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An evolutionary change doesn't stop this being a remarkable tablet
Recommended award
TechRadar's verdict
"The Sony Xperia Z2 Tablet is a powerful, well-balanced slate that
needed a slight bump in screen quality to truly compete with the best."
For
High-power
Live Color screen
Great design
Against
Screen too low-res
Sharper edges
Page 1 of 9Introduction
Ratings in depth
It's
become a bit of a cliche, but a year really is a long time in
technology. Less than 12 months ago, Sony launched the ridiculously
slim, light, and powerful Sony Xperia Tablet Z, and it seemed like a tablet ahead of its time.
Now
the Sony Xperia Z2 Tablet is here with subtle improvements across the
board. But while it remains a stylish and accomplished 10.1-inch tablet,
the arrival of some outstanding competition in the intervening months
has left it feeling a little less special.
The Xperia Z2
Tablet is competing at the top of the full-sized tablet tree, with
prices starting from £399 (around $660, AU$710) for the 16GB model, and
the 32GB unit costing £449 (around $745, AU$800).
That's the same price as the iPad Air,
and is a similar price to the Samsung Galaxy Tab Pro 10.1 (which you
can currently get online for less than its £449 RRP). With two of the
strongest full-sized tablets around as its main competitors, the Sony
Xperia Z2 Tablet really needs to step up its game. The waterproof features are more for peace of mind than day to day use.Interestingly,
the Sony Xperia Z2 Tablet faces pressure from these rivals in different
ways. The iPad Air challenges it for desirability and premium feel,
while the Samsung Galaxy Tab Pro 10.1 competes more directly on raw
specs and numerous software features.
Sony has won a couple of these battles, but perhaps not as many as it would have hoped for.
Sony
hasn't messed with the basic design of the Sony Xperia Tablet Z here,
and that's just fine by us. Now in a slightly slimmer, lighter shell, we
have no compunction with calling the Sony Xperia Z2 Tablet the
best-looking Android tablet on the market.
You can spot a
modern Sony smart device from a mile off. They tend to be a lot squarer
than rival offerings, with sharp corners and uniform, parallel
surfaces. The Xperia Z2 Tablet sticks to this template. A simple designFrom
the front, the Xperia Z2 Tablet looks quite chunky, thanks to its thick
screen bezel, which perversely makes the screen seem smaller.
With
the left and right sides (in landscape, the Z2 Tablet's default
orientation) especially pronounced, its lack of fascia buttons, and
Sony's subtle branding in the top left hand corner, it almost looks like
a tiny Bravia TV.
One telltale sign that it isn't is
the white matte plastic edging that extends from the rear of the device
and creeps around to meet the surface glass. This unique frame, which
contains strips of flat silver plastic along the length of each edge, is
another trademark of the current Xperia range. A larger bezel, apparently designed for easier grip, feels antiquatedI
found that this plastic edging was susceptible to marking. A relatively
light contact with my MacBook when carrying both together left an
unusual dink running across both white and silver plastic sections -
something you feel probably would not have happened with a Samsung
tablet, and certainly not with an iPad.
Close examination
reveals these materials to be a little flimsy, then, but the overall
effect is a pleasing one. There's a hard-to-define sense of quality that
Sony manages to imbue in its plastic devices that Samsung (for example)
doesn't always manage.
It's all the more impressive
given just how slim the device is. At just 6.4mm, it's half a centimetre
thinner than its predecessor, and more than a millimetre thinner than
the iPad Air. The Z2 Tablet is even thinner than the AirThe
Xperia Z2 Tablet is also surprisingly light. With a weight of just
426g, it's almost 70g lighter than the Sony Xperia Tablet Z, and some
43g lighter than the iPad Air.
Sure, you can cause the
device to bend and flex if you apply some pressure, but when simply sat
in your hands normally it feels great.
The only physical
buttons here are the power and volume keys, and they're well situated
mid-way up the left-hand side. It sounds like a silly thing to say, but
Sony makes the best power buttons in the business. The Sony Xperia Z2
Tablet's is predictably round, pronounced and moreishly clicky, and it's
very easy to feel out in a darkened room. The Omnibalance design is great for hardwareIts
nubbin design is a great reference point in such situations - you
locate the power button, then slide your finger down a centimetre to the
flatter volume rocker. Simple.
The tablet's main camera
lens is placed right in the top left corner. In other, bulkier tablets
this can lead to some irritating finger-in-shot moments, but thanks to
the Xperia Z2 Tablet's slight build, I never found this to be a problem
here.
Elsewhere, the Sony Xperia Z2 Tablet's edges are
unusually featureless. Other than the 3.5mm jack on the bottom left
(which can be awkward if you want to prop up the tablet on a table with a
set of headphones plugged in), and the slightest of ingresses for the
charging dock connector (sold separately) to the right, it's all pretty
much flush. A well-placed cameraThere's an infra-red emitter on the top alongside a tiny mic, but it still feels like something's missing.
That's because to the left of the infrared sensor you'll find two chunky covers concealing the microUSB and microSD slots. The unattractive coversThis
helps with Xperia Z2 Tablet's tidy looks, but it can be a little
irritating when you're scrabbling around to put it on charge -
especially when you have the tablet's software warning you every time a
port is opened.
Of course, there's an important reason behind these covers, which we'll discuss in the next section.
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