Article 6MPGZ Get up to $450 off a Google Pixel Tablet when you trade in your old iPad or Android slab

Get up to $450 off a Google Pixel Tablet when you trade in your old iPad or Android slab

by
Will Shanklin
from Engadget is a web magazine with obsessive daily coverage of everything new in gadgets and consumer electronics on (#6MPGZ)

Google has an offer for iPad owners who are curious about the Pixel Tablet. The company has a trade-in promotion that covers at least the cost of the Pixel Tablet for iPad owners - if not more, depending on which model you have. It works with Samsung tablets as well, but those trade-in values are lower. The Pixel Tablet costs $399 (without deals) for 128GB storage and no charging speaker dock.

The promo works with iPads as old as the sixth-generation model from six years ago. For that, Google will give you a surprising $399 - matching the Pixel Tablet's base cost. That iPad model only cost $329 in 2018, so Google is overpaying by a lot for that one.

However, Google balances that with much worse offers for modern, high-end iPads. For example, the 12.9-inch iPad Pro with M2 chip (2022) only nets $450. Until this week (when the company launched a new iPad Pro and iPad Air), Apple sold that model for $1,099, so we don't recommend that trade-in price. If you're done with a high-end iPad from the last few years, you can likely sell it on places like eBay, Craigslist or Swappa for significantly more.

ebf3dad0-0e34-11ef-9bbd-33ddc50aa1a0Sam Rutherford for Engadget

The Pixel Tablet stands out from its Android-running competitors by working with a charging speaker base that lets the device double as a smart display, making it much more versatile. Engadget's Cherlynn Low thought that part overshadowed its core functionality as a tablet. As a smart display, the Pixel Tablet mostly shines. It has a useful dashboard, an easy-to-read interface and impressive audio quality," she wrote in our full review.

The tablet has a 10.95-inch display with a 2,560 x 1,600 resolution (276 PPI) and runs on a Google Tensor G2 chip. It weighs slightly over a pound and is lighter than Android rivals like the Galaxy Tab S8 and OnePlus Pad. Its back has a nano-ceramic coating that gives it a premium, glass-like feeling that you may not expect from a $399 device.

Accessories are where the Pixel Tablet stands out the most. Google's Pixel Tablet Case, sold separately for $79, has a built-in kickstand that makes the slate more versatile. What I love about the kickstand-hanger-combo is that it allows you to place the Tablet pretty much anywhere," Low wrote in Engadget's review. So when I want to hang it off a kitchen cabinet to follow along with a recipe video or keep watching Love Is Blind for example, I can. And though the 2,560 x 1,600 LCD panel isn't as vibrant as the OLED on Samsung's Galaxy Tabs, it still produced crisp details and colorful images."

The star accessory is Google's $129 charging speaker dock, which you can use without removing the kickstand case. This product transforms the tablet into a smart display, potentially voiding the need for other smart home control hubs. The speaker has impressive sound for its size, making it easier to hear its responses if you aren't right next to it.

Google's fine print notes that the trade-in value will be finalized after receiving the tablet, and it could be lower if it determines the condition doesn't match what you selected during the trade-in process. The refund will be processed on the credit card you used to buy the Pixel Tablet (or through Google Store credit if you return your purchase during that time).

Follow @EngadgetDeals on Twitter and subscribe to the Engadget Deals newsletter for the latest tech deals and buying advice.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/get-up-to-450-off-a-google-pixel-tablet-when-you-trade-in-your-old-ipad-or-android-slab-192718892.html?src=rss
External Content
Source RSS or Atom Feed
Feed Location https://www.engadget.com/rss.xml
Feed Title Engadget is a web magazine with obsessive daily coverage of everything new in gadgets and consumer electronics
Feed Link https://www.engadget.com/
Feed Copyright copyright Yahoo 2024
Reply 0 comments