Dell's latest 8-inch Android tablet is a statement product. Hey world, it says: remember that company that made crappy laptops you hated seven years ago? Well, it can make great things now. Beautiful things. Thinner-than-the-iPad things. Things that redefine what a tablet is for, that add something to your life other than just another screen.
This tablet, the Venue 8 7000, is designed to make an impression, to wow you the minute you take it out of the box. Then, with its fancy new Intel processor, its unique accessories, and its three-camera array that can see the world in strange new ways, it's supposed to blow you away with what it can do.
Well, Dell nailed at least one thing: it's beautiful. Big, clunky name; thin, sleek device. At 6mm, it's impossibly thin, even thinner than the iPhone 6. And at just over a half of a pound, there's a distinct feeling to the Venue 8 7000 that you're just holding a screen in your hand. It's even more impressive that the tablet feels sturdy despite such waif measurements; the sharp edges and rounded corners of the aluminum body are strong. Even when powered off, the gray and black rectangle looks good just sitting on your desk.
That screen-in-your-hand feeling only becomes more pronounced when you turn the thing on. The Venue's 8.4-inch, 2560 x 1600 OLED display is crisp, clear, and bright, even if it does have that Alice in Wonderland oversaturated look to it. Even more impressive than the ridiculous resolution or eye-popping vibrancy is that there are basically no bezels around the screen. Big bezels usually make a screen feel smaller and more cramped, but these slim ones make everything feel more immediate. It's gorgeous, even if I would prefer something with a little less pop and a little more color accuracy.
