Thursday, June 20th 2024

Never Miss a Beat with Lenovo Tab Plus, a Music Lover's Dream Tablet with Eight Speakers

Today Lenovo introduced the Lenovo Tab Plus, an entertainment tablet that delivers an outstanding sonar experience with Eight JBL speakers with Hi-fi matrix structure tuned by Dolby Atmos. Designed for music lovers, the 11.5-inch tablet complements its premium sound with a 2K display for vivid visuals and an adjustable stand for optimal enjoyment from every angle.

"Tablets have evolved to meet the needs of people transitioning between work, study and play, offering a balanced combination of mobility and performance," said Tony Chen, vice president of Tablets, Intelligent Devices Group, Lenovo. "As the tablet market recovers, customers can expect increased Lenovo product differentiation through features that address their specific demands. The Lenovo Tab Plus is a prime example of a well-rounded tablet that delivers premium sound for a truly immersive entertainment experience."
Inspiration in Every Beat
An essential device for music lovers, the Lenovo Tab Plus transforms virtually any location into a personal entertainment sanctuary with 26 W of crisp stereo sound. Featuring Eight JBL Hi-fi speakers, including four matrix tweeters and four force-balanced woofers housed in 4 speaker boxes totaling 22 cc, the tablet brings any bedroom or living room to life with deeper, more pronounced bass and clearer treble. In addition, it is tuned by Dolby Atmos and supports high-res audio of 24-bit and 96 kHz frequency when using headphones.

To maximize the tablet's functionality and audio system designed and engineered with JBL, the Lenovo Tab Plus transforms into a Bluetooth speaker for seamless audio anywhere, streamed from your portable device like a smartphone, and comes with an integrated kickstand for up to 175 degrees of viewing flexibility. For the utmost sonar customization, it comes with a personalized app volume control that lets you fine-tune audio settings. With the app volume control, the tablet automatically cranks up the volume when your favorite music or podcast app is open, lowers the sound when a browser is chosen, and more.

A Complete Non-Stop Entertainment Experience
The Lenovo Tab Plus delivers a complete entertainment experience, matching its sonar prowess with a 11.5-inch 2K TUV-certified display with 90 Hz of refresh rate that complements the crisp sounds and heart pumping bass with vibrant images and evocative graphics. A TUV-certified screen undergoes testing to ensure low-blue light and flicker-free for optimal eye comfort. To ensure non-stop entertainment on the go, the tablet is packed with an 8600 mAh battery capable of streaming up to 12 hours and 45 W fast charging that reaches full power in only 90 minutes.

Lenovo's latest entertainment tablet is powered by a MediaTek Helio G99 processor, offers up to 256 GB of built-in storage with an option to expand via MicroSD card (sold separately) and is IP52 water and dust resistant. It features a built-in Immersive Reading Mode that softens the screen to simulate the color matrix of a book's pages and can transform into a digital photo frame or clock via Standby Mode. Standby Mode is automatically activated when the Lenovo Tab Plus is not in use and charging in landscape mode with the kickstand.

The Lenovo Tab Plus safeguards users with a privacy dashboard that lets the owner manage permissions, will offer upgrades for 2 years with 4 years of security patches until June 2028, and is available with Lenovo Premium Care for personalized technical support and Lenovo Accidental Damage Protection One for safety against accidental drops or spills. The tablet is compatible with the Lenovo Tab Pen Plus, the Lenovo 68 W USB-C Wall Charger, the Lenovo Multi-Device Wireless Keyboard, and a protective sleeve made with Dupont Tyvek material and PU leather.

Pricing and Availability
Lenovo Tab Plus is now available in select global markets with an expected starting price of €279 (including VAT) and $289.99.
Source: Lenovo
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32 Comments on Never Miss a Beat with Lenovo Tab Plus, a Music Lover's Dream Tablet with Eight Speakers

#1
P4-630
TheLostSwedeoday Lenovo
Missing T....
Posted on Reply
#2
Makaveli
not a bad tablet for the price.

I own the Lenovo P12 Pro and its been great so far.
Posted on Reply
#3
FreedomEclipse
~Technological Technocrat~
P4-630Missing T....
@TheLostSwede

Everything alright there? :laugh:


Im a little dubious about the sound quality. They've upgraded tablet speakers with laptop speakers. My HP laptop has speakers that are tuned by Bang&Olaughson and it still sounds a bit mediocre.
Posted on Reply
#4
bug
I have a tablet from Lenovo. I can't stand their launcher and, to my surprise, I discovered Google's is not an option (not available in the store). I went with Nova, but it seems crash-prone :(
Posted on Reply
#5
_JP_
Finally, feature-devices of some sort!
No, I'm not aching for nostalgia! :p But in the mobile device space it used to be the driving factor for technology to have a model that made X really good and it would make it stand-out, instead of the current bare landscape of "jack-of-all-trades, master of none" amount of tiles and smaller tiles.

I don't usually look at Lenovos outside ThinkPads, because everything else is just disposable outside of warranty or straight-up e-waste, but this one seems to be a step in the right direction...if it can at least upgrade to Android 17.
Posted on Reply
#6
TheLostSwede
News Editor
FreedomEclipse@TheLostSwede

Everything alright there? :laugh:
Just a sloppy copy/pasta...
_JP_I don't usually look at Lenovos outside ThinkPads, because everything else is just disposable outside of warranty or straight-up e-waste, but this one seems to be a step in the right direction...if it can at least upgrade to Android 17.
They only promise two OS upgrades, if you read the attached specs.
Posted on Reply
#7
_JP_
TheLostSwedeThey only promise two OS upgrades, if you read the attached specs.
I read "OS upgrades for 2 years", which has been the norm when manufacutrers don't want to commit with support/Android versions, especialy beyond warranty. But the EU, at least, has been pushing them to do it, which is why I commented with hope in my opinion than even in two years it could reach A17, given that A15 should be out this year.
Posted on Reply
#8
Makaveli
TheLostSwedeThey only promise two OS upgrades, if you read the attached specs.
This is pretty Standard

My P12 pro came with Android 11 and is now on Android 13 with security update May 5th, 2024.
Posted on Reply
#9
bug
_JP_I read "OS upgrades for 2 years", which has been the norm when manufacutrers don't want to commit with support/Android versions, especialy beyond warranty. But the EU, at least, has been pushing them to do it, which is why I commented with hope in my opinion than even in two years it could reach A17, given that A15 should be out this year.
Getting Android 15 in Q1/Q2 2026 can qualify as "OS upgrades for 2 years".
Posted on Reply
#10
TheLostSwede
News Editor
_JP_I read "OS upgrades for 2 years", which has been the norm when manufacutrers don't want to commit with support/Android versions, especialy beyond warranty. But the EU, at least, has been pushing them to do it, which is why I commented with hope in my opinion than even in two years it could reach A17, given that A15 should be out this year.
Sure, but Android seems to get one update a year. If Lenovo looks at it the same way is a different matter.
But that would only take it to Android 16, since it shops with Android 14.
MakaveliThis is pretty Standard

My P12 pro came with Android 11 and is now on Android 13 with security update May 5th, 2024.
Unfortunately yes. These devices have much more than a two year life span. At least Lenovo says they'll offer four years of security updates.
Posted on Reply
#11
Makaveli
TheLostSwedeUnfortunately yes. These devices have much more than a two year life span. At least Lenovo says they'll offer four years of security updates.
They are getting alittle better with this due to competition from Samsung who is forced to increase theirs due to apple.
Posted on Reply
#12
Franzen4Real
an entertainment tablet that delivers an outstanding sonar experience
Wow! What an interesting and diverse piece of tech we have here. Satisfying the content consumption market AND the nautical exploration market, all from the same device??
Posted on Reply
#13
TheLostSwede
News Editor
MakaveliThey are getting alittle better with this due to competition from Samsung who is forced to increase theirs due to apple.
I wasn't specifically pointing fingers at Lenovo here, as most Android device makers are doing the same thing.
It's why I only ever bought one phone from Asus.
Franzen4RealWow! What an interesting and diverse piece of tech we have here. Satisfying the content consumption market AND the nautical exploration market, all from the same device??
The second product shot shows the sonar in action...
Posted on Reply
#14
Bastich
Soundsbars have lotsa speakers too, and most of them sound meh. Just saying.
Posted on Reply
#15
Makaveli
BastichSoundsbars have lotsa speakers too, and most of them sound meh. Just saying.
agreed sounds bar a good option when you don't have space.

If I have the space dedicated speakers are a must if you care about the quality of your audio.
Posted on Reply
#16
Dammeron
Makavelinot a bad tablet for the price.
Is it though...? For a similar price You can get Redmi Pad Pro/Poco Pad. Slightly bigger screen with higher resolution, much better SoC, bigger battery (which is weird considering how thiccc this Lenovo is) and yet lower weight.

If this went for 200-230€, then maybe, but 280€ is too much.
Posted on Reply
#17
Makaveli
DammeronIs it though...? For a similar price You can get Redmi Pad Pro/Poco Pad. Slightly bigger screen with higher resolution, much better SoC, bigger battery (which is weird considering how thiccc this Lenovo is) and yet lower weight.

If this went for 200-230€, then maybe, but 280€ is too much.
That one is also a good option.
Posted on Reply
#18
Double-Click
It looks like it has some pretty thick housing for the woofers on the bottom (for a tablet anyway).
I have no idea how good/bad this thing really is, but at least they took displacement into account.
Posted on Reply
#19
Dr. Dro
>Mediatek Helio G99

Into the trash it goes...
_JP_I don't usually look at Lenovos outside ThinkPads, because everything else is just disposable outside of warranty or straight-up e-waste, but this one seems to be a step in the right direction...if it can at least upgrade to Android 17.
The question is, do you even want to run Android 17 on this hardware. Android is already resource inefficient as it is, you're going to have an iPhone 4s situation with all of these devices that have these anemic low-end SoC's. A "multimedia" tablet with a SoC that 2 year old Motorola low-end phones that already suffered from performance issues running Android 12... no, this is just garbage.
Posted on Reply
#20
TheinsanegamerN
TheLostSwedeSure, but Android seems to get one update a year. If Lenovo looks at it the same way is a different matter.
But that would only take it to Android 16, since it shops with Android 14.


Unfortunately yes. These devices have much more than a two year life span. At least Lenovo says they'll offer four years of security updates.
As has been brought up before, android is not iOS. Not getting the latest "feature" update (and I use that term VERY loosely now) doesnt mean your android device stops working or being able to install apps. Security updates are more important, and lenovo gives 4. Apps wont start complaining for usually 1-2 years IME after security updates stop, at which point the tablet is 6 years old.
Dr. Dro>Mediatek Helio G99

Into the trash it goes...



The question is, do you even want to run Android 17 on this hardware. Android is already resource inefficient as it is, you're going to have an iPhone 4s situation with all of these devices that have these anemic low-end SoC's. A "multimedia" tablet with a SoC that 2 year old Motorola low-end phones that already suffered from performance issues running Android 12... no, this is just garbage.
You REALLY think a 8GB tablet is gonna struggle to run android? LMFAO please. The helio G99 is comparable to the swathe of mid range snapdragons that run android without issue. My 2020 moto with midrange 4 year old snapdragon and 3GB RAM runs perfectly fine. It isnt 2009 anymore, we dont have issues unless you are talking the sub $100 scrap heaps.
Posted on Reply
#21
bug
DammeronIs it though...? For a similar price You can get Redmi Pad Pro/Poco Pad. Slightly bigger screen with higher resolution, much better SoC, bigger battery (which is weird considering how thiccc this Lenovo is) and yet lower weight.

If this went for 200-230€, then maybe, but 280€ is too much.
Yeah, but expect even crappier software support for Xiaomi's bastardized Android.
Posted on Reply
#22
Dr. Dro
TheinsanegamerNAs has been brought up before, android is not iOS. Not getting the latest "feature" update (and I use that term VERY loosely now) doesnt mean your android device stops working or being able to install apps. Security updates are more important, and lenovo gives 4. Apps wont start complaining for usually 1-2 years IME after security updates stop, at which point the tablet is 6 years old.


You REALLY think a 8GB tablet is gonna struggle to run android? LMFAO please. The helio G99 is comparable to the swathe of mid range snapdragons that run android without issue. My 2020 moto with midrange 4 year old snapdragon and 3GB RAM runs perfectly fine. It isnt 2009 anymore, we dont have issues unless you are talking the sub $100 scrap heaps.
Yes, and I'll stand my ground here actually. You can have 1 TB of RAM if you want, a 5 year old Snapdragon 855 will put this SoC in the ground, and you mean to tell me you'll be running android 17 on it. You must have the patience of a monk.
Posted on Reply
#23
Makaveli
Dr. DroYou must have the patience of a monk.
Maybe he is a wise monk :)
Posted on Reply
#24
bug
Dr. DroYes, and I'll stand my ground here actually. You can have 1 TB of RAM if you want, a 5 year old Snapdragon 855 will put this SoC in the ground, and you mean to tell me you'll be running android 17 on it. You must have the patience of a monk.
You seem to be under the (false) impression that if the hardware grows stronger, Android system requirements grow to match that.
Here's Android 14 on a lowly Unisoc platform: www.gsmarena.com/motorola_moto_e14-13148.php

You may not be able to play the latest games 4 years from now. But the phone will continue to be perfectly usable and able to use the latest Android version.
Posted on Reply
#25
Dr. Dro
bugYou seem to be under the (false) impression that if the hardware grows stronger, Android system requirements grow to match that.
Here's Android 14 on a lowly Unisoc platform: www.gsmarena.com/motorola_moto_e14-13148.php

You may not be able to play the latest games 4 years from now. But the phone will continue to be perfectly usable and able to use the latest Android version.
Helio G99 already offers a poor gaming experience today, no need to stretch out that far. And sure you can get the OS to run probably. Just like on aforementioned Moto E, experience is gonna blow. No way to sugar coat it.
Posted on Reply
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