Acer Iconia Tab 7 Review : Acer settles for too little

Acer Iconia Tab 7 Review : Acer settles for too little
VERDICT:

In the 7 inch budget tablet world, the Acer Iconia Tab 7 does nothing out of the ordinary or different than its competition. It just settles for identical specs of what other manufacturers have to offer and also suffers from many shortcomings. Acer could have tried for a slimmer build or matte back panel, but they haven’t. Acer has stuck to the orthodox and therefore missed a good opportunity.

There are many seven inch tablets and they all come at a fairly reasonable price tag. All in all its a competitive segment, so let's find out where the Acer Iconia Tab 7 stands.

Design and Display

The tablet is not the slimmest or the best looking, it just settles for an understated look. Asus, a rival, has done a better job at making its Fonepad 7 more stylish. I would also add that a 7 inch budget friendly tablet doesn't need to be an absolute stunner but Acer could have done a better job, such as adding a matte back and making the tablet lighter. Instead, Acer has gone with a plastic back and as the tablet is almost 300 grams, it tends to slip while you hold the device in one-hand.

All 7 inch tablets generally offer a pretty identical front consisting of a 7 inch display surrounded by a half inch bezel and the Acer Iconia Tab 7 is no different. The 7 inch display on the tab offers a resolution of 1024 x 600 pixels but since the tablet has on-screen navigation keys the resolution comes down to 976 x 600 which is just about average for a tablet of this size. 

The tab offers a screen density of 160 dpi which gives you good indoor visibility but it does take a hit outdoors. The display on the Acer Iconia Tab has very limited viewing angles and since the screen is very reflective you might end up watching your reflection on the screen in a well lit room.

Hardware and UI

Acer has gone with a Mediatek 8382 SoC with a quad-core CPU clocked at 1.3 GHz on the Iconia Tab 7. On the graphics front the Mali-400 GPU does a decent job while playing games. With 1GB of RAM onboard, the tablet performed without issues when it came to day to day usage. It was under heavy multi-tasking that I found it a bit sticky but not to an extreme degree. I was also able to play games like Dead Trigger 2 and Asphalt Airborne without any major hiccups.

Calling features are available on the device itself as the tab has a SIM card slot and though it worked, calls tended to sound a little noisy. A microSD card is also available and the tab takes upto 32GB of microSD cards. The tab features the power and unlock button as well as the volume rocker on the right side of the tab and both offer nice tactile feedback. The 3.5mm headphone jack and the USB port are located on the top and bottom of the device respectively.

On the UI front Acer has kept it very basic. The tab gives you a pretty stock like experience and runs on Android 4.4.2 Kitkat. Acer has sprinkled some additional apps which come pre-installed out of the box. But apps like “ab Docs” require you to sign up for an Acer ID.

  

  

Camera and battery

Acer is generous enough to include manual exposure settings in the camera app itself. The 2MP camera at the back is only good for an occasional shot in a well lit setup. Besides that the 2MP camera is not good enough to be your only camera choice. The front-facing VGA camera is also only good enough for video calls and an occasional low quality selfie.

  

In our battery test where we play a 1080p video on full brightness and with WiFi on for an hour, the battery dropped down to 82 percent. This means the tablet can play 5.5 hours of 1080p video before going dry completely. Under heavy usage of 4 hours in which I browsed YouTube, played games, browsed websites and took a couple of calls, I was able to drain the fully charged tab down to 10 percent battery.

Conclusion

The Acer Iconia tab 7 is just another tablet in the 7 inch budget tablet market. It is a bit overweight, underperforms a little, the screen is a bit low res, the call quality is a bit of a let down. Overall, if you are looking to buy a 7-inch budget tablet that for consuming media like videos or to browse the Web you should instead consider the Asus Fonepad 7, the Lenovo Tab A7 or the Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 Neo. At the end of the day the Acer Iconia Tab 7 is just another 7-in tablet that does not capture the imagination

Hardik Singh

Hardik Singh

Light at the top, this odd looking creature lives under the heavy medication of video games. View Full Profile

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