- Mar 24, 2011
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By Bill Detwiler
January 19, 2012, 2:00 PM PST
Takeaway: The Motorola Xyboard 10.1s excellent build quality and decent hardware are overshadowed by its high price and quad-core tablet competitors.
A year ago, Motorola combined high-end hardware with Android Honeycomb to create the Xooma solid, but slightly-overpriced, tablet. In December 2011, the company launched the Xyboarda thinner, lighter, more powerful Android tablet, which also has 4G connectivity.
In this weeks episode of Cracking Open, I show you whats inside the Motorola Xyboard 10.1 and explain why prospective buyers might want to wait a few months before picking one up.
January 19, 2012, 11:24 AM PST | Length:00:02:49
Our Xyboard 10.1 has a 1.2GHz Texas Instruments OMAP processor, 1GB of DDR2 SDRAM, 16GB flash storage, a 10.1″ IPS TFT active matrix LCD (1280 x 800), 802.11 b/g/n WLAN and Bluetooth 2.1 EDR, 1.3MP front-facing camera and 5MP rear-facing camera. The Xyboard 10.1 measures 6.8″ (H) x 9.9″ (W) x 0.4″ (D). It weighs 1.3 pounds.
Full teardown gallery: Cracking Open the Motorola Xyboard 10.1
Cracking Open observations
Our Xyboard 10.1 test machine has the following hardware:
January 19, 2012, 2:00 PM PST
Takeaway: The Motorola Xyboard 10.1s excellent build quality and decent hardware are overshadowed by its high price and quad-core tablet competitors.

In this weeks episode of Cracking Open, I show you whats inside the Motorola Xyboard 10.1 and explain why prospective buyers might want to wait a few months before picking one up.
January 19, 2012, 11:24 AM PST | Length:00:02:49
Our Xyboard 10.1 has a 1.2GHz Texas Instruments OMAP processor, 1GB of DDR2 SDRAM, 16GB flash storage, a 10.1″ IPS TFT active matrix LCD (1280 x 800), 802.11 b/g/n WLAN and Bluetooth 2.1 EDR, 1.3MP front-facing camera and 5MP rear-facing camera. The Xyboard 10.1 measures 6.8″ (H) x 9.9″ (W) x 0.4″ (D). It weighs 1.3 pounds.
Full teardown gallery: Cracking Open the Motorola Xyboard 10.1
Cracking Open observations
- Excellent build-quality: As with the Xoom and Droid Razr, Motorolas experience building high-quality devices comes through in the Xyboard. The tablet feels sturdy in your hands, has an efficient, clean interior, and sold construction.
Built-in 4G: Unlike the Xoom, which used a discreet 4G card, the Xyboards 4G chips are soldered directly to the motherboard.
- Processor switch: Instead of going with Nvidias latest Tegra processor, Motorola used a Texas Instrument OMAP processor in the Xyboard.
- Evolutionary, not revolutionary: For all intents and purposes, the Xyboard is an upgraded Xoom. The Xyboard has a faster processor, better display, and comes in a 64GB model, but both have a similar internal design, come with Android Honeycomb, and have a premium price tag. If Motorola had released the Xyboard six months ago, I wouldnt be knocking the Xyboard so hard. But with the iPad 3 just around the corner and Asus quad-core Transformer Prime already on the market, the Xyboards hardware will soon be, if it isnt already, outdated.
- Overpriced: And when you consider the devices high price, $699 for a 16GB model without a 4G contract, I think consumers should wait to see what Apple and other tablet makers release in the coming months before buying a Xyboard.
Our Xyboard 10.1 test machine has the following hardware:
- 1.2GHz dual-core Texas Instruments OMAP processor
- 1GB DDR2 SDRAM
- 16GB flash storage
- 10.1″ IPS TFT active matrix display (1280 x 800)
- 5MP rear-facing camera
- 1.3MP front-facing camera
- 3.7V, 7,000 mAh Li-Ion battery
- IR Transmitter
- Samsung K3PE7E700M-XGC1 4Gb LPDDR2 RAM
- Maxim MAXQ610 16-Bit Microcontroller with Infrared Module
- Qualcomm RTR8600 multi-band/mode RF transceiver for LTE bands
- TriQuint TQM7M5013 Quad-Band GSM / GPRS / EDGE-Linear Power Amplifier Module
- Avago A2FI140 048345
- Unknown Motorola IC? (MOT 14621 011-R 1F746-2)
- Unknown IC (77701-2 72827.1 1137 MX)