

- #Dell venue 10 vs 11 full#
- #Dell venue 10 vs 11 windows 10#
- #Dell venue 10 vs 11 android#
- #Dell venue 10 vs 11 pro#
- #Dell venue 10 vs 11 Bluetooth#
So this tablet may feel too heavy to use in one hand comfortably - 662g makes it around twice that of an iPad Air 2 - but the Venue 's weight does make it feel sturdy for an all-plastic tablet. It doesn't have any extra connections, though. But we can safely assume it, well, has keys and slots into the Dell Venue 's bottom edge. Bit odd, right? The keyboard also costs £112, making the whole package dangerously close to £500.ĭell didn't send us a keyboard to test with this tablet either.
#Dell venue 10 vs 11 Bluetooth#
There's no obvious bundle option on the company's website: you just add it as an accessory, on about the fifth page of spec customisation, below a half-dozen Bluetooth keyboard alternatives. However, Dell could make it easier to source a keyboard. It honestly doesn't make all that much sense as a lone lifestyle tablet, which is why there's an optional keyboard. It's quite obviously heavier than the screen parts of some of the recent affordable keyboard-combo machines too, like the Asus Transformer Book and the HP Pavilion X2.
#Dell venue 10 vs 11 windows 10#
This is a Windows 10 tablet, though, so don't write it off just yet.
#Dell venue 10 vs 11 android#
It's big, heavy and thick - at 10mm - a bit like the Android tablets we used to get excited about back in 2011. If you're just looking for a 10-inch tablet, the Dell Venue might not be the best device - which becomes obvious as soon as you get your hands on it.
#Dell venue 10 vs 11 pro#
It's meant more as laptop-replacement than something you'll use to read-up on soap gossip or iPhone 7 rumours while on the sofa - hence the "Pro" namesake.īut the Windows-based Dell Venue 10 Pro does have a few appeals of its own, even if it's not your all-purpose, for-everyone device. And starting at £349 it's not the sort of device you'll buy on a whim. Nope, the Venue 10 Pro is big and chunky.

Thanks to Bryan Cryer and Steve Litchfield for interactive code.(Pocket-lint) - What are budget tablets about these days? Should they be the sort of devices you can slip into a small bag and carry around with you 24/7 light enough so you can hold them in one hand cheap enough so you won't fall into a month-long depression when you crack the screen? These are what most budget tablets aim to achieve. Ratings shown are the latest entries entered by an expert/admin Some ratings may be provisional.Įditors Comparison Version: Alpha V3.0 - (Alpha - Features may change) By ratingĮach criteria based on your requirements you'll find a 'Winner' shown at the bottom of the table. Use our editors ratings to find a solution. Comparable CPU power.įull specifications and more information in our database.
#Dell venue 10 vs 11 full#
Dell offer a 4GB RAM version with LTE but the range starts with a good value version with 2GB of RAM and a full HD screen. That opens up possibilities for easy booting of 64-bit Linux builds. Not only does it clock up to 2.4 Ghz (compared to 1.8 Ghz for most of the Atom Z3000 range) but it is able to run 64-bit Windows which most of the other Z3000-series can’t. In early 2015 they updated the high-end version to use an Atom Z3795 CPU which is one of the highest performing processors of the Baytrail (2014-2015) generation. There are versions running on Core i3, i5 and Core M but it’s the Atom version that comes closest to the Surface 3. Dell have had the Venue 11 Pro in their portfolio for a while.
