Motorola Xoom Wi-Fi Tablet Review
the Verizon Motorola Xoom back in February, and we recently updated that review to reflect the Android 3.1 update. In a nutshell, the Xoom started off missing some key features—full Flash support was a big one. With the latest update to Google's tablet OS, Honeycomb, support for Adobe Flash 10.3 moved out of shaky beta mode and now works like a charm. Multitasking was also improved to include far more possible active apps at once. The Xoom Wi-Fi ships with the Android 3.1 update, so all you need to do is power up and log on to a wireless network. This review specifically discusses the Wi-Fi-only version of the tablet. Since there are few differences between the Wi-Fi tablet and carrier-backed versions, we will refer you to our original Verizon Motorola Xoom review for all the nitty gritty details—just skip the sections on cellular service and pricing.
the Verizon Motorola Xoom back in February, and we recently updated that review to reflect the Android 3.1 update. In a nutshell, the Xoom started off missing some key features—full Flash support was a big one. With the latest update to Google's tablet OS, Honeycomb, support for Adobe Flash 10.3 moved out of shaky beta mode and now works like a charm. Multitasking was also improved to include far more possible active apps at once. The Xoom Wi-Fi ships with the Android 3.1 update, so all you need to do is power up and log on to a wireless network. This review specifically discusses the Wi-Fi-only version of the tablet. Since there are few differences between the Wi-Fi tablet and carrier-backed versions, we will refer you to our original Verizon Motorola Xoom review for all the nitty gritty details—just skip the sections on cellular service and pricing.