjecture. What remains to be seen is if the Google Pixel Tablet will have a similar camera as the Nest Hub Max —  specifically if it will have the same digital pan-and-zoom technology, which automatically tracks you around the room while you’re on a video call. Considering the Echo Show 10 and the iPad Air (with Center Stage) both have a similar feature, it would be a real miss for Google not to include this. I’m also curious to see if the Pixel Tablet will mean the end for the Nest Hub Max, which pretty much looks identical to the tablet — except that you can’t pop off the Nest Hub Max’s display.  I still think there will be a place for mini smart displays like the Echo Show 5 and Lenovo’s Smart Clock — not everyone wants a 10-inch tablet by their bedside — but a speaker dock/charging stand seems like a no-brainer for larger tablets.  When the iPhone and the iPad first came out, there were plenty of charging docks with speakers, many of which were kind of clumsy. You can still find some of these docks, but they’re not all that common. However, they first came out when the idea of a smart home and smart speakers were still in its infancy, so having a tablet set up as some sort of hub didn’t make a lot of sense. Thanks to the improvements in the Google Home app (as well as HomeKit and Alexa), its time may have come back at last. 


title: “Google Pixel Tablet Could Kill Smart Displays And Tablets As We Know Them” ShowToc: true date: “2022-11-09” author: “Antonio Sullivan”


Among the best tablets, audio quality isn’t exactly a much-hyped feature — in fact, it’s probably the biggest weakness for any tablet. There’s only so much you can do on something that’s thinner than a pencil.  So, you’re either stuck with a large tablet with good audio that you can’t move anywhere, or a large tablet that is mobile, but with poor audio quality. The new Google Pixel Tablet looks like it will offer the best of both worlds — a tablet that’s portable, but one that offers great audio quality, too (albeit, when docked).  The Pixel Tablet (which will be powered by Google’s Tensor G2 chip), will be able to do pretty much everything that a Pixel phone can. However, when it’s docked, Google says it can act as a digital photo frame, and give you ready access to smart home controls. I imagine it will look similar to what you can already do with Google’s smart displays, so you’ll get a control panel with dials to adjust the brightness of your lights, change the thermostat, and more. And, Google says it will also let you use Google Assistant hands-free.  Nothing here is radically different from what you already get with the best smart displays, but how Google intends to present all of this on the tablet is up for conjecture. What remains to be seen is if the Google Pixel Tablet will have a similar camera as the Nest Hub Max —  specifically if it will have the same digital pan-and-zoom technology, which automatically tracks you around the room while you’re on a video call. Considering the Echo Show 10 and the iPad Air (with Center Stage) both have a similar feature, it would be a real miss for Google not to include this. I’m also curious to see if the Pixel Tablet will mean the end for the Nest Hub Max, which pretty much looks identical to the tablet — except that you can’t pop off the Nest Hub Max’s display.  I still think there will be a place for mini smart displays like the Echo Show 5 and Lenovo’s Smart Clock — not everyone wants a 10-inch tablet by their bedside — but a speaker dock/charging stand seems like a no-brainer for larger tablets.  When the iPhone and the iPad first came out, there were plenty of charging docks with speakers, many of which were kind of clumsy. You can still find some of these docks, but they’re not all that common. However, they first came out when the idea of a smart home and smart speakers were still in its infancy, so having a tablet set up as some sort of hub didn’t make a lot of sense. Thanks to the improvements in the Google Home app (as well as HomeKit and Alexa), its time may have come back at last.