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Apple ipad Huawei Matepad

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What’s the story?

The basic ipad looks like a blast from the past – but with 2021 internals, Apple Pencil support and loads of great (if expensive) accessorie­s available for it, Apple’s budget slate is really a powerful mini-computer in retro disguise.

With a sharp 10.2in screen, either 64 or 256GB of storage and stereo speakers, it checks most of our boxes, and ipad apps are generally much better than Android tablet equivalent­s. You can also pick up the ipad in both Wi-fi and LTE flavours, though no 5G options are available just yet.

Is it any good?

Whether you have an iphone or not, the ipad might still be the right tablet for you. For anyone who’s big into gaming, loves to draw or simply wants the best slate for productivi­ty under £350, the ipad is it. The reason Apple’s tabs are so great is that their operating system, ipados, is better than Android at making big-screen tasks work. And ipads also have more optimised apps, making for a holistical­ly more polished experience.

So while the ipad’s design is dated, and it’s heavy at 487g – not to mention clunky, with massive black bezels – it’s still a killer tablet. It also feels premium, bordering on retro-chic, and the screen quality is excellent for the price.

A word of warning: don’t get an ipad if all you want to do is watch films. Its squat screen makes widescreen content look awful. Pick up a much cheaper alternativ­e like the Amazon Fire HD 10.

But do get an ipad if you want to run clever apps or work seamlessly across macos and IOS devices, and plan on picking up some of Apple’s excellent accessorie­s. The folio keyboard case and stylus are two no-brainer add-ons that will massively boost your ipad’s productivi­ty potential.

The 64GB version will probably suffice for most people – which is just as well, as the price jumps to £459 for the 256GB model. We would have loved a cheaper 128GB option in the middle, but you know how Apple loves pushing us to always spend a bit more…

from £319 / stuff.tv/ipad

Key specs

● 10.2in 2160x1620 ● A13 Bionic,

3GB RAM ● 64/256GB, expandable

● Up to 10hrs ● 251x174x7.5mm, 487g

What’s the story?

Like the Amazon Fire HD 10, Huawei’s Matepad offers excellent value but no access to the Google Play Store. Still, you do get a sharp screen and a design that’s significan­tly more refined than Amazon’s Google-free tab. Four speakers make sure the Matepad sounds the part – and with support for streaming favourites such as Disney+, Netflix and Prime Video, loads of pre-installed apps (too many for some) and optional extras aplenty, it could be just the ticket.

Is it any good?

At its full price of £270, the Matepad is fine but not a standout. Since it launched, though, it’s been on sale at £170 for the 64GB version on Huawei’s store – that’s just £20 more than the clunkier, chunkier 32GB Fire HD 10. If you can find the Matepad at that price, its stellar value can’t be beaten.

With tiny bezels around the screen and a super-slim form, Huawei’s design is a lot more classy than Amazon’s, and at 460g it’s relatively light and comfortabl­e to hold. Its screen is big, at 10.4in, and gets up to 470 nits, making it one of the best budget displays for outdoor use.

No headphone port means you’ll want to pick up a pair of Bluetooth buds or cans for private listening – although even if you don’t, the Matepad’s quad-speaker array sounds pretty powerful.

Running Android with Huawei’s own Google-free interface, it’s a similar story to Amazon’s tab in that specific apps won’t work – including Google Docs, Drive and Youtube – but streaming apps are covered for the most part, and if not you can always use web-based alternativ­es in the browser.

Huawei’s Kirin 820 processor is a more capable chip than anything else in its price category, so performanc­e is smooth… but frustratin­gly, Huawei’s game selection isn’t as polished or expansive as what’s available in the Play Store. That aside, add brilliant battery life, up to 64GB of internal storage and microsd card support, and it’s hard to argue with the core experience offered by the Matepad.

from £170 / stuff.tv/matepad

Key specs

● 10.4in 2000x1200 ● Kirin 810, 3/4GB RAM ● 32/64GB, expandable ● Up to 16hrs ● 245x155x7.4mm, 460g

What’s the story?

The Tab P11 is one of the biggest-screened, most specced-out tablets you can get for less than £250. Its 11in 2K resolution gives it standout size and clarity, and you can pick up a Lenovo Precision Pen 2 for £45 if you fancy getting sketchy. Unlike those Amazon and Huawei offerings, this one is loaded up with the Google Play Store, so its app support is stellar; and for an extra £30 you can double the storage to 128GB, which should give you plenty of space for loads of offline movies.

Is it any good?

With its metal body, this is a rich-feeling slate that weighs a bit more than the competitio­n – but it also packs more screen to play with. Lenovo has paid attention to the details: the two-tone design looks tasteful, and the whole thing is skinny at 7.5mm.

The extra screen size and impressive brightness make the P11 excellent for work, with loads of room for split-screen multitaski­ng or multi-window productivi­ty. It also does a great job showing off films and video, and with Dolby Atmos sound matched with those quad speakers it does get immersive.

Holding it for three-hour films or long reading sessions won’t be as comfortabl­e as it would be with a lighter or smaller alternativ­e; but if you can prop it up, the P11 is a best-in-class playback tab at this price.

With full-fat Google, you can download loads of apps from the Play Store, fire up Docs and access all your Play Games saves. Lenovo’s also loaded up some of its own software, including a tool to help you moderate your kids’ tablet time.

Performanc­e is fine day to day, but the Snapdragon 662 chip is relatively low-powered; so while it can handle basic 3D games like Minecraft just fine, more intensive games such as Genshin Impact will struggle.

Impressive battery stamina and more storage than much of the competitio­n make sure the Tab P11 doesn’t falter at the final hurdle, making this a fine big-screened gadget for work and play.

from £240 / stuff.tv/p11

Key specs

● 11in 2000x1200 ● Snapdragon 662, 4/6GB RAM ● 64/128GB, expandable ● Up to 12hrs ● 259x163x7.5mm, 490g

What’s the story?

The Tab S6 Lite comes with a clever S Pen in the box and marries smart note-taking with a very thin design, an impressive screen and stereo sound. It packs less storage than some competitio­n, and its Exynos 9611 processor isn’t the best for gaming, but with that stylus in tow you’re getting more versatilit­y than with most of the competitio­n.

Samsung’s interface is also going to be instantly familiar for anyone who’s already carrying one of the company’s phones, and of course access to the Google Play Store means great app support.

Is it any good?

At the heart of the Tab S6 Lite is a device that covers the basics. Its design looks sleek and modern, especially sat next to the ipad, its screen is big and relatively bright, and performanc­e is smooth in daily use. This tablet has a superpower, though: that S Pen.

Samsung’s the only tab in our lineup to ship with a pen in the box; and up to 4096 levels of pressure-sensitivit­y means the harder you press with the nib, the thicker your scribbles will be – just like a graphic designer’s tablet.

With S Note, Samsung’s own very smart note-taking app, the S6 Lite also converts your handwritte­n notes to text in moments – and thanks to hundreds of pen-optimised apps in the Play Store, the stylus helps you flex your creative flair whether you’re mind-mapping, drawing or photo editing.

Three fancy colours (blue, pink and a near-black dark grey) help the S6 Lite stand out in a sea of slate-coloured, er, slates – and while the processing power in this one can’t stack up to that of Huawei’s Matepad, its superior game selection should help it edge ahead for most button-bashers.

Along with the ipad on p68, the Tab S6 Lite looks like the most future-proofed tablet in our mix thanks to the fact that it runs the relatively new Android 12. And with Samsung’s One UI over the top, it really does feel like messing about with an extra-large smartphone.

from £299 / stuff.tv/s6lite

Key specs

● 10.4in 2000x1200 ● Exynos 9611, 4GB RAM ● 32/64GB, expandable

● Up to 13hrs ● 245x155x7m­m, 467g

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