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Buy Samsung Galaxy S2 Tablet 9.7 ##BEST##


The Samsung Galaxy Tab S2 9.7 is an Android-based tablet computer produced and marketed by Samsung Electronics.[3] Belonging to the high-end "S" line, it was announced on 20 July 2015 and was released in September 2015 along with the Samsung Galaxy Tab S2 8.0. It is available in Wi-Fi only and Wi-Fi/4G LTE variants.




buy samsung galaxy s2 tablet 9.7



The Galaxy Tab S2 9.7 takes design cues from the 2014 Galaxy Note 4 and 2015 Galaxy A series phones because the device has a painted metal frame with chamfered edges and a plastic back, along with a camera design similar to the Galaxy S6 It is available in black, white, or gold/beige colors. At 5.6mm thick, the Tab S2 9.7 is, as of September 2022, still one of the world's thinnest tablets together with the smaller screen Samsung Galaxy Tab S2 8.0.[5]


Hi all , I have a tab s2 9.7 WiFi tablet and I've had it for near 7 years now and I was thinking of upgrading it , anyone have any suggestions ?? Recommend a tablet they own ??? Is the tab s2 9.7 worth upgrading ??? I basically watch videos , social media and browsing , thanks


The first Android tablet I ever used was the original Galaxy Tab. It was a 7" Android tablet running Android Froyo, and it seemed a lot like a large version of my Galaxy S. In hindsight, it wasn't a very good tablet, but Samsung was one of the first Android vendors to enter the market and they were working with a version of Android that had never been designed with tablets in mind. As Android moved to Gingerbread and then to the tablet exclusive release of Android Honeycomb, Samsung was always among the group of manufacturers producing Android tablets. While some vendors like LG and HTC have left and returned to the tablet market, Samsung has continually producing new Galaxy Tab tablets, and those tablets constitute a very large portion of the Android tablets that are sold each year.


While the naming styles of Samsung's tablets have changed over the years, last year the company settled on using the same S moniker that their smartphones have used for years, and that brought us the Galaxy Tab S 10.5 and Galaxy Tab S 8.4. This year Samsung has continued with their Galaxy Tab S naming scheme and has released two new tablets under the Galaxy Tab S2 name. These new tablets bring serious changes to both the hardware and form factors of the original Galaxy Tab S tablets, and I'll be evaluating the larger of the two models. You can view the specs for both tablets and how they compare to their predecessors in the chart below.


With the new display sizes come new form factors, and both tablets are substantially thinner and lighter than their predecessors. This also results in a drop in battery capacity as there's only so much room to fit batteries inside the chassis, and how this impacts battery life will be investigated later in the review.


When Samsung announced the Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge I uttered a well-deserved "finally" with regards to the design of the phones. The aluminum and glass construction was a long overdue and greatly appreciated improvement to Samsung's existing industrial design, and I still think the Galaxy S6 is a pretty great looking and feeling device. However, upon seeing that the design really only used a metal frame and a sheet of glass overtop of a plastic back, I immediately knew that there was no way the design would scale up to tablets. There's simply too much fragility in that type of design, especially as you scale it larger. Since I suspected that Samsung still wasn't at the point where they would be producing aluminum unibody tablets, I wasn't surprised by the design of the Tab S2 tablets when they were announced.


Both versions of the Tab S2 have the same thickness, just 5.6mm. The larger model of the two that I am reviewing has a mass of 389 grams. The thickness and mass are enabled by the Tab S2's construction, which consists of a metal frame around the edges of the device but a plastic back cover. This is obviously a trade off, and I'll start with what's good before discussing what negatives come from it. The most obvious advantage is the low mass. When you pick up the Tab S2 you will be amazed that you're holding a full size tablet. You can't really notice a difference between its 5.6mm thickness and the 6.1mm thickness of the iPad Air 2, but the difference made by the lower mass is enormous. This is the first full size tablet I've used where I can honestly say I don't feel fatigued after holding it for a long period, and that's something you can't really accomplish with an aluminum unibody chassis. In that regard, the Tab S2 definitely has an advantage over every other full size tablet that I've used, and it encourages you to use it more and take it with you in situations where you may decide to leave a heavier tablet at home.


Of course, the obvious negative impact is the feel of the device. The metal frame honestly does nothing to improve the feeling of the Tab S2, especially on this white model which has a coating applied to the frame. The coating also doesn't seem very durable, and there were already chips in it by the time the tablet got to me. Overall it just doesn't feel as nice or well-built when you hold it as an aluminum unibody tablet does. What also disappointed me is that even though it's 5.6mm thick, there's still a small degree of flex to the back cover, particularly near the bottom. The materials used in a tablet can also have an impact on thermal performance which could limit performance in sustained workloads.


As far as primarily plastic tablets go, the Tab S2 is a pretty good device. I love how light it is, but at the same time I don't feel like the plastic build befits a $500 flagship tablet. It also doesn't feel quite as sturdy as the Venue 10, but I think Samsung's goal was to make a thin and light device that wouldn't be cumbersome to hold and carry around. They definitely succeeded in doing so, and I think that while there's a group of users like myself that feel a $500 device deserves the absolute best construction and materials, there's another group that feels the $500 should go toward making a device as light and portable as possible.


As phone screens keep getting bigger and bigger, fewer and fewer people are buying tablets. With the Galaxy Tab S2 ($499 for 32GB), Samsung believes it has three strong reasons why you shouldn't succumb to slate ennui:


When I first picked up the box for the Tab S2, I thought I had mistakenly received the smaller 8-inch version -- this 9.7-inch tablet is that compact and light. The slate weighs just 13.8 ounces, compared to 15.4 ounces for the iPad Air 2. Measuring 9.3 x 6.6 x 0.22 inches, the Tab S2 is slightly shorter and thinner than the iPad (9.4 x 6.6 x 0.24 inches). This tablet is also 16 percent thinner than the first Tab S.


Because Samsung switched from a 16:10 to a 4:3 aspect ratio, the Tab S2 looks a lot more iPad-like in general, including the prominent home button beneath the screen. In fact, if the button were circular instead of rectangular, one could easily mistake Samsung's new tablet for Apple's. The button doubles as a fingerprint scanner, just like on the Galaxy S6.


When your tablet is mostly about consuming content, it helps to have a jaw-dropping canvas, and the Galaxy Tab S2 delights. Let's start with the fact that this Super AMOLED, 2048 x 1536-pixel panel can display 195.3 percent of the sRGB color gamut. That's nearly double the iPad Air 2's 99.6 percent and the Microsoft Surface 3's 99.3 percent. The Tab S2 also beats the Dell Venue 10 7000's mark of 171 percent.


The Tab S2's screen is brighter than the iPad Air 2's and the Surface 3's (450 nits versus 345 nits and 407 nits, respectively), but Apple's tablet offers more accurate colors. On the Delta-E test, where a score close to 0 is best, Samsung's slate registered 4.07, compared to a near-perfect 0.9 for the iPad and 3.1 for the Surface 3. The Venue 10 7000 (249 nits, 10.2 Delta-E) wasn't even close in those two categories.


Samsung equipped the Galaxy Tab S2 with an octa-core Exynos 5433 processor and 3GB of RAM -- the same CPU found inside the Galaxy Note 4. That might seem like an old chip to stuff into a shiny new tablet, but the proof was in the multitasking. Using Samsung's multiwindow feature, I had no problem streaming a Marques Brownlee YouTube video on the left side while scrolling through the highlights of the VMAs on the right in Chrome.


Whether you want to continue texting on a bigger screen, drag and drop photos to your tablet from your phone, or take a call without picking up your phone, the SideSync 4.0 app can make it happen. Using the Galaxy S6 Edge Plus, I quickly found the Tab S2, and the two devices connected. After that, a box popped up the tablet's display, showing shortcuts for the Files, Music and Photos apps across the top, with a Plus button to add more.


Sometimes, you want to beam what's on your tablet to the big screen, but not if it's a hassle. The Quick Connect feature on the Galaxy Tab S2 lives up to its name. You just swipe your finger down from the top of the screen and press the Quick Connect button to start searching for nearby TVs on the same Wi-Fi network. After you connect, you can mirror your phone's display on your set to display photos or videos, or play games.


For this scenario to work, you'll need a Samsung TV from 2014 or later, in the 8000 series or higher. During a demo, I noticed that the video stream from the TV to the tablet stuttered, but Samsung said the hotel's Wi-Fi connection was a little wonky.


Perhaps Samsung made the Galaxy Tab S2 too svelte, because the battery life doesn't impress. This tablet packs a smaller battery than its predecessor (5,870 mAh versus 7,900 mAh). As a result, the Tab S2 lasted just 7 hours and 32 minutes on the Laptop Mag Battery Test, which involves continuous Wi-Fi Web surfing on 150 nits of brightness.


In comparison, the iPad Air 2 lasted 9 hours and 20 minutes, and the Surface 3 endured for 8:01. The tablet category average is 9 hours. The previous Galaxy Tab S lasted 8:57. At least the Tab S2 beats the Dell Venue 10 7000 (6:55). 041b061a72


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