HTC Discreetly Introduced a New Android Tablet

HTC Corporation, often known as High Tech Computer Corporation, is a Taiwanese consumer electronics business located in New Taipei City, Taiwan. The once-impressive Android smartphone maker has a surprise tablet to go along with its weird metaverse-focused Desire 22 Pro. The new A101 is an Android tablet with a 10.1-inch display, entry-level specifications, and a design that dates back to the mid-2000s.

HTC’s Latest Android Tablet

We uncovered the gadget, which seems to have been surreptitiously unveiled last month and is targeted at the African market. It follows the A100 tablet, which was released in Russia last year to a similar lack of enthusiasm.

We don't want to be too critical since the tablet looks to be aimed mainly at developing regions. But it's still odd to see HTC – creators of the original Android phone and a firm Google once entrusted with building a Nexus-branded tablet — manufacturing forgettable gadgets like this. The A101 even ships with 2020's Android 11, rather than Android 12 or the big-screen-focused Android 12L.

HTC's tablet is powered by a Unisoc T618 CPU, 8GB of RAM, and 128GB of storage, which is extensible through microSD. We think the tablet will be able to handle complex tasks such as Android to iPhone transfers but still skeptical. It has two cameras on the back: a primary 16-megapixel camera and a 2-megapixel ultrawide camera. Both variants include a 5-megapixel front-facing camera, a 3.5mm headphone socket, a 7,000mAh battery, and capability for face unlock.

Overall, HTC made an unexpected step. This is a firm that used to compete in the flagship Android market with the likes of Samsung. However, in 2022, it can secretly unveil a completely mediocre tablet on its website and most of the globe will not notice until days later.

Meanwhile, the smartphone design expertise that HTC sold to Google in early 2018 has been growing steadily over the previous several years. While the Pixel 4 is generally considered a flop, the Pixel 5 was a highly good midrange device, and the Pixel 6 was a competitive flagship with perhaps more than its fair share of software issues. In contrast, it's becoming more difficult to understand what HTC's surviving smartphone business is working on beyond nebulous buzzwords like "metaverse."



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