It's not old hardware. It's one of the fastest chipsets right now. Like I said, from Qualcomm only Snapdragon 600 and 800 are newer and they're just updated Krait cores. The cheapest devices running them are above the 500$ range and the difference is maybe 30% in CPU performance, while GPUs are the same. It's a win-win because they manage to keep the price low while offering great performance. If you want the fastest there's Xperia Z Ultra with Snapdragon 800, but it costs 700$ and still it's behind the new Nexus 7 in most other areas. The performance difference between the XZ and new Nexus 7 is still way smaller than the difference between the first N7 and the new N7.
Trouncing? That Snapdragon runs circles around the Mini processor. It will run circles around the Apple A7 too. There's really no comparison. The thing with UI smoothness is not a matter of hardware but the way OS works. It's the single biggest issue people have with Android. A single core phone running Windows Phone will have smoother experience as well because iOS and WP stop everything to make the UI render smoothly so it appears snappy. The moment you touch the screen 100% of resources are relocated to make scrolling smooth, because that's how newbies tell whether a device is "fast" or not.
The point is that since Jelly Bean Android is smooth enough to offer comfortable and lag free experience while quick CPUs mostly reduce the time needed to do what you need to do. You'll launch apps faster and in app menus and their functionality will work faster. I think it matters less whether you'll have a couple dropped frames when scrolling.
I agree. It's best to play with all devices you're considering. I thought the Ipad Mini was fine until I started playing with it and compared it to my N7 and the normal Ipad.
You buy any compatible wireless charger and put the tablet on it to charge.
I made a mistake and confused the hardware for a second. When I said "trouncing" I meant the Mini is trouncing the 7, not the 7.2 Of course the 7.2 would be better than the Mini. I meant the 7, not 7.2.
I know that I'm not getting the best hardware in either the Mini or the 7...Or the 7.2, compared to the, obviously, more expensive tablets out there, like the Sony you mentioned.
And I think I would say that I would much rather have responsiveness over the quickness of performing the tasks Android is supposedly better at. My Touchpad was great when switching between my PowerPoints and my PDF of the book I was going to reference. But when scrolling through both documents, I noticed the lag. I had to readjust a good bit, because I was expecting the scrolling to be as fluid as my finger motion was. It was a bit annoying.
While I have been mentioning the current Mini a lot, I don't think I would buy that edition of it, and instead wait for the update that is rumored to be due out later this year. Which is where my waiting game comes into play. It'll give me some time to learn the 7.2 (never used the 7) and then see the Mini 2 and hope for both a screen upgrade (Really hoping for Retina, otherwise I'd be a bit disappointed, even if they improved it a slight bit like to finally play 720p content) and an upgrade to the chipset.
A friend of mine said it should be on par with the current iPad in performance, still staying a step behind it so as not to cannibalize sales, much like the iPod Touch is behind the 5, and maybe even the 4S as well.
Well, the main thing is the tablet is sold and I have the money for an N7.2 as we speak. If I wanted the Mini 2, I'm sure I'd need at least $100 more which could be covered by me selling my shit BlackBerry and my economic Linksys WRT120N router. I don't plan on buying a tablet beyond the $400 price range, but I may even consider refurbished current-iPads with Retina. That would be at the very bottom of the list, just above not buying a tablet at all.
Someone asked about my MBP. My C2D, 4GB of RAM, 250GB HDD MBP. I threw out the number $1300-1500. They didn't seem shocked. I could negotiate down to $1300 and still be happy. I paid $200 less for it, lol. I could skip the tablet as a whole and get about a $1500 pool of cash and make a run at the Retina MBPs when they are refreshed with Haswell.
I'm getting ahead of myself here. I got exams, can't be worried about this shit, but.... I can dream, right?