Mobile Technology

ARNOVA FamilyPad 13.3-inch tablet gets UK launch

ARNOVA FamilyPad 13.3-inch tablet gets UK launch
ARCHOS has launched a 13.3-inch tablet designed for the family called the FamilyPad
ARCHOS has launched a 13.3-inch tablet designed for the family called the FamilyPad
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The FamilyPad runs on Android 4.0 with a range of pre-installed multi-player digital board games specially selected by ARCHOS
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The FamilyPad runs on Android 4.0 with a range of pre-installed multi-player digital board games specially selected by ARCHOS
The FamilyPad features a 13.3-inch, 1280 x 800 resolution, 10-point capacitive touchscreen panel capable of full HD video playback
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The FamilyPad features a 13.3-inch, 1280 x 800 resolution, 10-point capacitive touchscreen panel capable of full HD video playback
ARCHOS has launched a 13.3-inch tablet designed for the family called the FamilyPad
3/3
ARCHOS has launched a 13.3-inch tablet designed for the family called the FamilyPad
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In case you can't already sense it, the festive season is almost upon us. Not too long ago, in addition to exchanging gifts with loved ones and eating and drinking way too much, this time of year would see family members gather around the table to play board games or browse old photos with the rest of the family, or sit down and watch a seasonal movie together. ARCHOS has brought such activities well and truly up to date, with the launch of a family-sized tablet named the FamilyPad.

Released under the ARCHOS budget-friendly ARNOVA brand, the FamilyPad features a 13.3-inch, 1280 x 800 resolution, 10-point capacitive touchscreen panel capable of full HD video playback at 30 frames per second. It's not quite in the same monster display league as the 20-inch, Win8 Tabletop PC from Sony, but it is priced a good deal cheaper.

The FamilyPad runs on Android 4.0 with a range of pre-installed multi-player digital board games specially selected by ARCHOS
The FamilyPad runs on Android 4.0 with a range of pre-installed multi-player digital board games specially selected by ARCHOS

It runs on Android 4.0 (ICS) with a range of pre-installed multi-player digital board games specially selected by ARCHOS. Processing power comes courtesy of an ARM Cortex A8 running at 1 GHz, supported by 1 GB RAM and 8 GB of onboard solid state storage (with microSD expansion). There's a 720p (2-megapixel) front-facing camera for HD webchat and a similarly-specced snapper to the rear, built-in Wi-Fi, one micro-USB port, a 3.5-mm audio jack and mini-HDMI out.

As you might expect from an ARCHOS product, APE, OGG and FLAC join the more common MP3 and WAV audio file formats. The FamilyPad sports built-in stereo speakers, too. Its Li-pol battery is claimed to give up to 10 hours of video playback per charge or six days on standby, and the tablet can be placed on the included display stand for comfortably watching movies in the den, reading recipes in the kitchen or flipping through the family photo album on the coffee table.

The ARNOVA FamilyPad will be initially released in the UK next month for £274.99 (US$441). We're still waiting for confirmation of U.S. availability and (actual) pricing.

Product page: FamilyPad

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5 comments
5 comments
Atul Malhotra
Is one supposed to hold it with one hand and browse with the other ? I would be very interested in knowing how much this weighs
If its anything beyond 650-700 grams, it will be real pain as a tablet. As a desktop or tabtop screen this is too small
What is Archos thinking ?
Eddie Dudley
It is a great name to have Familypad but at still trying to figure out the advantage over an ipad or samsung galaxy. With the new mini tablets coming out , yes I agree with the prior post that its too bulky.
VoiceofReason
I like the idea. I'd have to see it and hold it. I hate the smaller tablets. My eyes aren't getting any younger and I appreciate the added real estate.
Not sure about the OS though. My biggest complaint would be bloatware. Like a cell phone, many times you can't get rid of the crap the manufacturer puts on without bricking the device.
Bruce H. Anderson
Years ago I thought it would be cool to have a permanent display on the kitchen wall that would function as a calendar/notepad/etc. Whenever someone came home, it would be there to check. I was thinking a good name would be Kitchen Window (a nod to Microsoft). With these larger tablets such a thing is now with us. A wall mount with a charging station would work well, and with enough battery life and integrated easel you could remove it to use as a recipe book, or watch a video, or do Skype. It would be portable in that it could be easily be moved from place to place, but not necessarily something you would want to carry around.
cellur111
Such a bad tablet, bad specs for a new 13.3 inch tablet, my Motorola xoom has the same and some better specs than this and its over a year old.