When it comes to Tablets, it is undeniable that Apple’s best-selling iPad takes more than half of its market share slice.
The innovative iOS Tablet has confiscated the world by storm and has become somewhat a household name for Tablets.
However,Android Tablets exist and are prepared to provide what they claim to be more than what iOS Tablets can provide.
But does getting Android-based Tablets a good decision when the iOS-based one is the most popular? Here are just some of the advantages of getting an Android Tablet rather than the typical iOS-based iPad.
Fully Customizable: This is probably the feature that most Android users boast about. Android and iOS are different types of operating systems-series of codes that were put together to make the Tablets work.
But what makes Android Tablets different from the iPad is that the former’s operating system is based on an open-source system, whereas the latter uses an exclusive one.
How does this make Android better? An open-source operating system permits full customization of the Tablet’s features and applications. The stock color theme is too bland for your taste? You could flash a new one.
The stock loader is not giving you enough options? Install a custom loader with hundreds of themes and customization options. The list goes on. This just cannot be done with iPad app.
What you see is what you get, and, as the long line of iPads has demonstrated, what you get is something that all of the former Tablets have also gotten.
Apple rarely strays from its trademark interface, sticking to everything familiar. If it has proven to work before, they are not changing it. With an Android Tablet, however, customers can change the experience to suit their taste.
Rooting Versus Jailbreaking: The second advantage of Android Tablets is that gaining access to its core functions and the program is easy to do and without any major violations at that.
To customize stock themes and interface, the consumer must gain access to the main codes-the “root” of the program, so to speak.
This is what is known in Android circles as “rooting” – getting into the primal codes and gaining full administrative access. Similarly, such a thing is possible with the iOS’ iPad.