To figure out your needs, ask yourself these questions:
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What is your budget? Are you willing to stretch it a bit if you get a significantly better device for a little more?
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What are you planning to do with the device?
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Make phone calls? – you will need a SIM card enabled device like a smartphone or tablet
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Take photographs?
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Check mail?
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Send messages – SMS and\or an online messaging service?
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Browse the internet? On the go, or at home?
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Create documents? – smartphones and tablets are still quite limited in this area
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Read documents and e-books? – a large screen with high resolution screen will help
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Use maps and navigation capabilities? On the go? – GPS will be required
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Watch movies?
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Play games? Demanding ones or casual ones? – the hardware will have to be fairly powerful for a good experience
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Edit images and videos? Casual or serious?
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Make video calls? – a front facing camera will be required
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Listen to music? At home or on the go? Radio or MP3?
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Play CDs and DVDs?
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How large a device are you willing to put up with? This will affect both usability and portability.
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Do you need expandable storage?
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How comfortable are you using an on screen keyboard?
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Are you willing to spend time tinkering with the device to improve your experience?
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Do you care if your device does not get the latest OS updates, but just serves your needs as it is?
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Do you plan to install additional software on the device, purchasing them if necessary?
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How important is battery life – are you willing to charge the device at least once a day?
Once you answer them, you will see that you can’t have it all. There will be trade-offs, and you will have to evaluate the areas where you are willing to compromise. Here are a few tips to help you decide:
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If you don’t have a smartphone yet, get it – you’ll be able to do lots more with it as it’ll be with you all the time.
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Android is the smartphone OS to go for if you are a big user of Google services like Gmail, Picasa, Maps etc. and also like to tinker with your devices.
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Windows Phone provides a very good out of box experience with very little setup needed, and the phones are available at pretty attractive prices.
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The iPhone is definitely nice to have, but the Android and Windows Phone alternatives are much better value propositions.
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If you are serious about editing documents (Word\Excel\PowerPoint), you still require a laptop as the smartphones are too small for editing and the tablet software is not completely compatible with the document formats.
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On a tight budget (below Rs 20,000) – AMD ones and not the Intel Atom ones.
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For portability on a higher budget (above Rs 40,000), consider the Ultrabooks as they are significantly lighter than regular laptops but just as powerful.
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Video and photo editing is possible on smartphones, tablets and laptops, but for heavy duty editing, you are better off with the laptop as these tasks require a good amount of computing horsepower.
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Tablets are much better than laptops, netbooks and smartphones for watching movies, reading e-books and internet browsing.
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Apple has a definitive edge due to its better app ecosystem, albeit at a single size – 10″. The iPad is priced quite reasonably in this area compared to its Android counterparts.
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Smaller tablets are lighter and better than their larger cousins for reading while handheld.
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If you are considering Android, then definitely look for the tablets with Ice Cream Sandwich (Android 4.0) or higher as the user experience is much improved than the older versions.
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Just to add to the fun, Windows 8 will bring with it a multitude of tablets and hybrid devices (laptop + tablet combo), and the next year should completely overhaul the laptop market. So, if you are looking for a laptop, wait a few months. And, in case you thought the iPad was a bit big for your tastes, but wanted an Apple device, there might even be a smaller iPad announced by the end of the year. Revolutionary enough?