In the past year, product review and rating magazine Consumer Reports had a troubled relationship with Apple products and its users: since the release of the iPhone 4 on AT&T in June 2010 and the whole “Antennagate” debacle that saw Apple issue a press conference to clarify that the issue was common to every smartphone and announce the free Bumper program, Consumer Reports couldn’t recommend the phone even when a) it was topping the publication’s rankings and b) Apple released the Verizon iPhone which, according to many, doesn’t come with any signal attenuation issues. They, however, recommended bumpers. It was pretty clear that Consumer Reports suddenly had a “thing” for not recommending Apple’s iPhones anymore, but we’re not here to speculate on the reasons or the testing methods they use.
The good news for Apple is, Consumer Reports today announced that the new iPad 2 tops the magazine’s tablet rankings, beating other devices in test labs. Competitors are approaching quickly, though, and Consumer Reports thinks that other tablets will soon give people more choice between different models:
So far, Apple is leading the tablet market in both quality and price, which is unusual for a company whose products are usually premium priced,” said Paul Reynolds, Electronics Editor at Consumer Reports. “However, it’s likely we’ll see more competitive pricing in tablets as other models begin to hit the market.
In their tests, the iPad 2 sported longer battery life than any other tablet: (from Archos, Dell, Motorola, Samsung, and ViewSonic)
The largest gap in performance among the 10 tested tablets was evident in Consumer Reports’ battery-life test, measured by playing the same video clip continually on each tablet and timing how long it played until the battery ran down. The top-scoring iPad 2 lasted 12.2 hours, but the lowest-rated tablet, the Archos 70 Internet Tablet, $270, lasted just 3.8 hours.
Tech specs, of course, aren’t everything when it comes to a personal device like a tablet, and Apple knows this very well. Still, if you’re really interested in Consumer Reports’ take on the whole subject, check out the full press release after the break. [via BGR]
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