In the world of tablets, there is rarely a time when we are presented with excellent options from Android in response to Apple’s ever-increasing market share. The term “electronic commerce” refers to the sale of goods and services over the internet.
The Lenovo Tab M10 Plus, which competes with Samsung’s Tab A8, is one contender. Because it is priced slightly lower, you might be mistaken in thinking that the tablet isn’t all that exciting. But you’d be wrong. The Tab M10 Plus, with its 2K resolution display and thin bezels, is an appealing package for anyone who wants to consume multimedia or even get into drawing.
The Lenovo Tab M10 Plus features a 10.61-inch IPS display with 2K resolution, slim bezels, an 85% screen-to-body ratio, and a brightness of 400 nits. The Tab M10 Plus also has quad speakers and Dolby Atmos support, making it ideal for streaming music and watching TV shows and movies. The Tab M10 Plus measures 7.45 mm in height and weighs 465 grammes, and it has 8-megapixel cameras on both the front and back.
The Lenovo Tab M10 Plus features a 60 Hz, 20001200 FHD 10.6″ inch display with 220 ppi. The display is razor-sharp, crisp, and clear, with vibrant colour reproduction from all angles. We’ve had fun watching videos on Netflix, YouTube, and other apps. The Lenovo Tab M10 Plus also includes a Reading Mode with greyscale and muted colours.
If you are a person who take notes or like to draw using tables, the Tab M10 Plus is compatible with Lenovo’s Precision Pen 2. Lenovo included the Instant Memo notes application, which allows you to quickly write and draw notes. The Precision Pen, according to Lenovo, has 4,096 levels of pressure sensitivity. The MediaTek Helios G80 processor powers the Lenovo Tab M10 Plus. What does this mean in practise?
To start, your regular browning, streaming, emails, social media activities are completely fine, and we found no issues at all using multiple apps running at the same time at all, although you could feel the low ram configuration limit when switching from one app to another. Heavy games, on the other hand, caused some stuttering, which was to be expected given the configuration we had. Lighter games performed much better and ran continuously with no frame drops.