Samsung's latest TouchWiz user interface for Android 3.1 offers some useful enhancements
to the Galaxy Tab 10.1, along with some unwelcome redundancy.
Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 tablet owners are poised to receive a free software update tomorrow, bringing new apps, new features, and a new user interface. The over-the-air update comes by way of Samsung's TouchWiz software, which puts the company's unique spin on Google's Android 3.1, and further distinguishes its product from the herd of similarly spec'd Honeycomb tablets on the market.
This morning we outlined many of the new features users can expect, including a revamped Media Hub storefront, a new Music Hub store, and Live Panel widgets.
After getting our hands on an early release, we feel confident declaring the update a worthwhile improvement to an already great tablet. You can see many of the new features for yourself below:
Samsung has also customized Android 3.1 with a tray of Mini Apps, which can be accessed by
swiping upward from the bottom of the screen regardless of the currently running app.
The Tab's app tray now offers more preinstalled software, including a photo editor, Music Hub store,
Social Hub, Photo Editor and more.
Of the multiple keyboard options included on the Tab 10.1, users can now choose a tablet-optimized
Swype keyboard that allows users to input text by dragging their finger across groups of letters.
Now for the bad news. In Samsung's zeal to put its mark on Android it has created many apparently redundant apps. Open up the app list and you'll find Samsung's email app alongside Google's Gmail, Samsung eBooks next to Google Books and Amazon Kindle, Samsung Music Hub next to Google Music, and a Samsung-designed app labeled 'Video' next to a Google-designed app labeled 'Videos'. As a reviewer I can empathize with Samsung's instinct to offer something beyond the stock Honeycomb experience, but I fear that all these overlapping apps may confuse new users expecting something closer to Apple's "it just works" philosophy.
Still, whatever minor complaints I may have, the software update itself gets an unequivocal thumbs-up, and further carves out the Galaxy Tab 10.1's place among its Android Honeycomb competition.






