Enlarge (credit: Google)
After the death of Android tablets, Google has been slowly rebooting its tablet ambitions under the Chrome OS banner. After debuting the concept with the Acer Chromebook Tab 10, Google now has its first-party Chrome OS tablet hardware, the Pixel Slate.
The device has a more-than-passing resemblance to the Microsoft Surface or iPad Pro: there’s a tablet, and a keyboard cover, and a pen. The tablet is an Intel-powered device with 8-16GB of RAM and a 3000Ă—2000 display. This is the first Chrome OS device to support biometrics—on the top of the device is a power button that doubles as a fingerprint scanner. Single USB-C ports are found on the left and right sides, and a pogo pin connection is on the bottom.
The back of the device doesn’t do a great job of looking like a “Pixel” device. While the phones and the Pixelbook had a two-tone glass and aluminum design, the Pixel Slate is one solid piece of metal with only a “G” logo in the corner.
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Source: Ars Technica – Google announces its first tablet in three years, the Pixel Slate