Oct 04, 2016 01:08 PM
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Although you'll have to shop around to find one, Nexus 10 prices have fallen considerably since launch and if you can find one new you can pick it up for around £200. Otherwise, it could still be worth hunting one down second hand or refurbished if you want to see what Android Lollipop feels like without buying a high-end smartphone or tablet.
Coming up to its fourth birthday, the Google Nexus 10 has definitely stood the test of time and still holds its own, even for a tablet launched way back in November 2012. A lot has happened in the time since, we now live in a post-Brexit world and superhero movies are now getting a bit stale, yet the Nexus 10 is still almost as reliable as ever. Even if it has since been superseded by the Nexus 9, thanks to a partnership with HTC and has been removed from the Play Store altogether, it's still a great purchase if you can pick it up for cheap.
Apple blew pretty much any other device, be it tablets or desktop monitors, completely out of the water when the famed Retina display was first introduced to the iPad 3 in early 2012. Since then, it's been a story of companies competing for the biggest and best screens to date. In fact, it took almost a year for a proper competitor to rear its head, with Google and Samsung teaming up to introduce the Google Nexus 10 to the world