I wonder how much to replace a crack screen with these new Iliads. The first ones still cost upwards of $400 to replace it. I had mines for about a year and I cracked the screen. That's the last $700 Iliad I'm buying.
The real question is if this screen even can crack (under normal abuse). I mean are they still using the somewhat fragile glass screens, or a brand new, and [potentially] far more durable, plastic display?
The Galaxy Tab 10.1, much like its Limited Edition sibling that we reviewed last month, is ever-so-slightly thinner than the iPad 2, a slate that most sane individuals (and competitors, for that matter) would confess is the market leader today.
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I wonder how much to replace a crack screen with these new Iliads. The first ones still cost upwards of $400 to replace it. I had mines for about a year and I cracked the screen. That's the last $700 Iliad I'm buying.
The real question is if this screen even can crack (under normal abuse). I mean are they still using the somewhat fragile glass screens, or a brand new, and [potentially] far more durable, plastic display?