CharlesLewis
Android Enthusiast
I've tried a couple of tablets in the past (Kindle Fire and Asus Transformer) and haven't been satisfied. The Kindle's problem is obvious; it just wasn't designed for what I wanted. But the Asus looked like a winner to replace my laptop when it dies, except for problems with some web sites.
Using Mint and Gmail, for example, I found some of the features I need are not available. If I access Mint on my laptop, I can adjust budget categories, but when I tried it on the tablet, no dice. And Gmail on the tablet doesn't support emails to groups I have set up (on the laptop, I can type the group name and it expands to all of the email addresses; on the tablet, it simply shows up as an invalid address). To make matters worse, the GroupU app on my phone didn't seem to be available for the tablet.
I followed the instructions to tell the web browser (and I tried several) to appear as a full browser, not a mobile, but apparently some web sites are just too smart to be fooled.
I haven't experimented in the last six months and am wondering if any of the newer tablets have found a way to avoid these problems?
Using Mint and Gmail, for example, I found some of the features I need are not available. If I access Mint on my laptop, I can adjust budget categories, but when I tried it on the tablet, no dice. And Gmail on the tablet doesn't support emails to groups I have set up (on the laptop, I can type the group name and it expands to all of the email addresses; on the tablet, it simply shows up as an invalid address). To make matters worse, the GroupU app on my phone didn't seem to be available for the tablet.
I followed the instructions to tell the web browser (and I tried several) to appear as a full browser, not a mobile, but apparently some web sites are just too smart to be fooled.
I haven't experimented in the last six months and am wondering if any of the newer tablets have found a way to avoid these problems?