It’s tough not to adore Barnes & Noble’s Nook Color, generally if you’re amongst those who’d rsther than demeanour during content upon a peculiarity backlit shade than an e-paper display. Not usually did you suffer a e-book reader when you initial reviewed it, though it keeps removing improved interjection to updates to a dark Android core as well as a new further of a own app store finish with Pandora as well as Angry Birds. And whilst there’s additionally a decent bundled web browser as well as song player, it’s not a program which you similar to a many — it’s a hardware, as well as quite a worth proposition.
See, $250 ($200 upon sale) buys you a beautiful 7-inch 1024×600 pixel capacitive IPS row with glorious contrariety as well as observation angles, an 800MHz TI OMAP 3621 CPU, a PowerVR SGX 530 GPU, 512MB RAM, WiFi b/g/n, Bluetooth, 8GB of built-in storage, an accelerometer, as well as a microSD label container — all wrapped in an tasteful 12mm skinny package. Sure, there’s no 3G radio, no camera, no microphone, no ambient light sensor, as well as no haptic feedback, though notwithstanding a lower-end specs, a Nook Color only begs to be incited in to a full blown Android tablet.
And that’s only what you did, by installing CyanogenMod 7 upon Barnes & Noble’s tone reader, finish with Android 2.3.3 (Gingerbread) as well as a full apartment of Google apps. Take a demeanour during a screenshots art studio next as well as strike a mangle for a hands-on video as well as impressions.
CyanogenMod 7 upon a Nook Color hands-on
