AT&T Trek 2 HD

Design, Display, and FeaturesTrek 2 HD may sound like the name of a rugged device built for hiking and camping trips, but the tablet isn't waterproof or built to any specific durability test standards. That said, it still feels quite sturdy, with a solid polycarbonate build and a grippy textured back panel.
 The tablet measures 8.5 by 4.9 by 0.4 inches (HWD) and weighs 12.8 ounces. It's about the same size as the Shield Tablet K1 (8.7 by 5.0 by 0.4 inches, 12.6 ounces), though the svelteSamsung Galaxy Tab S2 8.0$349.99 at Amazon (7.8 by 5.3 by 0.2 inches, 9.6 ounces) makes them both look chunky.
Battery life is solid. The tablet clocked 5 hours and 19 minutes of runtime while streaming full-screen video over LTE at maximum brightness. That's nearly an hour more than the ZenPad Z8 (4 hours, 30 minutes over LTE), though not quite as long as the Shield Tablet K1 (6 hours, 13 minutes over Wi-Fi). You shouldn't have to worry too much about the tablet dying on you while traveling.
There are matching 5-megapixel camera sensors on the front and back of the tablet. Images are mostly clear and reasonably sharp in well-lit settings, but unsurprisingly, neither sensor can handle low light very well. Pictures taken indoors tend to look muddy, and autoexposure usually overcompensates by either washing out or darkening the background. Both sensors can also record 1080p video, though it's not the smoothest.

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