Pandigital SuperNova

Pandigital SuperNova

3 expert reviews - 0 user reviews

4.3/10
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We have collected 3 reviews of the Pandigital SuperNova. Experts rate Pandigital SuperNova 4.3/10. Reviewsor.com helps you find reviews, best prices, user reviews of the Pandigital SuperNova and Pandigital Touch Pad.

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Pandigital SuperNova Reviews

CNet

11/2011

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5.0/10

Pandigital SuperNova

With the Kindle Fire's $200 debut upon us, it's a good time to take stock of the tablet market and ask some questions. Is $200 a low-enough price to turn what might be an unappealing tablet into a product that would sell enough to turn a profit? My answer is no. What's more important than price is value. Specifically, what do you get for that $200? Which brings us to the Pandigital SuperNova, a $200 tablet with a low-resolution screen, running a non-Google certified version of Android 2.3 that...well, I think you can see where this is going, but keep reading to confirm your suspicions. If you're getting a $200 tablet you're hoping, at the very least, that it won't feel like one. The good news about the SuperNova is that it doesn't feel like it costs $200. The bad news is that it actually feels cheaper. The SuperNova has a dark-gray chassis and a very plasticky feel, reminiscent of a cheap toy. The body is relatively thin, measuring 0.5 inch in depth, but overall its dimensions are in line with what you'd expect from an 8-inch tablet and it's only slightly smaller than the Archos 80 G9. The SuperNova feels comfortable in our hands, with no pointy corners or jagged edges, and a thin, light, and smooth chassis. However, as light as it is, it feels hollow and, well, cheap.

LaptopMag

10/2011

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4.0/10

Pandigital SuperNova Review

Pandigital has launched its new flagship product, the Pandigital SuperNova, as a competitor of the Amazon Kindle Fire. Expanding on the positives of the 7-inch Pandigital Nova slate, the $229 SuperNova offers an 8-inch capacitive display, longer battery life, and improved cameras. But is that enough to distinguish itself as a front-runner in the budget slate space?One glance at the SuperNova, and its designation as a budget slate is all but confirmed. The tablet is swathed in cheap black plastic that is very effective at resisting smudges and fingerprints. The chassis seems sturdy enough, but there's nothing aesthetically appealing about the subtle striations on the front of the tablet doing their worst brushed metal impersonation.A gray Pandigital logo sits at the top of the slate next to the front-facing 1.3-megapixel camera. Four backlit physical buttons (Home, Menu, Back, and Search) of varying degrees of stiffness lie at the bottom. Buttons for power and volume are on the right, while a microSD card resides on the left. Micro HDMI, mini USB port, and power ports sit on top, while the headphone jack is inconveniently positioned on the bottom. The tablet's smooth rear is vacant save for a 3-MP camera and a speaker.

PCMAG

10/2011

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4.0/10

Pandigital SuperNova

Hack this tablet. Please. The Pandigital SuperNova could be the Amazon Kindle Fire for the geek crowd; a $229 list/$199 street, Android tablet with decent specs from a manufacturer that's completely open to people rooting, modding, and re-installing the operating system. There's just one catch: Pandigital has used a dim, low-res screen, which seriously reduces the appeal of this tablet. A thick, blocky device made of black plastic, the SuperNova tablet's casing feels flimsy. It's 6.1 by 8.4 by .4 inches and just over a pound in weight. A bigger problem: This is the worst capacitive touch screen I've ever seen. At least it's capacitive; I'll give it that. But it's dim and grainy at 8 inches and 800-by-600 resolution, and it has an absolutely hideous viewing angle. If you aren't looking at it straight on, it's barely visible, almost like it has a privacy film over it. It's going to take some work to get past this screen. Below the display, there are four Android hard buttons that are a bit wiggly and take some pressure to get pressed. There's a microSD card slot on the left-hand side of the tablet, a VGA camera on the front, and a 3.2-megapixel camera on the back. The SuperNova lasted for 6 hours and 36 minutes of video playback on one charge of its nonremovable battery, which is on par with other tablets this size.

Prices

Retailer Information Prices
Amazon Marketplace Pandigital SuperNova 8 Capacitive Touch Android Tablet - R80B400 $169
J&R Music and Computer World Pandigital SuperNova 8" Capacitive Touch Android Tablet - R80B400 $189.88