Saturday, 29 November 2014
If there’s an Android contender to rival an iPad Air 2, this is it. The Nexus 9 has the same screen shape, the same resolution and – like the Apple tablet – launches with the very best its platform has to offer.
You get the brand new Android 5.0 Lollipop software, bags of power and a super-sharp display: all for £80 less than an iPad Air 2. It’s sure to lure thousands away from the Apple Store.
Just as important, though, is what the Nexus 9 does for Android. It sets the bar for future Android tablets, and sees Google finally embrace non-widescreen tablets. It’s been a long time coming.
The Tupperware of Tablets
There’s plenty of praise to come for the Nexus 9, but it’s not a tablet that sets out to wow you with its hardware design. Like the good old Nexus 7, it’s more practical than luxurious.The back is plastic, and has the sort of minimalist design a swedish furniture maker might come up with. Good-looking? Sure, but it doesn’t give the hard, expensive impression of the iPad Air 2, or offer the jaw-dropping thin-n-lightness of the Samsung Galaxy Tab S 8.4.You get the feeling Google cares a little more about what happens when you switch the screen on than what it feels like.That we can be so blasé about a tablet this thin and light tells you about how far we've come, though. The Nexus 9 is 7.9mm thick and weighs just 425g in its Wi-Fi only incarnation. It is thin and it is light, it just doesn’t showcase it in the same way the 6.1mm-thick iPad Air 2 does.That slight lack of initial impact is quickly forgotten when you start using the Nexus 9, though. The 4:3 aspect is so much better suited to an 8in-plus tablet than the widescreen styles that used to be the Android norm.Switch between this and the Nexus 10 and the older tablet just seems a bit, well, silly. It’s not just about the looks either, but how its weighting sits in your mitt. The Nexus 9 feels right, and is just about light enough to use one-handed while reading an article on the train on the way to work.In short, the Nexus 9 makes it pretty obvious why 10in widescreen tablets were never all that popular.
Google Nexus 9 Tech Specs
The size, the shape, the handling: we have no serious complaints. However, Google has deliberately limited you in one quite annoying way. There’s no memory card slot.
Of course, iPads have never had memory card slots, either - but the iPad Air 2 is available in 64GB and 128GB versions if you're the type that values on-board storage. The Nexus 9, on the other hand, maxes out at 32GB.
Casual users may well get by with the standard 16GB, but with only 10GB of it actually available to use once you factor in the OS, it’s soon gone if you load up a few games and movies. You can obviously bolster this with cloud storage from Google Drive or Dropbox, but it's not really the same thing. Don’t say we didn’t warn you.
LCD starlet
The Nexus 9 screen just begs for games and films, too. It offers oodles of pixels, 2048 x 1536 to be exact (just like the Lenovo Yoga), and it’s enough to make everything on the 8.9in screen look as sharp as any rival.
Just like the Nexus 7 before it, the Nexus 9 uses an IPS LCD screen, the same tech found in the iPad Air 2. The strong colour reproduction melded with the high resolution, bright backlight and very immediate image give the display plenty of pop.
However, purists will notice a few little issues. First, this is an LCD and its black levels aren’t close to what you get from an OLED tablet such as the Samsung Galaxy Tab S 8.4.
There’s also some pretty clear leakage from the backlight, particularly clear at the top of the Nexus 9. It exhibits as a tiny strip of brightness at the top of the screen. You should get used to it, but those with display OCD may find it distracting. It is fairly minor, but is another little negative to jot down if you’re after the ultimate Android tablet.
READ MORE: Lenovo Yoga Tablet 10 HD+ Review
What flavour is that Lollipop?
This is the first tablet to run Android 5.0 Lollipop, the version the rest of the Android-using world is going to be clamouring after for weeks or, more likely, months. So what’s it all about?
Android 5.0 Lollipop has a new look. It appears and feels familiar, but everything has been given a subtle facelift. The soft keys are new. The apps menu now looks like a series of white pages and you double-swipe down from the top of the screen to access quick settings toggles and screen brightness.
The lock screen is new, too, giving you notifications without having to take the tablet out of sleep mode. Very handy and about time. These are all things that we’ve seen before in other custom interfaces. It’s mostly just a neat, simple, quite cute UI – not a revolution.
Google has also reworked a bunch of the standard Android apps in the Nexus 9’s Android 5.0. Gmail, the Contacts book, Calendar and even the Play Store have all been given a spring clean.
But speaking of apps, it's also worth noting that many still aren't optimised for larger Android screens. Developers seem happy to produce different versions of their apps for iPhone and iPad, but many seem content to release just one for Android, which is then simply blown-up to fit tablet screens. That can have some ugly results.
But Lollipop is pretty elsewhere, with a colour palette that now has that extra hint of pastel to it. And everything moves with that extra bit of pep. Google seems to want the Nexus 9 to be something that would slide gracefully into an IKEA show home in its software as well as its hardware design.
Is it flat-out better than what you get with the Google Now interface available for just about any Android device these days? Maybe, but not by a huge margin.
What really matters is the stuff in the background – those turning cogs you can’t see on the surface. Android 5.0 now supports 64-bit processors and is better primed for connections to other devices than ever before. Our guess is that this means deeper integration with Android Wear watches, co-operation that we don’t even know about yet. For now, it means you can take up where you left off with media and apps in Lollipop goodies.
A lot of that promise is about the future, not right now. For example, while the Tegra K1 CPU used in the Nexus 9 is 64-bit, there’s nothing that specifically makes use of that more advanced architecture at present.
It’s not noticeably faster than previous top Android tablets, either. There’s the odd hint of lag here and there, undoubtedly because Android 5.0 Lollipop is a baby chick still brushing off those remaining bits of eggshell.
We imagine it’ll soon be improved in an update before too long, and it’s hardly bad at present anyway. Just the occasional stutter, and some apps not loading as fast as we’d like, especially given Android 5.0 uses a special ART runtime that’s meant to speed this whole process up. We’ll have a full review of Android 5.0 Lollipop up on wapwing.blogspot.com very soon.
The Numbers of The Beast
If you're a real power user you might be disappointed to find that hot-swapping is off the table. In fact, swapping of any kind seems unlikely - battery isn't just non-removable, it's glued in place behind a back cover you can’t rip off.
Papp-a-razzie
Walk around a major city and you’re sure to see loads of tourists taking loads of pictures with their tablet – probably iPads. But HTC and Google still seem to be working under the assumption tablet cameras aren’t too important.
We'd wouldn't necesarily argue with that, but if you are a tablet snapper you'll likely find that your greatest annoyance isn’t image quality but autofocus speed. It feels sluggish, not the sort of camera to whip out to capture your dog as it bounds across a park, flinging 360 degree drool. You’d probably end up with a photo of some grass. Maybe a tree if you’re lucky. The Nexus 9 is also prone to overexposing just about every cloud in the sky, too.
Approach the camera with patience and you can get some reasonable results with pretty decent colour saturation, but we'd recommend sticking to your phone camera unless you simply must let absolutely everyone see that you’re rocking the new Nexus.
Google Nexus 9 Verdict
But there are still some niggling flaws - the build isn’t up there with the likes of the iPad Air 2, storage is limited and at this early stage Lollipop is just a little stuttery.
Our other lingering regret is that the Nexus 9 and Nexus 6 show that the Google Nexus line isn’t the bargain-hunter’s paradise it used to be. Good value overall? Sure, but perhaps the real bargain right now is the £240 iPad Mini 2. Now there's a turn up for the books.