![]() I wanted a tablet with a fast CPU for image processing and fractal art creation. I also had a dream list above and beyond these minimum requirements. Lastly I required the replacement's screen be similar in size and provide improved or comparable image detail and color fidelity compared to the 9. I wanted the replacement to have a recent Android OS, more RAM than the 2GB in my old Nexus and also support additional micro SD storage. My aged Nexus 9 unexpectedly died in July and I had an immediate need for a replacement (Android) tablet. On crowded San Francisco public transit I've switched from e-reading on the Nexus 9 to the smaller Dell Venue 7 Windows tablet (running Windows 10) and found 7" a far preferable size for reading books.I believe in homescreen widgets, particularly the Simple Calendar Widget Pro, and the use screen overlaying Swapps app launcher.The 7-8" tablet form-factor satisfies my primary tablet use sweet spot: e-reader, image processor, email, internet media consumption.I prefer unaltered vanilla Android but also love HTC Sense.Me: An Android smartphone user since Froyo and Android tablet user since Gingerbread: I have good news: the Asus ZenPad Z8s and Huawei MediaPad M5 Pro are worthy Nexus 9 replacements deserving your consideration. ![]() They're going to have to pry that Nexus tablet out of your cold hard hands before you'd replace it with some cheap garbage tablet running on Android Marshmallow (or worse, Lollipop). You want a replacement tablet but you've looked around and been dissatisfied. You're willing to replace it, but you've either hoped for Google to release the Nexus 9B or for Nvidia to release a follow-up Shield Tablet. If you're like me, you've happily owned a Google Nexus 9 tablet for the last few years.
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