![]() The two speakers are decent, but there's not much in the way of a stereo effect - their output just sounds like one louder-than-average speaker. The Tab 2 is thinner and lighter than either the Kindle Fire or the Nook Tablet, an impressive feat for a $249.99 tablet. All three weigh almost exactly 12 ounces, despite the fact that there's an LTE radio inside the Tab 7.7. It's a good design, and Samsung was smart not to change it much.Īt 10.4mm (0.41 inches) thick, the Tab 2 is a hair thicker than the Tab 7.0 Plus (9.9mm) and several hairs larger than the Tab 7.7 (7.85mm), but I can't say I really noticed the difference in either case. Up top you'll find the headphone jack, and on the bottom two stereo speakers flank Samsung's standard proprietary dock connector. A microSD card slot sits on the left side, letting you add up to 32GB of storage in addition to the 8GB that comes built in. There's an IR blaster on the right side as you hold the tablet vertically, below the volume rocker and power button - those two are grouped close enough together that I continually pressed the wrong one when I wasn't looking at them. As far as buttons and ports, it's laid out exactly like the Galaxy Tab 7.7. The tablet's back is a matte grey plastic, and it's both comfortable to hold and mercifully resistant to fingerprints. That's not a bad thing at all, though: the Galaxy Tab 2 is a sleek, attractive device, albeit not a particularly flashy one. If you've seen one 7-inch Galaxy Tab, you've seen them all - Samsung doesn't seem to be interested in overhauling its tablets' designs. ![]()
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December 2022
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