Aoc Breeze tablet is well built and have nice look, with offering a rubbery back plate that's both comfortable to hold and durable. The front plate, surrounding the 8-inch touchscreen, is plastic but features a mock brushed aluminium finish that adds a touch of class.
AOC is arguably best known for manufacturing LCD monitors and the Breeze is its first tablet release.
Aoc Breeze tablet runs Android 2.1, an outdated version of Google's operating system that, for example, isn't compatible with Adobe Flash content. It's commendable that AOC hasn't crammed hundreds of unwelcome apps into the Breeze, but a few useful ones, such as an ebook reader, have been included.
Most apps downloaded run smoothly enough, but resource intensive activity of any kind drags the Breeze to an almost standstill. There's both a micro-USB and standard USB port for connecting to a laptop or attaching peripherals.
It uses resistive screen technology and is extremely unresponsive to finger inputs, making interacting with the device often frustrating and occasionally a nightmare.
Aoc Breeze provide advantages like good battery life, not a lot of bloated pre-installed software, close to stock Android 2.1, bright screen and charges fast. But the disadvantages according to consumer review are : slow, locks up and seems to not be able to run all of the programs an updated Android device can, the screen is pressure sensitive (resistive) not capacitive like the iPhone/iPad/iPod or other modern smartphones, does not work with Microsoft Exchange very well. tried downloading other exchange apps to fix the issue but they did nothing. most of them crashed, Speaker worked intermittently. and the AOC website offers little to no support and says that they have no plans of letting you upgrade it.
