No one understands why President Obama didnât hammer Governor Romney on his 47% secret video comments during the first presidential debate. In hindsight, a mistake. Like President Obama, Google is throwing away its best ammunition against the iPad mini â" pixel density â" by publishing marketing materials that make the Nexus 7 look like a turd.
Iâve been perusing the iPad mini reviews and am thinking about getting one. A big negative that most people are focusing on is the screen resolution, which is just 1024-by-768 at 163 pixels per inch (ppi). The iPad 3 by comparison is 326 ppi.
âEw, the screen is terribleâ writes John Gruber (quoting someone else)
âThe iPad Mini costs too much, especially considering the lower resolution of its 7.9-inch non-Retina Displayâ says CNET.
So 163 ppi isnât all that bad, if weâre willing to live in 2010.
Anyhow, I read that the Nexus 7, Googleâs competing tablet, has similarly sized 1280Ã800 display but far more pixel density at 216 ppi. The Nexus 7 is also just $200 to the Ipad miniâs $329 (for 16 GB).
So Iâm thinking, maybe Iâll buy a Nexus 7. I havenât been testing any Google hardware lately, since I moved to the iPhone last year.
As Iâm perusing the Google Nexus 7 site with screen quality on my mind I notice something. All the screen images on the device are absolute crap.
Normally we all expect a little letâs say optimism in marketing materials for fast food and consumer electronics. But Google seems to be going the other way, showing a device putting out screen resolutions far below what they actually look like in person.
A few examples:
Here are a few from Appleâs iPad mini site:
Based solely on those images, which one of these devices do you want in your hands?
All of the above images were screen captured and then I played with the size with Skitch for this post. That distorts them somewhat, but you can go to the links above and see for yourself.
My biggest complaint with Android devices in the past was fit and finish. Apple nails it, Google doesnât.
And even when Google has something to really show off, they fail to do it. Somebody in marketing needs to brush up on their photoshop skills, pronto. Pixelated and blurry images (and boring ones, too) donât make me want to buy a Nexus 7. I know the device has a way better screen than Google is showing me, but these things matter. Inattention to detail destroys products.
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