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The original Toshiba Regza AT100 impressed us with its support for full-size ports and the ability to remove its battery and swap in a new one. Features that are still unmatched in mainstream tablets.
The 7-inch version (also known as the Toshiba Thrive 7-inch in some countries) is here now, but with its smaller form factor, can it possibly offer the same experience?
Overall, the Regza AT1S0 provides a very typical Honeycomb experience, with no word yet on whether an Ice Cream Sandwich upgrade is in the works.
The Regza AT1S0 comes packed with all the formerly impressive tablet hardware goodies we now take for granted. These include a 7-inch capacitive touch screen running at 1,280 x 800-pixel resolution, 1GHz Nvidia Tegra 2 CPU, 1GB of RAM, and 32GB of flash memory storage, with a 16GB version available as well. The gyroscope, accelerometer, ambient light sensor, Bluetooth 3.0, and 802.11 b/g/n network adapter such as Toshiba Portege M700 Adapter, Toshiba Satellite A10 Adapter, Toshiba Portege R600 Adapter, Toshiba Portege PPR65U Adapter, Toshiba Satellite A75 Adapter, Toshiba Qosmio G25 Adapter, Toshiba Qosmio F50 Adapter, Toshiba Tecra A1 Adapter, Toshiba Tecra A9 Adapter, Toshiba Tecra R10 Adapter, Toshiba Satellite R10 Adapter round out the hardware highlights.
Many Honeycomb tablets deliver haptic feedback for doing certain tasks. For example, pressing the home button delivers a quick vibration to the tablet, continuing to your hands. However, on the Regza AT1S0, the feedback feels less like a vibration and more of a sudden "pop" inside the device which we found a little disconcerting. We soon realized this was not a warning sign of its imminent detonation, but only its interpretation of the haptic vibration. It just felt weird, so we shut it off immediately anyway.
Performance And Battery Life
Navigating Honeycomb on the Regza AT1S0 felt fast, smooth, and its screen was noticeably more responsive than the 7.0 Plus', especially when swiping.
We experienced that same smooth swiping when surfing the Web; however, after a site was loaded, scrolling quickly down a page on the Regza AT1S0 produced lots of visible clipping. When surfing the Web, to make sure the 1GHz Tegra 2 CPU isn't wasting time drawing assets no one can see, it will only draw the assets on the screen and anything not currently on the screen will be drawn when you scroll to it. As a result, if you scroll too quickly you'll see assets draw in as the tablet attempts to keep up with your scrolling speed. On the 7.0 Plus, with its faster 1.2GHz Samsung Exynos CPU, clipping was virtually nonexistent.
While Samsung's proprietary PLS screen technology contributes to the 7.0 Plus delivering the highest levels of color reproduction on a 7-inch tablet screen, the IPS screen on the Regza AT1S0 still impresses. The Regza AT1S0's screen delivers wide viewing angles, a high brightness, and pretty good color reproduction, if not quite as good as the 7.0 Plus.
Riptide GP, a personal watercraft game available on the Android market, is great when comparing tablet GPU performance. Unlike Shadowgun, which seems to cap its frame rate, Riptide actually scales and depending on the speed of the processor running it, the game's framerate will be noticeably smoother or choppier. In our tests, the 7.0 Plus delivered an obviously smoother experience than the Regza AT1S0. Riptide on the Regza AT1S0 is still perfectly playable, it's just not as smooth.
For movie playback, both MKV and MOV movies we tried on the Regza AT1S0 wouldn't play. We received a warning that it couldn't handle those formats, but unlike the 7.0 Plus, which offered to convert the same files into formats that the tablet was compatible with, the Regza AT1S0 offered no such option.
The Regza AT1S0's 5-megapixel rear camera took decent still photos, but when compared with photos taken by the 7.0 Plus's rear 3-megapixel camera showing higher levels of color saturation, they looked a bit washed out. Shutter lag on the Regza AT1S0's camera was painfully slow, sometimes lasting up to 6 seconds, giving whatever moment you were all set to capture to be long gone by the time it snapped. The 7.0 Plus was, on average, about 2 seconds faster.
Video playback of recorded video wasn't as smooth as that on the 7.0 Plus; however, the 7.0 Plus seemed to wash out the image too much. Surprising, given the way it handled color in pics. The Regza AT1S0's recorded video color was much better balanced.
Conclusion
Seven-inch tablets aren't cheap. Well, full-featured 7-inch tablets aren't cheap. Though the Kindle Fire and Nook Tablet offer very controlled experiences, if all you want to do is read a book, watch some movies, play a game every now and then, and surf the Web, there aren't much better ways to spend US$200 to US$250.
If a less controlled 7-inch tablet experience is worth another US$200 to you, then make sure you get the one that offers the most for the money. While the Regza AT1S0 has more ports and a more responsive screen, the 7.0 Plus' faster performance and more thoughtful design make it a better choice. Ed: The Toshiba Regza AT1S0 is available now in South and Southeast Asia at a starting price of S$799 (US$611).
The 10-inch Regza AT100 got props for offering full ports and a swappable battery at a very decent price. Not including those same features here, misses the point. The Regza AT1S0 isn't a bad tablet; there are just much more appealing options out there for your cash.
Service And Support
The Toshiba Regza AT1S0 comes with a one-year carry-in warranty for the tablet and its battery. On its support Web site, you can extend the product warranty, browse frequently asked questions and other technical issues. Technical support is available via phone, though in case of hardware failure the unit has to be brought to a service center for repair.