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Minggu, 25 Februari 2018

Huawei's MediaPad M5 has upgraded hardware and Oreo out of the box

Latest Android slates come in 10.8- and 8.4-inch flavors, with optional pen input and a desktop mode.

Your options for good, cheap Android tablets a pretty limited these days. Samsung's Tab S3 line is the go-to option for many in the West. Huawei, however, occupies the number three spot for tablet sales — after Apple and Samsung — when you look at the global numbers. The products haven't been perfect, though. The previous-gen MediaPad M3 suffered from frustrating software issues — a consequence of the older EMUI interface — although the hardware was solid.

At Mobile World Congress 2018, Huawei returns with a by-the-numbers upgrade to the MediaPad series, bringing modest spec upgrades, a fine-tuning of design and most importantly of all, newer software based on Android 8.0 Oreo.

Category MediaPad M5 8.4 MediaPad M5 10.8
Dimensions 212.6mm x 124.8mm x 7.3mm 258.7mm x 171.8mm x 7.3mm
Weight 316 grams 498 grams
Colors Space Gray, Champagne Gold Space Gray, Champagne Gold
Resolution 2560 x 1600 IPS LCD 2560 x 1600 IPS LCD
CPU Huawei Kirin 960, Octa-core Huawei Kirin 960, Octa-core
OS Android 8.0 + EMUI 8.0 Android 8.0 + EMUI 8.0
Memory 32GB/ 64GB/ 128GB + microSD 32GB/ 64GB/ 128GB + microSD
RAM 4GB 4GB
Wireless Wi-Fi: IEEE802.11a/b/g/n/ac; 2.4 GHz/ 5 GHz Bluetooth: 4.2, optional LTE Wi-Fi: IEEE802.11a/b/g/n/ac; 2.4 GHz/ 5 GHz Bluetooth: 4.2, optional LTE
Sensors Ambient light sensor, gyroscope, accelerometer, compass, Hall effect sensor, fingerprint sensor Ambient light sensor, gyroscope, accelerometer, compass, Hall effect sensor, fingerprint sensor
Audio Built-in microphone, dual speakers, HUAWEI Histen stereo sound effect Built-in microphone, dual speakers, HUAWEI Histen stereo sound effect
Camera Front camera: 8MP, fixed focus
Rear camera: 13MP, autofocus
Front camera: 8MP, fixed focus
Rear camera: 13MP, autofocus
SIM Nano SIM Nano SIM
Battery 5100mAh 7500mAh
In the box 9V 2A travel charger, Type-C charging/data cable, USB Type-C to 3.5mm headset jack adapter cable 9V 2A travel charger, Type-C charging/data cable, USB Type-C to 3.5mm headset jack adapter cable, M Pen (MediaPad M5 Pro only)

The MediaPad M5 comes in three flavors: There's an 8.4-inch version that handles very much like a giant smartphone, and a larger 10.8-inch model that's heftier, with more of a convertible angle. (Though still with software derived from the bits running on Huawei's phones.) The MediaPad M5 Pro is a special version of the larger model, and comes bundled with Huawei's M Pen stylus, as well as a keyboard dock. The tablet can also connect to any regular keyboard over Bluetooth, just like most other Android devices, and this will also activates desktop mode.

The hardware is solid, if derivative. Unlike the Windows 10-powered Matebook X Pro, there's nothing too fancy going on with minimal bezels or precision-milled chamfers. Instead, the big design addition is 2.5D glass on the front, giving the tables a more organic feel. Both displays pack 2560x1600 resolution panels, and in Huawei's well-lit indoor demo area, both were sufficiently bright for easy visibility. That said, neither could hold a candle to Apple's laminated panel on the iPad Pro.

Other core features from Huawei's MediaPad series have made it across to the new devices too, including Harman Kardon audio tech behind quad speakers and Huawei's HiSten audio enhancements for wired music playback. These are, after all, primarily media consumption tablets.

Huawei's new tablet runs last year's chips, but performance doesn't seem to have suffered.

On the inside, both MediaPad models run Huawei's older Kirin 960 chip, as opposed to the latest Kirin 970 processor, along with 4GB of RAM and between 32 and 128GB of storage, depending on the model. That's somewhat disheartening, but presumably and indication of the mid-level price point Huawei's targeting for these new tabs.

In the limited time we used them though, we didn't run into any of the subtle performance glitches that affected the MediaPad M3. And the interface, though still essentially a blown-up phone UI, runs smoothly even at that relatively high resolution.

The MediaPad M5 Pro takes the hardware of the 10.8-inch model and adds Huawei's M Pen stylus, with 4096 levels of pressure sensitivity, and a bundled keyboard dock. Huawei has also adapted the desktop interface from the Mate 10 Pro, which kicks into action when it's connected to a keyboard. Although we weren't able to preview this mode ahead of today's announcement, it appears to be almost identical to the Mate 10's implementation, which has its own basic window manager for resizing Android apps.

The Huawei MediaPad M5 ships later this year. We'll update this post with release info when available.

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