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Updated: Best laptop: 25 top laptops for every budget


Updated: Best laptop: 25 top laptops for every budget

Choosing the best laptop for you

Now that Windows 8 is a few months old, we’ve got a huge number of laptop-tablet hybrids appearing as well as plenty of traditional laptops using the new OS. And that’s before you get to Apple’s hugely successful MacBook line.

No wonder choosing the right laptop for you can be even more confusing than ever.

And it’s not only high-end powerhouses that are packing in the performance; cheap laptops are more powerful and capable than before, while high-end devices are often perfectly good replacements for your desktop computer, able to cope with more intensive programs.

Those after a fast boot up time and a lightweight machine to carry might drool over an Ultrabook.

Serious gamers will want a machine tailored to their graphical and processing needs, while those after flexibility might fancy a convertible laptop-tablet hybrid.

Here we look at some of the best laptops to really excel themselves in our extensive testing processes this year. We’ve arranged them into categories to help you find the best one to suit your needs.

We also list the current selling prices in the UK, Australia and the US, although in some cases a laptop listed here may not be available in every territory.

All of the machines listed here are laptops. Although we have listed the convertible laptop-tablets that fall more on the side of laptop than tablet, we haven’t listed those that are more tablet-like. You can find those in our tablet reviews page and buying guides. Similarly, all-in-one touchscreen computers and other desktop PCs are in our PC and Mac desktop reviews page.

PRICING NOTE: The prices listed here are for guidance only and aren’t guarantees of availability at a certain price. Because of the wildly fluctuating availability of certain models, we often review laptops by series. As a consequence it may be that there are tens of models with similar or the same name, vailable at various price points.

When considering what to buy, think about your needs and your most important factor, be it laptop battery life or screen size. The most important part is to be honest about what you need, and you could save a fortune on getting the best laptop for you.

Best laptop-tablet hybrids

Since this article seeks to round up the best laptops available, we are only listing those we have fully tested and reviewed in real life situations. More laptop-tablet hybrids will be reviewed as soon as we get them in for testing, so we expect to add more impressive convertible tablets to this list later.

For now, here are the great machines we have tested and loved so far:

1. Sony Vaio Duo 11 – £900/AU$1,500/US$1,500

Sony Vaio Duo 11

A full Intel Core processor powers the sliding tablet-laptop design of the 11.6-inch Sony Vaio Duo 11, enabling it to run Windows programs as well as Windows Store apps. Its design is a welcome change from the many docking ‘transformer’ style hybrid devices such as the Samsung Ativ Smart PC and Asus Vivo Tab.

While it’s not a perfect laptop-tablet hybrid, and certainly won’t have mass appeal, Sony has furthered the Windows 8 cause with an exceptionally powerful device that challenges the perceptions of what tablets can achieve.

Read our Sony Vaio Duo 11 review

2. HP Envy x2 – £830/AU$900/US$640

Best laptops

The outstanding industrial design in the HP Envy x2 really shows the potential of a tablet/laptop hybrid, and will leave you with little question that this is the direction laptops are heading in. It combines a full version of Windows 8 with excellent battery life in a compact package, with its superb 11.6-inch screen topping things off.

Read our HP Envy x2 review

3. Samsung Ativ Smart PC Pro – £1,000/AU$1,500/US$1,100

Best laptops

When you have it in its Ultrabook form, the Samsung Ativ Smart PC Pro is maybe not the standout laptop some of its peers are. But when it becomes a tablet, it’s a great Windows 8 tab with an excellent screen that’s powerful, well balanced in your hands and very responsive to touch. You can go from either mode to the other in seconds, and neither is disappointing. Write on it with a stylus, type on it with the keyboard attachment, navigate with your finger – the Smart PC Pro can do it all.

Read our Samsung Ativ Smart PC Pro review

Best budget laptops

4. Samsung Series 3 Chromebook – £230/US$330 (around AU$350)

Top laptops: 20 best laptops in the world

Top laptops: 25 best laptops in the world

Cheaper than some tablets, the Samsung Chromebook doesn’t run a typical operating system such as Windows, OS X or even Linux. Instead, it is designed just to run Google Chrome, the web browser, and related web apps.

If you think you could do all your computing using Google web apps, you could well benefit from the good battery life, silent operation, light weight and portability, simplicity and implicit security of the Chromebook, not to mention its low price. However, with no 3G connectivity, it is pretty much limited to use only in Wi-Fi areas.

Read our Samsung Series 3 Chromebook review

5. Lenovo IdeaPad S405 – £350/AU$695/US$400

Best laptops

The Lenovo IdeaPad S405 is an attractive laptop that has Ultrabook looks at a rock-bottom price tag. It doesn’t offer a huge battery life, so is best around the home instead of out and about, but it’s lightweight and smart, making it a great option as a secondary machine. It will happily perform most tasks with ease, such as browsing the web or watching HD movies, although full-on gaming is out of the question. As a bonus, it boots up nice and quickly too. There’s even a good array of ports, and the build quality is impressive for the price.

Read our Lenovo S405 review

6. Asus VivoBook S200 – £450 (around AU$685/US$715)

Top laptops: 20 best laptops in the world

Top laptops: 25 best laptops in the world

The Asus VivoBook S200 offers supreme good looks, touchscreen operation, slick performance and excellent portability, all for a reasonable price.

This laptop runs on an Intel Core i3-3217U processor, which means it provides more than enough grunt to power Windows 8 through any day-to-day tasks, while keeping power consumption to a minimum.

Read our Asus VivoBook S200 review

7. HP Envy Sleekbook 6-1126sa – £500 (around AU$760/US$780)

Best laptops

The HP Envy Sleekbook 6-1126sa is a system that anyone looking to buy a budget laptop should check out. Its large screen and decent audio subsystem make it great for enjoying music and movies, while the comfortable keyboard and strong battery life make it a joy to use for everyday tasks. It also looks far more expensive than it is, and offers decent specs for its price too. It’s not quite up there in terms of raw power, but in almost every other respect, this is a very tempting machine.

Read our HP Envy Sleekbook 6-1126sa review

High-end laptops

8. Toshiba Satellite P855-32G – £650 (around AU$1,000/US$1,030)

Top laptops: 20 best laptops in the world

The Toshiba P855 is one of the better conventional laptops we’ve seen of late, offering a lot of performance for a relatively small price tag. Though it’s in the high-end section of this roundup, it’s really more of a mid-range laptop in terms of its price.

Sporting a third-generation 2.5GHz Intel Core i5-3201M and 8GB of RAM, the P855 is certainly no slouch. Its bright screen, Nvidia GeForce GT 630M graphics card and clear Harmon Kardon speakers mean this is the perfect home entertainment powerhouse.

Read our Toshiba Satellite P855-32G review

9. HP Spectre XT TouchSmart – £1,000/US$1,200 (around AU$1,500)

Best laptops

The HP Spectre XT TouchSmart Ultrabook is a milestone. Watch the Ultrabook market over the next year. Watch as heavyweight chips join incredible screens as the norm rather than the exception. This is a great-looking machine, with a brushed aluminium shell and stunning 15-inch touchscreen, but there’s a lot of substance here, too. The keyboard is excellent, the 1080p screen makes it great for working or for movies, the hybrid drive makes it run impressively fast and the touchscreen is a great extra… uh, touch. It’s a shame it doesn’t have the strongest battery life, but we’ll forgive it since it’s got that great screen to power instead.

Read our HP Spectre XT TouchSmart review

10. Apple MacBook Pro 13-inch – £1,000/AU$1,350/US$1,200

Top laptops: 20 best laptops in the world

The mid-2012 MacBook Pro 13-inch is a significant step up from its older brother. The new processors and their improved graphical capabilities give it a considerable power boost over its predecessor, and USB 3.0 ports enable it to connect with high-speed storage peripherals.

The 13-inch MacBook Pro is ideal for those who need a little more configurability and storage than the MacBook Air can offer, but also need a very portable machine. Creative professionals and gaming enthusiasts might be better off with a 15-inch MacBook Pro, though.

Read our Apple MacBook Pro 13-inch review

11. Dell XPS 15 – £1,280/AU$2,000/US$1,600

Top laptops: 20 best laptops in the world

While the Dell XPS 15 doesn’t have the skinny credentials to qualify as an Ultrabook, it boasts a huge spec sheet, and an incredible hardware configuration inside a great-looking chassis. We’re not sure we’ve seen anything as impressive on a PC as its Corning Gorilla Glass, Full HD display, though it doesn’t quite have the “wow” factor of the MacBook Pro with Retina display.

If you’re looking for a high-end PC that marries good looks and superb performance, and are more Windows than Mac, then you really shouldn’t look any further than the Dell XPS 15.

Read our Dell XPS 15 review

12. Apple MacBook Pro with Retina display – £1,800/AU$2,500/US$2,200

Apple MacBook Pro with Retina display review

Top laptops: 25 best laptops in the world

The new Apple MacBook Pro’s most exciting new feature is, of course, its Retina display. With a 2880 x 1800 resolution at 220 pixels per inch, it crams over 5.1 million pixels into its 15.4-inch screen. That’s over three million more than an HD TV.

However, it does mean that after-market upgrades are almost impossible, and sacrifices have been made, such as the lack of a hard drive, optical drive and Ethernet or FireWire 800 ports. Clearly aimed at video editors, photographers and graphics professionals, the Retina screen is beautiful, but the laptop’s high price tag will put some off.

Read our Apple MacBook Pro with Retina display review

Best ultra-portables

13. Lenovo IdeaPad U410 – £600/US$700 (around AU$915)

Top laptops: 20 best laptops in the world

Sure, there is plenty of room for super-skinny, super-slick, ultra-desirable machines with hefty price-tags, but there is also a demand for more affordable portable notebooks. That’s where the Ivy Bridge Core i5-toting Lenovo IdeaPad U410 comes in.

Ultrabooks aren’t great if you’re looking to do some high-end gaming or intense HD video editing, but for everything else this is a brilliant machine that is perfectly suited to meet your digital media demands, with an extremely tempting price tag.

Read our Lenovo IdeaPad U410 review

14. Toshiba Satellite Z930 – £780/AU$1,290/US$1,200

Top laptops: 20 best laptops in the world

The Toshiba Satellite Z930-10X manages balances power with affordability. Thin, light and powerful enough to handle a wide range of tasks simultaneously, it boasts a wide range of connectivity options and an Intel Core i5 Ivy Bridge processor.

If you want an Ultrabook exclusively for entertainment then we’d recommend looking elsewhere, since it lacks a Full HD resolution and has integrated graphics and fairly weak audio compared to other Ultrabooks. But as a mobile workstation for offices, the Toshiba Satellite Z930-10X is an excellent purchase.

Read our Toshiba Satellite Z930 review

15. HP Envy TouchSmart – £850/AU$900/US$800

Best laptops

The design of the HP Envy TouchSmart is thoughtful, with an excellent level of attention to detail: solid construction and a sweet touchscreen stand out as the best parts here. The brushed aluminium and matt black chassis give this machine a premium look and feel that sets it apart from many of its duller peers. The screen is very responsive to touch commands, making it a breeze to navigate Windows 8, while its 14-inch size gives it a good balance of portability and usability. The keyboard and trackpad are also good, making it an extremely comfortable laptop all round. It’s reassuring to know that a well balanced laptop that’s practical, fun to use and handsome can shine in a crowded market.

Read our HP Envy TouchSmart review

16. MacBook Air 2012 – £930/AU$1,100/US$1,100

Top laptops: 20 best laptops in the world

Top laptops: 25 best laptops in the world

Although not technically an Ultrabook, previous iterations of the MacBook Air were the machines that inspired the creation of Ultrabooks, so we felt it deserved to sit alongside these rivals. The 2012 MacBook Air is just as inspiring, with an Intel Core i5 processor, faster RAM and better connections.

It’s easy for us to recommend the newest MacBook Air, because it’s a fantastic machine. But, unlike last year, there are other impressive lightweight options out there.

Read our MacBook Air 2012 review

17. Gigabyte U2442 Ultrabook – £970/US$1,100 (around AU$1,480)

Top laptops: 20 best laptops in the world

A very strong first laptop offering from Gigabyte, which usually makes components, the Gigabyte U2442 Ultrabook has a lot to recommend it. Gamers and power users will appreciate the Nvidia graphics and 8GB RAM, while everyday users will respond well to the lack of bloatware and clever features such as Smart Manager.

Adding power through boosted RAM and extra graphics while keeping the chassis down to a slim and portable size is what this Ultrabook is about, while the screen is well suited to both entertainment and processing tasks.

Read our Gigabyte U2442 Ultrabook review

18. Dell XPS 13 – £1,100/US$1,500 (around AU$1,670)

Best laptops

Dell has really got serious with the internals of the XPS 13. An Intel Core i7 processor, 8GB of RAM, an SSD for fast performance and an absolutely staggeringly large battery life all combine to make this pretty much the ultimate road warrior’s laptop. It’s brilliantly thin and light, and the 13-inch screen still gives you room to work. It’s a bit of a shame it doesn’t offer a touchscreen, but the Dell XPS 13 is still one of the best laptops you can buy, offering top performance, brilliant battery life and excellent build quality.

Read our Dell XPS 13 review

19. Asus Zenbook Prime UX31A – £1,350/AU$1,700/US$1,420

Top laptops: 20 best laptops in the world

When Ultrabooks were first introduced by Intel, one of the first models to show us that it could stand up to the gauntlet laid down by the MacBook Air was the Asus Zenbook UX21. The Asus Zenbook Prime UX31A continues the styling of its predecessors, and adds a Core i7-3517U processor, Intel HD 4000 graphics and 4GB of RAM.

But the most notable change is its screen – a 1080p IPS wonder that dwarfs its competition’s resolution. It falls down on battery life, so you should consider if that’s a big issue for you. It’s also expensive, but its performance is admirable.

Read our Asus Zenbook Prime UX31A review

20. Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon – £1,500/US$1,500 (around AU$2,290)

Top laptops: 20 best laptops in the world

Top laptops: 25 best laptops in the world

The Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon is a fantastic business Ultrabook, with one of the most comfortable keyboards we’ve ever used. Fantastic build quality and lightweight design meet top performance and a range of useful features, such as a long battery life, huge SSD drive, super-fast boot times and blistering processor performance.

A few niggles with the screen and connections aside, if we chose one Ultrabook to be our business companion, we’d pick the comfortable, high performance and long lasting Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon every time.

Read our Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon review

Best gaming laptops

21. Scan 3XS Graphite LG5 – £590 (around AU$900/US$935)

Top laptops: 20 best laptops in the world

Designed from the core up as an ultra-portable gaming laptop, this packs a punch in the processor and graphics. The Intel Core i5 3210M is a capable workhorse of a chip that will handle all the games you throw at it, and chew through more serious work as well. The GeForce GTX 640M GPU and low native resolution enable you to hit great frame rates, but the 11.6-inch screen is small.

The SSD is also too small, but that’s easily rectified online. The undersized screen isn’t as easy to fix though, and we’d advise anyone looking to do work to look elsewhere. However, as a gaming system there’s a lot to love here.

Read our Scan 3XS Graphite LG5 review

22. Gigabyte U2442F – £800/AU$1,200/US$980

Best laptops

The Gigabyte U2442F is an interesting option for any gamer who wants a laptop that is as happy out on the road as it is plugged into the wall playing the latest games. The gaming performance is impressive for a machine that is so thin and light – you’d usually have to pay heavily in the bulk and weight stakes to hit these kinds of performance figures. It’s also a versatile option if you’re looking to do something a little more work-orientated, and it has a good array of ports.

Read our Gigabyte U2442F review

23. Alienware M17x 2012 – £1,090/US$1,275 (about AU$1,665)

Top laptops: 20 best laptops in the world

The Alienware M17x has had an Intel Ivy Bridge flavored refresh for 2012. The most notable addition is the inclusion of a third-generation Intel Core CPU. The model we reviewed packed an i7-3610QM processor, a four-core monster clocked at nominal 2.3GHz, which can be pumped full of Intel Turbo Boost steroids to achieve a top speed of 3.3GHz.

Combine this with a seriously powerful GPU courtesy of the latest Nvidia or AMD graphics technology and you’re looking at a top-end gaming machine more than worthy of its hefty price-tag. There’s also Intel HD 4000 graphics as part of the Ivy Bridge package, meaning DirectX 11 support.

Read our full Alienware M17x review

24. Samsung Series 7 Gamer – £1,350/US$1,900 (around AU$2,060)

Top laptops: 20 best laptops in the world

The Samsung Series 7 Gamer laptop has the hardware and performance that gamers care about, and a price tag that we would deem fair. Samsung’s custom UI, however, mostly detracts from the overall experience, short of one or two niceties, such as being able to disable the trackpad and Windows keys. It’s also quite heavy.

From a purely processor to pennies perspective, the Series 7 Gamer is worth the money. It’s a gaming machine capable of playing the latest titles at respectable settings. All its case lights and fancy UI, though, make it a bit like a party guest who arrives overdressed. You’re glad they showed up, but the bow tie they’re wearing just makes them look silly.

Read our Samsung Series 7 Gamer review

25. Razer Blade – £2,000 (around AU$3,050/US$3,170)

Top laptops: 20 best laptops in the world

Top laptops: 25 best laptops in the world

The standout feature on the Razer Blade is its Switchblade touchpad interface – a unique feature that turns the Blade’s touchpad into a fully functioning small second screen that you can use to check your email, watch YouTube videos or amplify your gaming experience.

The Intel Core i7-3632QM CPU is powerful, and the sound is crisp, but it is expensive, the keyboard is a little stiff and the touchpad placement to the side takes some getting used to. But its long battery life and comparatively lightweight chassis makes portable, quality gaming possible.

Read our Razer Blade review

Posted in Computing, Hardware, Mobile Phones, Security, Software, TechnologyComments (0)

Updated: Mother’s Day: 9 tech gifts for mom


Updated: Mother's Day: 9 tech gifts for mom

Mother’s Day is the the time to show your mom how grateful you are that she’s put up with all your crap for so long, but it’s not easy to find a good Mother’s Day gift.

Everyone’s mom is different, and while some might be satisfied with a card and brunch, others will want more. After all, she carried you for nine whole months – the least you can do it spend a couple hundred bucks on a thoughtful gift.

And while some moms are tech-savvy, some may have no clue. But that doesn’t mean that you can’t make her day with the right gadget. You’ve just got to discover the perfect Mother’s Day tech for her.

No matter what tech your mom is already into, there’s bound to be a technologically advanced Mother’s Day gift here that she’ll appreciate. And even if she doesn’t, at least it’s the thought that counts with mothers.

1. Fitbit Flex wristband and Aria smart scale

Get it at: Fitbit.com (scale $129.99)

Taglines: “Outsmart your weight with Aria” / “Never stop moving with Fitbit Flex”

If your mom doesn’t already have a Nike FuelBand, you might want to clue her in to this fitness gift combo from Fitbit. The scale will track her weight, body fat, and BMI, all the while connecting to her computer via Wi-Fi and uploading her stats and progress.

Whether your mom’s obsessed with fitness or she’s been struggling to get into it, the Aria smart scale could be a great Mother Day tech gift.

FitBit Aria Flex

And the Flex wristband, much like the popular Nike FuelBand, is much more than a pedometer that will count your mom’s footsteps. In addition to steps taken, it tracks calories burned, distance traveled, active minutes, and – get this – both hours slept and quality of sleep. It even acts as a silent alarm clock so she won’t wake up your dad when she gets up early to go running. And naturally the two gadgets will work together.

Unfortunately, the Flex isn’t out yet, though Fitbit is currently promising a Spring 2013 release date that should arrive any day.

2. BabyPing video baby monitor

Get it at: BabyPing ($199.99)

Tagline: “Whether home or away BabyPing keeps you connected to your baby”

New moms have always relied on baby monitors in this modern age, but the technology has come a long way. Static-filled walkie-talkies are a thing of the past, and now it’s all about the video.

There are plenty of different choices when it comes to video baby monitors, but the BabyPing is one of the best – and more importantly, it’s one of the easiest to set up, so even non-techy moms should be able to get into it.

BabyPing video monitor

It’s full of features, too, including night vision, audio filtering to keep background hiss down, two-way audio, built-in nursery rhymes, and Wi-Fi connectivity to PCs and iOS devices (no Android, unfortunately, though there are plenty of alternative baby monitors for non-iOS-using moms).

3. Kindle Paperwhite

Get it at: Amazon ($119)

Tagline: “The world’s most advanced e-reader”

Plenty of moms out there already have an e-reader, but there are plenty more who probably don’t yet know what they’ve been missing.

There are several reasons a Kindle Paperwhite will make a perfect Mother’s Day tech gift: it’s affordable and it’s easy on the eyes, and since it’s the newest Kindle model, your mom will be able to brag to all her friends about it.

Kindle Paperwhite

The best part? You won’t have to look at all the trashy romance novels she has lying around anymore, since they’ll all be digital.

4. Moxie showerhead and bluetooth speaker

Get it at: Amazon ($149.25)

Tagline: “It takes Moxie to shower out loud”

Moms have it hard. Whether their kids are 2, 12 or 40, it seems their job never ends. The shower may be one of the only places your mom gets to relax. And with the Moxie showerhead and built-in bluetooth speaker, she can do it while listening to her favorite Celine Dion or Phil Collins songs.

The showerhead speaker connects to a smartphone or other bluetooth device at up to 32 feet, and one of the best parts is that the speaker isn’t limited to the shower – it detaches and can travel with your mom all over the house or wherever she wants to go, with seven hours of battery life.

Moxie showerhead with speaker

An alternative for moms who appreciate some ambiance but don’t care as much about music is an LED showerhead that can simulate rainfall while projecting various soothing colors. Browse LightintheBox.com and take your pick.

5. Slingbox

Get it at: Slingbox.com ($179.99 – $299.99)

Tagline: “Watch your TV anywhere”

The Slingbox is a great Mother’s Day tech gift – whether your mom is down with all the memes or still thinks that her browser is called “Google,” she’ll appreciate the ability to take her episodes of soap operas and The View with her on the go.

The latest models are the Slingbox 350 and the Slingbox 500, and although the 500 comes with some extra features, let’s be honest – your mom probably isn’t going to use them anyway. You might as well go with the cheaper version (we won’t tell).

Slingbox 500

Plus, your dad will likely show some appreciation for this one as well.

6. Flower Power by Parrot

Get it at: Parrot.com (not yet available)

Tagline: “The most advanced plant sensor”

Parrot’s Flower Power is a device the likes of which we’ve never seen before, and it’s sure to tickle your mom’s green thumb – or better yet, lack thereof – on Mother’s Day.

It’s a plant sensor that sits in the soil of a planter or pot, monitoring sunlight, moisture, temperature, and fertilizer, then sending the data wirelessly via bluetooth to your mother’s gadgets. It will even remind her when to water them.

Flower Power by Parrot

It was only introduced at CES this year, so unfortunately it’s not on the market yet, but a 2013 release is promised and you can sign up to be notified at parrot.com. Maybe it will make a good birthday present, or you can remember it for next year’s Mother’s Day.

7. LogMeIn

Get it at: LogMeIn.com ($69.95 per year)

Tagline: “Simply connect from anywhere”

This one’s for the working moms, though even the retirees and stay-at-homes out there could no doubt find some use for it. LogMeIn is a subscription service that will allow her to access her home PC from anywhere.

Moms at soccer practice or dance recitals won’t have to duck out to email their bosses that important file, and when she’s with her friends she’ll be able to pull up all those cute baby pictures and home videos without having to worry about what’s synced with her tablet or phone.

LogMeIn app

Trying to juggle files between multiple devices can be a hassle even for the tech-savvy, so your mom will definitely appreciate not having to do it.

Getting her a year’s subscription to LogMeIn Pro will ensure that she remembers what a good son or daughter you are all year long.

8. Canon PowerShot Elph 110 HS

Get it at: Amazon ($194.98)

If your mother is sick of being disappointed by blurry smartphone photos (or if she – gasp! – doesn’t use a smartphone at all) you might want to consider getting her an affordable point-and-shoot.

There are many to choose from, but Canon’s name carries some weight in the world of photography and the Elph line of point-and-shoots has always proved reliable in our experience.

Canon Elph camera

The Canon PowerShot Elph 110 HS is the latest model, and it has plenty of features that will keep your mom entertained. In case she isn’t too tech-savvy, though, the adorable name (“Elph”) and the rainbow of colors that the 110 comes in should allay most of her fears.

And she might be amazed when you tell her that it takes full HD 1080p video, even though that’s become a standard feature for point-and-shoots. You don’t have to tell her that part.

9. Nook HD

Get it at: Barnes & Noble ($149)

Tagline: “The best in reading”

If the Kindle Paperwhite is too light on features for your media-hungry mother, the Nook HD may be the ideal alternative.

Barnes & Noble’s Kindle competitor has improved dramatically with the Nook HD, which, with the very recent addition of Google Play store access, has become a desirable little tablet in its own right. The standard Nook HD comes in a handy 7-inch size, while the upgraded Nook HD+ adds an extra two inches and an improved resolution.

Nook HD

The best part? Barnes & Noble has got your back with a Mother’s Day sale that’s knocked $50 off the price of the Nook HD and a full $90 off the price of the plus-sized version.

There are plenty of high-tech Mother’s Day gifts out there, and we’ll continue adding to this list as the holiday approaches. But no matter what kind of Mother’s Day gadgets you get her, don’t forget the flowers, too.

Posted in Cameras, Computing, Gadgets, Mobile Phones, Technology, WirelessComments (0)

Updated: 70 best free iPad games 2013


Updated: 70 best free iPad games 2013

Best free iPad games 1 – 35

So you’ve got an iPad and come to the dawning realisation that you’ve no cash left to buy any games for it.

Have no fear, because the App Store offers plenty of iPad gaming goodness for the (unintentional or otherwise) skinflint. Our pick of the 70 best free iPad games is listed below.

Note that apps marked ‘universal’ will also work on an iPhone or iPod touch, scaling down controls and graphics accordingly.

You can also check out some of the entries in our TechRadar video:

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1. PewPew (universal)

“Expect retro graphics and megatons of enemies,” says the developer about this twin-stick shooter, adding: “Don’t expect a story”. With its vector graphics and Robotronish air, PewPew brings to mind Geometry Wars and Infinity Field, but without a price tag. Despite being free, PewPew nonetheless boasts five modes of shooty goodness.

PewPew

2. Bub – Wider

This curious creation is a tranquil arcade game, where you tilt your iPad to guide a bubble around forests. The aim of Bub is to snare strangely named seeds and avoid foes. There’s little new here over the iPhone release, and the fuzzy graphics desperately need an upgrade, but Bub works well on iPad due to the precision the larger device offers.

Bub wider

3. Flockwork

It turns out if you’re a sheep that thinks the grass is greener, you should check out the other side of the fence first. In Flockwork, wooly heroes make a break for freedom, but end up immersed in a kind of ruminant hell. Your task: help the sheep escape by way of finger gymnastics and fast reactions.

Flockwork

4. Cliffed: Norm’s World XL (universal)

This race-to-the-bottom vertical platform game lacks depth but Cliffed is fun for a quick high-score blast. Use the chunky controls to make your guy dash left or right to avoid rocks and leap down holes. If the screen catches up with him, it’s game over.

Cliffed

5. Air Hockey Gold

Air hockey games work much better on the iPad than the iPhone, simply due to the iPad’s larger screen. Air Hockey Gold isn’t the only free game of this type, but it was the one that felt best during testing, and the two-player mode works nicely.

Air hockey gold

6. Magnetic Shaving Derby (universal)

“Use the magnet to attract the razor to shave the face!” explains Magnetic Shaving Derby, presumably having first hidden any safety instructions from view. The result is an experience best described as completely bonkers, with a side order of “don’t try this at home, kids, unless you enjoy the site of blood”.

Magnetic Shaving Derby

7. Dizzypad HD

Dizzypad is a one-thumb game which has you tapping the screen to have your frog leap between rotating lily pads. If he falls in the drink, he dies (pollution, eh?), but extra lives can be gained by munching bugs or bravely skipping lily pads. Extra modes are available via in-app purchase.

Dizzypad

8. Escape – Norm’s World XL (universal)

IUGO’s puzzler Escape has you swiping to make your silhouette leap between circles, which vanish when you leave them. The idea is to jump on every circle, whereupon you move to the next level. in-app purchases are available for tougher levels and two-player modes.

Escape

9. Frotz (universal)

Although it works on an iPhone, Frotz isn’t great on the smaller screen. But on the iPad, with its larger keyboard, the interactive fiction player is a revelation. It uses the Z-Machine format, and you can download a selection of freely available text adventures (including the original Zork) using the app, or upload your own files to the app via FTP.

Frotz

10. QatQi (universal)

QatQi starts off a bit like Scrabble in the dark, until you figure out that you’re really immersed in a kind of Roguelike mash-up. So although the aim is to make crosswords from a selection of letters, you’re also tasked with exploring dungeons to find score-boosting stars and special tiles.

QatQi

11. Harbor Master HD

This game might look like Flight Control in the drink, but the gameplay mechanics are subtly different. As with Firemint’s effort, Harbor Master is a line-drawing game, this time with you drawing paths so boats can dock. However, once they’ve unloaded, they must leave the screen or sometimes visit another dock, ensuring things rapidly become complex and frantic.

Harbor master

12. Tiny Tower (universal)

Tiny people in a tiny skyscraper need you to feed then tiny sushi and do other tiny tasks. Things can, inevitably, be sped up by not-so-tiny IAP cash infusions, but if you’re a patient sort, and keen on micromanagement games, Tiny Tower is a charming, enjoyable title that will eat many tiny moments out of your day.

Tiny Tower

13. Crimson: Steam Pirates

This turn-based strategy game comes complete with an engaging story and a healthy dollop of yo-ho-ho. You command pirate ships, setting their courses and then watching the action unfold. Crimson: Steam Pirates gives you eight free voyages and further adventures can be bought via IAP.

Crimson Steam Pirates

14. Labyrinth 2 HD Lite

Another demo for a paid-for title (and one that made our best paid-for iPad games list), Labyrinth 2 HD Lite‘s definitely worth downloading if you don’t have the full game. It’s the digital equivalent of tilt-based marble games, but with crazy designs. You get a small selection of mazes here, but they’re playable and varied, and there’s always a high-score to beat.

Labrynth

15. Frisbee Forever (universal)

With almost limitless possibilities in videogames, it’s amazing how many are drab grey and brown affairs. Frisbee Forever is therefore a breath of fresh air with its almost eye-searing vibrance. The sense of fun continues through to the gameplay, which is all about steering a frisbee to collect stars strewn along winding paths. Initially, you explore a fairground, but soon you’re soaring above the wild west and sandy bays.

Frisbee Forever

16. Pocket Legends (universal)

Many free iPhone OS MMOs are dreary text-based affairs, so it’s nice to see Spacetime Studios creating something a bit more ambitious with Pocket Legends, providing us with an iOS-specific 3D world populated by the usual motley collection of fantasy characters. As always with MMOs, the game demands you invest plenty of time to get anything out of it.

Pocket legends

17. Solitaire Ace

After a few hands of Klondike, we actually ended up preferring this free app to several of the iPad solitaire apps with hefty price tags. Solitaire Ace might be simple (no undo, only one theme, just three solitaire variations), but it’s fast and responsive, with intuitive controls and extremely clear cards.

Solitaire Ace

18. Tilt to Live HD

The basic aim of Tilt to Live is simple: avoid the red dots, either by cunning dodging and weaving or by triggering explosive devices in the arena. The game stands apart from similar releases due to its polish and sense of humour. You get the basic mode for free, and others can be unlocked by in-app purchase.

Tilt to live

19. Flow Free (universal)

Flow‘s quite sneaky. It looks simple enough, tasking you with connecting like-coloured blobs via pathways that cannot cross. And indeed it is at first, despite you also having to fill the entire board to proceed. But once you’re on larger grids, trying to figure out snaking pathways, your ears will be shooting steam.

Flowfree

20. 10 Pin Shuffle (Bowling) Lite (universal)

We’re big fans of 10 Pin Shuffle, a universal app that combines ten-pin bowling and shuffleboard. Of that title’s three game modes, the best one is included here in 10 Pin Shuffle Lite, for free. Called 10 Pin Poker, it adds a card game to the mix. Get a spare or strike and you’re given one or two cards, respectively. At the end of the tenth frame, whoever has the best hand wins.

Ten pin shuffle

21. Pilgrim’s Punch-Out (universal)

Become a 1980s NES-style Scott Pilgrim in Pilgrim’s Punch-Out, a movie tie-in that isn’t at all a massive rip-off of (sorry, tribute to) Nintendo classic Punch-Out!! Decent controls enable you to fight your way to glory, and although the game’s over pretty quickly, there’s always a high-score to beat.

Pilgrims punchout

22. Fowlplay HD

If you ever wanted to poop on someone’s head from above, Fowlplay HD is the game for you. Taking on the role of a pigeon that should really cut back on fibre, you zoom around a stylised forest that appears to be populated by refugees from Minigore. Aim your deposits at their heads, avoid the trees, and grab any power-ups that come your way.

Fowlplay hd

23. To-Fu 2 (universal)

There’s a touch of Angry Birds about To-Fu 2, at least if the birds were covered in something yucky that glued them to any walls they collided with. Said stickiness is the name of the game here, getting the squidgy hero to level’s end rather than impaling him on the liberally strewn spikes.

To-Fu 2

24. Choice of the Dragon (universal)

It’s not the most interesting-looking game in the world, but luckily the magic of Choice of the Dragon is in its witty prose. Playing as a multiple-choice text adventure, akin to an extremely stripped-back RPG, this game is an amusing romp that perhaps lacks replay value, but you’ll enjoy it while it lasts.

Choice of the Dragon

25. Lux Touch (universal)

There are several Lux games on the App Store, but the original is now free and works very nicely on the iPad. Essentially, this is Risk, and while the computer AI isn’t terribly bright, Lux Touch should nonetheless keep fans of the original board game quiet for a short while.

Lux touch

Best free iPad games 26 – 60

26. New York 3D Rollercoaster Rush HD Free

25 of the full game’s tracks are on offer in New York 3D Rollercoaster Rush HD Free. The game’s a simple arcade title: tilt your iPad to control the coaster’s speed, aiming to keep it on the track, and take risks to ensure the crazy riders have a great time (and, presumably, give the health-and-safety guy a heart attack).

New york 3d rollercoaster

27. iLifeGame (universal)

John Horton Conway’s famous Game of Life cellular automaton exists for practically every platform, and this simple iOS version, iLifeGame, gets things right with clear graphics, the ability to draw your own starting points, and a small collection of predefined patterns.

ilifegame

28. Pukk HD

Given that it’s another Pong clone, Pukk HD isn’t the best game to play if you’ve no friends, because the single-player mode is extremely dull. However, with another player, it becomes an exciting battle of digital tennis – and it looks a lot nicer than Tap Blaster HD, too.

Pukk hd

29. Grim Joggers Freestyle (universal)

When we think of extreme sports, jogging isn’t the first that comes to mind, although it might be now we’ve experienced Grim Joggers Freestyle. The game’s essentially Canabalt, but instead of one guy leaping across grey rooftops, you get a string of joggers trying desperately to survive in a surreal alien world.

Grim Joggers Freestyle

30. Pilot Winds (universal)

With Tiny Wings having spent a large amount of time troubling the App Store charts, we’re surprised it took so long to make it to the iPad. All along, Pilot Winds was the next best thing, and it’s still free. Instead of a fat bird sliding down hills, you’re a daredevil penguin skier, and while the game’s inspiration is clear, it has plenty of tricks of its own.

Pilot Winds

31. Drop7 Free (universal)

Drop7 is one of the finest puzzle games on iOS. You drop numbered discs into a grid, and if the number matches the number of discs in its column or row, it vanishes. Grey discs are destroyed by twice removing discs next to them. Three modes are on offer, each demanding a different strategy. And now the game’s owned by Zynga, it’s free, with only the occasional unobtrusive advert.

Drop7

32. TinkerBox

Myriad physics puzzlers exist for iOS, but most are twitch-oriented games where you fling objects around, and repeat with slight variation until you succeed. TinkerBox is different, because it demands you carefully consider the task at hand and then construct machines and tools using engineering concepts. It’s great for educating kids and also perfect for anyone who used to love the likes of Meccano.

Tinkerbox

33. Trainyard Express (universal)

Trainyard Express is a puzzle game which tasks you with getting trains to stations by laying track. It starts simple, but the logic puzzles soon test you, with colour theory and other complications. In all, you get 60 puzzles, and there’s no overlap with the app’s commercial sibling Trainyard.

Trainyard express

34. X-Baseball (universal)

As the saying goes, there are few American sports that can’t be improved by the impending threat of a banana, and that’s X-Baseball. Hit balls! Hit bananas thrown by fans! Also, hit annoying birds flying overhead! Just don’t ‘not hit’, otherwise your game will soon be over. It’s just like the real thing!

X Baseball

35. Paper Toss: World Tour HD

The original Paper Toss was pretty dry and throwaway, but in dumping the wastebasket in absurd surroundings (within a volcanic pool, in the desert, by the Taj Mahal), it gets a second wind as Paper Toss: World Tour HD and is a far more satisfying flick-based arcade game.

Paper toss

Best free iPad games 36 – 70

36. NinJump – HD

NinJump is a quickfire one-thumb game which has your ninja rapidly climbing, leaping between two endless towers. As he leaps, he knocks obstacles from the air, dispatching killer squirrels, deadly birds and throwing stars lobbed by enemy ninjas. Simple, addictive fun.

NinJump

37. Chuck’s Challenge (universal)

Chuck’s Challenge has a long pedigree, being heavily based on ancient Atari Lynx game Chips Challenge. The idea is to use your brain and swiping skills to solve tile-oriented puzzles, keeping your strange purple-haired avatar alive. For no money, you get 25 puzzles, but more are available to buy.

Chuck's Challenge

38. Parsec (universal)

On playing Parsec, we had to check a couple of times that it was free, because it’s one of the best shooters on the App Store. The game boasts retro-style neon visuals, slick touch controls, and an exciting 20-level time-attack structure that begs you to regularly attempt to beat your high score.

Parsec

39. Flick Kick Field Goal Kickoff (universal)

Flick the football in precision or sudden-death mode, taking into account wind speed and direction before you belt the ball goalwards. Flick Kick Field Goal Kickoff is a simple game, but the stadium looks great, and it’s always a fine title to waste a few minutes with.

Flick kick field goal kickoff

40. BIT.TRIP Beat Blitz (universal)

The love-child of Pong and a drug-fuelled hallucination, BIT.TRIP Beat Blitz has you deflecting hundreds of balls, in time to crunchy industrial-style dance beats. This is dazzling and pure but demanding arcade gaming, with long, tough levels. Miss too many beats and you’re plunged into Nether, a soulless black-and-white realm where you must chain multiple beats to escape from.

BIT trip

41. Triple Town (universal)

In Triple Town, you have to think many moves ahead to succeed. It’s a match game where trios of things combine to make other things, thereby giving you more space on the board to evolve your town. At times surreal, Triple Town is also brain-bending and thoroughly addictive. Free moves slowly replenish, but you can also unlock unlimited moves via IAP.

Triple Town (universal)

42. Pinball HD Collection

If you’re a fan of spanging a metal ball about, Gameprom’s iPad pinball tables are as good as they come. Pinball HD Collection is the freemium incarnation of the company’s output, and you get the simple but playable Wild West entirely for free. Yee-haw!

Pinball HD Collection

43. Temple Run (universal)

There are many endless running games for the iPad, but this is the only one where you’re being chased by deadly evil demon monkeys. But then you did nick a priceless trinket from a temple. Tsk! The tilty swipey gameplay’s perhaps a tad tiring after a while of holding up an iPad, but Temple Run is great in short bursts on the larger screen.

Temple Run

44. Candy Train (universal)

Leaves on the line? Pfft! Here, you’re more likely to find candy and giant cherries. Not that such hazards stop the little train—but broken tracks will. Your job is therefore to plan out a route for the cartoon chuffer, until your brain seizes up and your Candy Train journey comes to a sticky end.

Candy Train

45. Bejeweled Blitz (universal)

Bejeweled Blitz is the online incarnation of PopCap’s hugely popular gem-swap game, and it looks fab on the iPad’s screen. As a freemium title, there’s a whiff of IAP (either grind or buy coins to unlock power-ups, or you’ve no chance of topping the high-score tables), but you’ll still be addicted all the same.

Bejeweled Blitz

46. Jetpack Joyride (universal)

Another endless game, Jetpack Joyride is a witty, polished take on the iCopter format, with one-thumb controls dictating the hero’s attempts to avoid death that comes increasingly rapidly from the side of the screen. The real gems here are the power-ups, including the amusing Profit Bird (depicted), which isn’t at all a swipe at Angry Birds and Tiny Wings.

Jetpack Joyride

47. Fairway Solitaire HD

Fairway Solitaire HD is a perfect example of what happens when you marry simple gameplay with a bit of character. On its own, the basic card system would be fine: unlock face-down cards by selecting those one higher or lower than the current one in the draw pile. But the addition of golf scoring and a crazed gopher out for blood turns this into a surprisingly enjoyable and original title. You get nine courses for free.

Fairway Solitaire HD

48. X-Motorcycle (universal)

X-Motorcycle happily offers two videogame cliches for the price of none: the speeding hero (this time on a motorbike), who cannot slow down, and inexplicably giant fruit that appears to be an immensely important currency. The result is a fast, playable game reminiscent of old-school thrills filtered down to their essence and squirted into your iPad.

X-Motorcycle

49. Orbit1

One thumb per person and one glowing neon ship is the premise behind Orbit1. You grab points, aim to destroy your opponents, and just hope someone doesn’t flip out, grab the iPad and fling it out of the window in a huff.

Orbit1

50. Zen Pinball (universal)

More pinball! This one’s a bit less realistic than Gameprom’s efforts, but Zen Pinball is very pretty, with a bright and exciting free table, Sorcerer’s Lair. Further tables are available via IAP, including some Marvel-themed and surprisingly great Star Wars efforts, but the sole freebie should have pinball addicts happily sated for a while.

Zen Pinball

51. Word Solitaire HD

With a game called Word Solitaire, you might expect a kind of solitaire game that has you form words rather than use standard cards. And that’s exactly what you get here – sorry, anyone waiting for a huge surprise. However, this is not a bad thing, because Word Solitaire HD is a relaxing, entertaining title.

Word Solitaire HD

52. Royal Revolt (universal)

In Royal Revolt the king is dead and his siblings have stolen his kingdom while the prince was at school. Unfortunately for them, he was studying magic and is now out for revenge. The game itself is a real-time-strategy effort with some seriously cute and well-animated graphics.

Royal Revolt

53. Letterpress (universal)

Who knew you could have such fun with a five-by-five grid of letters? In Letterpress, you play friends via Game Center, making words to colour lettered squares. Surround any and they’re out of reach from your friend’s tally. Cue: word-tug-o’-war, last-minute reversals of fortune, and arguments about whether ‘qat’ is a real word or not. (It is.)

Letterpress

54. Snuggle Truck HD

This one had a dubious start, initially named Smuggle Truck and featuring immigrants being smuggled across the US border. One swift rejection by Apple later and the game swapped immigrants for cuddly toys, which is significantly funnier anyway. The trials-oriented gameplay isn’t bad either.

Snuggle Truck HD

55. Frisbee Forever 2 (universal)

As noted elsewhere in this list, we love Frisbee Forever. This sequel is essentially more of the same: fling your plastic disc away, guide it through hoops, collect stars, and make it to the finish line. What makes Frisbee Forever 2 really stand out is the lush locations you get to fly through, including ancient ruins and beautiful snowy hillsides.

Frisbee Forever 2

56. Gridrunner Free (universal)

Gridrunner Free has the look of a lost 1980s arcade game, with hints of Caterpillar and Space Invaders. But this is really a thoroughly modern affair, with perfect touch controls and bullet-hell-style gameplay, albeit bullet-hell in the videogame equivalent of a shoebox. Oh, and you only get one life in survival mode, making every game a frantic bid to stay alive. (More modes can be unlocked via the 69p In-App Purchase.)

Gridrunner

57. Hero Academy (universal)

There’s a point in chess where you sometimes wish your knight would just give your opponent’s bishop a thoroughly good trampling. Sadly, few chess games do such things (the ancient Battlechess being an exception), but Hero Academy takes the idea and runs with it. On specially designed boards, wizards attack knights, and demons defend their turf against samurais. It’s an engaging turn-based effort with plenty of depth.

Hero Academy

58. Rinth Island (universal)

Rinth Island is what would happen if you propped block-shifter Soko-Ban up against a wall and wrapped it around a tube. The puzzles soon become notoriously devious, as you figure out how to reach each tube’s summit, but its novelty factor combined with great design will ensure you stick around.

Rinth Island

59. Outwitters (universal)

Another chessish two-player effort, Outwitters has teams of angry sea creatures battling to the death, first helpfully arming them with surprisingly dangerous weapons. (It turns out crabs eschew claws when they’ve a mortar cannon to hand.) Unlike Hero Academy, Outwitters has a ‘fog of war’, meaning units cannot see any further than they can move. This makes the game tougher to master but perhaps more rewarding on doing so.

Outwitters

60. Shadow Era (universal)

Proving that great ideas never die, Shadow Era brings trading cards to life on the iPad. What you lose in not being able to smell the ink and manually shuffle the deck, you gain in not being able to lose the cards or have them eaten by the dog. It’s all very swords-and-fantasy oriented, and just like in real life you can also buy extra cards if you feel the need.

Shadow Era

61. Blendoku (universal)

A game about blending colours, which doesn’t feature an Old English Sheepdog barely avoiding tipping paint everywhere? Missed opportunity! Still, what you’re left with in Blendoku is a beautifully minimal game that tasks you with putting coloured squares in order. It starts off simple, but the level design will soon have you sobbing into your crayons.

Blendoku

62. Into the Dead (universal)

You know, if infinite zombies were running towards us, we’d leg it in the opposite direction. Not so in Into the Dead, where you battle on until your inevitable and bloody demise. The game’s oddly dream-like (well, nightmare-like), and perseverance rewards you with new weapons, such as a noisy chainsaw. VVRRRMMM! (Splutch!)

Into the Dead

63: Score! World Goals (universal)

Score! takes the basic premise of a million path-drawing games and wraps it around classic footie goals. The combination works really well, with you attempting to recreate the ball’s path in the best goals the world’s ever seen. Failure results in a baying crowd and, frequently, improbable goalkeeping heroics.

Score World Goals

64. Lost Treasures of Infocom (universal)

“You are standing in an open field west of a white house.” If you’re of a certain age, you’re already downloading Lost Treasures of Infocom, which gives you classic text adventure Zork entirely for free. IAP enables you to buy further titles by Infocom, the masters of interactive fiction, and they all work wonderfully on the iPad.

Lost Treasures of Infocom

65. Groove Coaster Zero (universal)

Rhythm action games are rarely complex, but Groove Coaster Zero out-simples its rivals by only demanding you use a thumb to tap, press, swipe or rub, responding to on-screen symbols. In the meantime, beats are drummed into your ears as your eyes are hurled around a breakneck disco-neon roller-coaster. Groovy!

Groove Coaster Zero

66. Frankenword (universal)

Take two words that haven’t previously met, introduce them via a cunning overlap, and you’ve another iPad word game that stands out from the crowd. ‘Warning device’ plus ‘mammal with armour’? Alarmadillo, of course. It’s probably not in your dictionary, but it should be on your iPad, because Frankenword is ace.

Frankenword

67. Super Monsters Ate My Condo (universal)

The original Monsters Ate My Condo was like Jenga and a match-three game shoved into a blender with a massive dollop of crazy. Super Monsters Ate My Condo is a semi-sequel which takes a time-attack approach, shoe-horning the bizarre tower-building/floor-matching/monster-feeding into a tiny amount of time, breaking your brain in the process.

Super Monsters Ate My Condo

68. RAD Soldiers (universal)

Tactical war-games tend to work well on a touchscreen device, and RAD Soldiers is no exception. The turn-based action has you take on chums or the single-player mode, and the cartoon styling gives a palatable face to leaving an enemy soldier as a pair of smoking boots. Just watch out for the IAP.

RAD Soldiers

69. Cubed Rally Redline (universal)

Argh! That’s pretty much what you’ll be yelling on a regular basis on playing this endless racer. Cubed Rally Redline shouldn’t be difficult. You can go left or right on five clearly defined lanes, and there’s a ‘time brake’ for going all slow-motion, Matrix-style, to weave through tricky gaps; but you’ll still be smashing into cows, dinosaurs and bridges before you know it.

Cubed Rally Redline

70. Vectrex (universal)

In the distant past (well, the 1980s), there was an excellent console called the Vectrex, which had a vector-based iPad-sized screen. In the Vectrex app, it’s been beautifully recreated on the iPad. The Asteroids-Like Minestorm is entirely free, but further games are available to buy via IAP.

Vectrex

If you liked this, then make sure you check out our best free iPad apps roundup!

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Buying Guide: Best cheap tablets: top budget options


Buying Guide: Best cheap tablets: top budget options

Best budget tablets: 1-3

The iPad 4 still rules the roost as the best 10-inch (technically 9.7-inch) tablet in the world, but with prices starting at £399 and rising all the way to £659, it’s clearly priced in a bracket way above many people’s budget.

Apple’s sky-high prices mean those wanting a more affordable tablet experience will have to look elsewhere, although the iPad Mini has recently entered the fray at a lower price point.

Google’s Android operating system now adorns a multitude of tablets, from those priced at the same lofty heights of Apple’s offerings, to those that can be picked up for £100 at your local supermarket – although we’d advise against purchasing most of these, and instead check out the superior options below.

Be sure to check out our tablet buying guide too.

FutTv : qh3alrsvLyl78

If you can’t quite hack the lower offerings, and you’ve managed to scrape together enough money to indulge in a pricier tablet experience, then take a gander at the following:

For those of you who are still with us, well done. To reward you for your loyalty, here are some top tablets for under £300.

1. iPad mini

iPad mini

Price: from £269
OS: iOS 6
Review score: 4.5/5

Apple’s former CEO Steve Jobs famously slammed small tablets a few years back, leading many to believe the Cupertino-based firm would never dabble in the budget end of the market, but here we are.

In terms of consistency in the tablet market Apple cannot be matched, as it now lays claim to the first two places in our top 10, with the iPad mini the jewel in an already glistening crown.

The slight downsides to the iPad mini are that it misses out on a Retina display and it pushes the upper end of the budget price bracket, but you can justify that price with its slick operation and premium build quality, letting you know you have a top piece of kit in your hand – as we said in our review “the iPad mini is the best iPad Apple has ever created.”

2. Google Nexus 7

Google Nexus 7

Price: from £159
OS: Android 4.1 Jelly Bean
Review score: 4.5/5

With a quad-core processor, beefy 12-core GPU, 7-inch HD IPS display and being the first device to run Android Jelly Bean, the Google Nexus 7 is quite simply the best budget tablet out there.

The 16GB version is available for just £159, while the 32GB model will only set you back £199. It’s quite possibly the bargain of the century.

There are a few shortcomings – such as no microSD card slot, meaning you’re stuck with 32GB at most, and no rear camera – although these can be easily overlooked at this startlingly attractive price.

3. Asus FonePad

Asus FonePad

Price: £179.99
OS: Android 4.1 Jelly Bean
Review score: 4/5

It’s almost identical to the Nexus 7 sitting in second place, but the FonePad has a few trump cards including a great price, microSD slot and 3G connectivity which not only allows you to get online but also send/receive phone calls and text messages.

You’d be forgiven for wondering why the FonePad isn’t sitting calmly at number two, but the Jelly Bean interface isn’t quite as slick (it’s packing a dual-core, not quad-core chip), you can pick up a Wi-Fi only Nexus 7 for less dosh and while the call function is cool, it’s also a little impractical on a device this size.

That said pair it up with a Bluetooth headset and you might as well turf your smartphone out, as the FonePad can do pretty much everything.

Best budget tablets: 4-7

4. Amazon Kindle Fire HD

Amazon Kindle Fire HD

Price: from £159
OS: Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich
Review score: 4.5/5

What’s better than a tablet with a quad core processor? One that costs just £159. That’s right: the power of the Kindle brand has mated with an HD screen and won’t charge you the earth to own it.

Coming in at 16GB and 32GB flavours, the Kindle Fire HD is sure to be a big hit, bringing the simplicity of the e-book range to the tablet arena, with dedicated space to access your movies, games, apps and music too.

It’s a little simplistic for some, but for others it’s the perfect mix of curated content and easy to use interface – and despite the price, it’s got a decent build quality too.

5. Acer Iconia A210

Acer Iconia A210

Price: from £201.95
OS: Android 4.1 Jelly Bean
Review score: 4/5

The Acer Iconia A210 is one of the best budget 10-inch tablets available.

If it wasn’t for the very average battery life, we’d be having a major fling with the A210 because it has both flexibility and an Acer-made polish to its user interface that we really enjoyed using.

The A210 may not have the show stopping specs of some of the other tablets on other, but at the end of the day it offers a solid tablet experience at a great price.

6. Toshiba AT200

Toshiba AT200

Price: from £219.99
OS: Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich
Review score: 4/5

The Toshiba AT200 was once the world’s thinnest 10.1-inch tablet clocking in at a super slender 7.7mm thin, but it’s now lost that title to the Sony Xperia Tablet Z.

Still, it means you can slide it into your bag without issue, and at 535g, you probably won’t notice it’s in there.

The Toshiba AT200 is a good, solid and portable device, delivering everything you’d expect from an unfussy Android slate. If you’re looking for a standard tablet experience, the AT200 is certainly worth a look.

7. Samsung Galaxy Tab 8.9

Samsung Galaxy Tab 8.9

Price: from £249.99
OS: Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich
Review score: 4.5/5

The Samsung Galaxy Tab 8.9 is a funny little thing. It’s essentially the same as its older brother, the Galaxy Tab 10.1, but with an 8.9-inch screen.

It’s slightly thinner and lighter, and consequently more convenient for anyone wanting to stuff it in a bag, while the internal components are basically the same.

While it may be starting to show its age, it’s ideal for anyone who thinks 10.1 inches is just slightly too big for a tablet, finds 7-inch options a tad too small and can’t afford an iPad mini. A decent screen, and premium features make it a great option.

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In Depth: Google Glass review roundup


In Depth: Google Glass review roundup

Some think it’s the future of tech. Others think it’s something we should fear. And still others reckon it’ll make you look like a dork. It’s Google Glass, and now it’s been tested by real people. OK Glass, let’s discover the truth!

What is the Google Glass screen like?

It’s “interesting”, says Engadget’s Tim Stevens. It produces “a glowing image that appears to be floating in space”. According to Google it’s the equivalent of a 25-inch screen eight feet from you, and while it hasn’t stated the resolution “developers are advised to work with an array of 640×360 pixels.”

It’s good but not great: it’s nowhere near as detailed as a modern smartphone, colours are inconsistent and “it almost has the look of an old-school, passive-matrix LCD”.

Stevens found that “while contrast is reasonably good, seeing the display in bright sunlight can be a problem” – more so if you use the sunglasses visor, which sits between you and the display.”

Can I wear Google Glass over my normal glasses?

Yes, but you probably won’t be happy: the frame isn’t designed to fit over normal spectacles, so it’s going to feel like going to a movie where you’ve got to wear specs over your specs.

Engadget found that “a few [people] with eyesight difficulties were simply unable to focus on the display at all.” CNet’s Scott Stein found that “it’s not always the most comfortable device”. Prescription versions of Glass are in development.

Where does the Google Glass battery live?

It’s at the back, just behind your right ear.

Google Glass battery

Is Google Glass comfortable to wear?

The titanium frame keeps the weight down, and putting the battery and speaker behind your ear means that Google Glass isn’t too front-heavy.

“The overly flexible nature of the band means it can be a bit tricky to put on without using both hands, but once positioned properly, it manages to be quite comfortable on both large and small heads,” says Engadget.

It’s adjustable too. “The titanium frame is bendable,” says CNet. “Little nose contacts can be bent and adjusted for individual fit.” It’s bendable but not foldable: you can’t put Glass in a normal sunglasses case.

How does Google Glass’s speaker work?

A speaker behind your ear sounds odd, but Glass’s one is bone conductive – so the sound waves travel through your skull rather than into your ears. “You can hear it, but it’s not as loud as a standard earpiece,” says Stein.

How adjustable is Google Glass?

Not very, says Stevens. “You can modify the wake angle (how far back you must tilt your head for the display to pop on) and enable or disable head detection, which automatically turns off the headset if you remove it. That’s about it.

You can’t adjust volume levels or display brightness, can’t disable Wi-Fi or Bluetooth (both appear to be always on), can’t re-arrange the application cards in the interface or set their priority, can’t modify the default screen timeout length and you can’t enable a silent or do not disturb mode.”

What are Google Glass’s technical specifications?

“Crack the case open (which we do not recommend) and you will find an aging TI OMAP 4430 processor, paired with 1GB of RAM and 16GB of storage (12GB available),” Tim Stevens says. “Content will push to your Google+ account wirelessly by default, but you can pull it off through the micro-USB port if you like – which is also how Glass charges. Battery size is unknown, but battery life is: it’s poor.” Wireless is 802.11b/g Wi-Fi or Bluetooth.

Google Glass

Will Google Glass run apps?

Yes, there’s an official API for developers. Unlike Google Play, Google Glass apps will be pre-approved by Google before anyone can get them. Robert Scoble notes that “Google is forbidding advertising in apps.”

What software does Google Glass run? What’s the operating system?

It’s Android, of course, and you’ll be amazed to discover that Glass is designed to work with Google’s own services.

“Glass is meant to tie in to one Google account (Gmail), and with it, Google+ and Google Now,” Scott Stein explains. “Apps don’t get downloaded; they populate seamlessly via the MyGlass app on Android. Right now, they operate more like features and push services (for instance, The New York Times’ app really just seems to push headlines down to the device)… The current uses are limited, but the potential is huge.”

Google Glass

Does Google Glass really deliver all-day battery life?

Not even close. “In what we’d consider average usage, reading emails and taking short pictures and videos, we got about five hours before the headset unceremoniously shut itself down,” says Stevens.

Digital Trends’ Saul Berenbaum noted tech blogger Robert Scoble’s remark that “one six-minute video I did took 20 percent of the battery” and reports multiple users’ experiences: “Know that feeling when your battery icon starts blinking red while you’re shooting? That’s practically the norm with Google Glass, at least right now.”

What are Google Glass’s key features?

Bearing in mind that we’re talking early prototypes here, the big features at the moment are weather, navigation (including recommendations for places of interest such as nearby restaurants), hangouts, email and messaging (although you can’t create emails, just reply to others’) and of course, search.

Google Glass

Engadget felt that many of these features were quite basic, so for example if you say “Google Engadget” then “you’ll see the description of Engadget – but not the page itself or indeed any gadget news.”

If you Google famous names you get the wikipedia result, and so on. It’s “of mixed usefulness”: Wikipedia, sums and conversions are great but “anything more complex may result in disappointment.”

How do you control Google Glass?

“The wide, flat outer edge of the right side of Glass is a touch pad, capable of four-direction swiping and tapping,” says Stein. “You tap once to turn Glass on (or, tilt your head upward to a user-determined angle), and swipe and tap from there.”

Glass also uses voice recognition and motion sensing. “You can activate the display in two ways,” says Stevens: “Tilting your head up or tapping the capacitive touch portion on the side. The default display is a clock with ‘ok glass’ written below. This is actually quite useful, as tipping your head up is a quick and easy way to check the time, though it’d be nice if you could turn off the ‘ok glass’ bit. It’s not that hard to remember.”

What’s Google Glass actually like to use?

“If Kinect and Siri had a baby and raised it among a family of smartphones, it would be Google Glass,” says Stein. “If you don’t like engaging with Kinect and Siri, you won’t like this experience. Voice recognition works, but has its hiccups. You can see the commands you can perform, much like how Kinect’s command guidance system works… speaking to Glass is needed to do most tasks efficiently. Swiping isn’t enough. Doing both can get a little odd, and each interface – touch and voice – has its little hiccups.” He also found that “everything else Glass does requires a lot of speaking and head-tilting, swiping, and a degree of patience.”

Google Glass

Using Glass “is a series of highs and lows,” Stevens says. Navigation is good, Hangouts – “when they worked” – were great, and Stevens “also enjoyed wowing friends over dinner by looking up the authors of obscure books or doing complex conversions just by asking Glass.”

However, the lows include audio – “Glass makes a pretty mediocre Bluetooth headset” and the speaker isn’t great: “in noisy areas you’ll struggle to hear anything” unless you stick your fingers in your ears. The battery life is crap, “the photography in low light is a mess, having emails read to you is far too cumbersom and the general lack of customisation options is surprising.”

Robert Scoble loves the voice recognition. “It’s actually quite amazing, even though I know that the magic is that it expects to hear only a small number of things,” he says. “‘OK Glass, Take a Picture’ works. ‘OK Glass, Take a Photo’ doesn’t. The Glass is forcing your voice commands to be a certain set of commands and no others will be considered. This makes accuracy crazy high, even if you have an accent.”

What are Google Glass Hangouts really like?

In the promo videos, Google Glass delivers video chat that looks amazing. In real life? It’s “quite compelling”, says Stevens, although unlike normal video chat the other person can’t see you because the camera points away from you.

“It’s easy to envision touring a museum with someone who’s stuck at home. It’s also easy to envision museums not being happy about such a scenario.” Or cinemas, or concert venues, or… you get the idea.

It’s also hugely dependent on the quality of your connection: “You’ll need to be on a solid LTE [or Wi-Fi] signal to have a hope of transmitting decent-quality video and audio without terrible lag”.

How good is the camera?

The 5 megapixel, 720p camera is great, says Scoble. While it isn’t fantastic in low light, “it totally changes photography and video” because you “can capture moments.” No more reaching for your phone, loading the camera app and missing the moment. Glass is instant.

Could Google Glass accidentally delete my stuff with the wrong gesture?

It looks that way. Stein “deleted a few videos I shot by accident… by swiping/tapping in the wrong order.” Remember, though, this is still a prototype – such kinks shouldn’t be hard to iron out.

Are there privacy concerns over Google Glass?

Oh yes, and not just because you don’t want to hear “OK Glass” when you’re in a public toilet. “There are many [concerns], and they are troubling,” says Engadget.

The lack of a red LED to indicate that Glass is recording is a mistake (the screen does glow when recording, but it’s not as obvious as a bright red LED would be), and “you can easily imagine plenty [of] situations where Glass owners would innocently wear their headsets much to the discomfort of others.”

Google Glass

Stevens believes that Google needs to address the privacy stuff fast. “Right now, this issue is largely floating under the radar and will likely continue to do so until Glass headsets start appearing in public in greater numbers,” he says.

“If Google doesn’t get ahead of this now, the story of Glass could very quickly become one of fear, uncertainty and doubt by the public at large.”

How secure is Google Glass?

Not very. There’s already an exploit that enables someone to completely take over your Glass unit, and Jay Freeman argues that Google “should have some kind of protection on your Glass that activates when you take it off”.

There’s absolutely nothing to stop somebody stealing your Glass and using your various Google apps with your identity, and there’s also the possibility of someone accessing Glass while it’s on your head.

How’s this for a frightening prospect? “A bugged Glass doesn’t just watch your every move: it watches everything you are looking at (intentionally or furtively) and hears everything you do.”

Will Google Glass make me look like a dork?

Yes. “The overall aesthetic here leans far closer to prototype than polished,” says Engadget. “Adding on the clip-on sunglasses made Glass feel a little less awkward,” says Stein. “Maybe it’s the psychological framework of actual glasses… to actually wear it to a cafe or a party takes chutzpah. People either stared at me with apprehension, got excited about tech, or thought I was an insufferable geek. Maybe that’ll change.” Of course, Google might well improve the design too.

Google Glass

When is the Google Glass release date?

Late 2013, probably. Google hasn’t been more specific yet.

What else is in the Google Glass box?

CNet’s package included “the Glass unit itself (in a variety of colors), a snap-on sunglasses visor, a clear visor, and a Micro-USB charger.”

What will the Google Glass price be?

If Google knows, it isn’t saying. The Explorer Edition was $1,500 (£985 or AUS$1,449), but we’d expect retail prices to be a lot lower.

Is Google Glass worth $1,500?

“Absolutely not,” says Engadget. “Future iterations of Glass will have to get far cheaper before we’d begin to consider this good value, although much of that value proposition depends on future developer support.”

Robert Scoble asked audiences “who would buy this?” and quoted various prices. “As the price got down to $200 literally every hand went up. At $500 a few hands went up. This was consistent, whether talking with students, or more mainstream, older audiences.

Is Google Glass the future?

Robert Scoble certainly thinks so: “I will never live a day of my life from now on without it (or a competitor). It’s that significant… it’s the most interesting new product since the iPhone.” All Google needs to do is make it $200.

Scott Stein is more measured. “It’s an early product that’s clearly in beta, but it’s also an experiment. It’s a social-interaction project, it’s a living debate on wearable tech, and it’s an app platform in need of apps. It’s not necessarily a device that needs to exist, but it could have uses for some. And some of its uses may not have been invented yet.”

The big question is whether Google can address the privacy concerns, Stevens says. “The future is incredibly bright for Google’s Project Glass and it’d be a damn shame if it were dimmed by public outcry.”

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