Motorola Tablet Revealed By Android Creator

Android creator Andy Rubin showed a new Motorola tablet that runs the future Honeycomb version of Android

Motorola is to join the tablet race with a new device that will run Google’s next-generation Android operating system (codenamed Honeycomb), which will apparently be optimised for tablets.

Android creator Andy Rubin demonstrated the device 6 December on stage at the D: Dive Into Mobile show in San Francisco.

The thin, light-looking machine appeared to be closer to the 9.7-inch screen size of Apple’s iPad than the 7-inch display of Samsung’s Galaxy Tab, though no such dimensions were confirmed.

Motorola Confirmation

A Motorola spokesperson told eWEEK “we are working on both a 7- and 10-inch Android tablet and intend to introduce a tablet in the first half of 2011.”

“We want to make sure that any tablet we deliver is compelling and competitive in the marketplace, and we will only deliver a tablet when that occurs.”

Rubin did confirm the device features a “dual-core Nvidia 3D processor,” which should provide solid 3D graphics for gaming and multimedia apps on the tablet.

This makes sense; Rubin and his team just introduced Android 2.3, the Gingerbread build, which is slated to appear first on the Samsung Nexus S 16 December from T-Mobile and Best Buy.

Rubin called up the tablet screen quickly using virtual icons on the screen – there are no hard, physical buttons on the device – briefly displaying Google Talk video chat icons before launching the next version of Google Maps for Android.

3D Processor

Slated to launch on Android handsets within days, the new Google Maps app utilises the tablet’s 3D graphics processor to show buildings and their shadows as the user zooms zooms to ground level. Rubin used two fingers to tilt the 3D map of San Francisco on the screen and rotate the view.

“These guys really know 3D and have been great to work with,” Rubin said of Nvidia.

The new Google Maps for Android app, Rubin explained, employs vectors instead of pre-rendered tiles to dynamically render content.

Previous iterations of the app feature preset tiles, which created latency when users navigated around the app.

With the new Maps, content will be drawn in real time on smartphones and eventually, tablets. Users will be able to download their entire route in a few short seconds. Rubin said this app will be available on  platforms such as Apple’s iOS in the future.

Some Way Off

Rubin also showed off Gmail on the Motorola tablet. This app resembled the Gmail for iPad app, with messages in the left pane and email content on the right.

Rubin confirmed the Motorola tablet, the first for the company, wasn’t “due out for awhile now.”

If the Motorola tablet does appear in 2011 as expected, it will launch nearly a year after Apple blew open the gates to the tablet kingdom with its iPad.

Samsung followed the iPad with its Galaxy Tab. While hardly the first Android tablet in a sea of machines from Archos, ViewSonic and others, the Tab is the first significant Android tablet.

The machine, which Samsung made available from all four major US carriers, has sold more than 1 million units to date, buoyed by strong US Black Friday sales.

Motorola, which just saw its Android handset lead eclipsed by Samsung in the US, will have its work cut out for it trying to catch up.