The Nokia T20 has a 10.4-inch display, but the real story is the 2K resolution of the tablet. We like what Nokia has done with the design of the screen and it's to HMD Global's credit that the tablet looks like such an expensive tablet. It's the kind of tablet you can buy and pass on to the kids, but there's a sense that it will be less popular and cheaper than Amazon's Fire tablet range. 

The revival of the Nokia brand with the release is the first It is the first tablet that does a great job in daily use at an affordable price. The Nokia T20 isn't for you, but it's a solid tablet that can be used for online shopping, streaming television shows and video calls. The T20 packs into Google's entertainment area, a personalised area on the tablet that houses a wealth of content including movies, TV shows, videos and all sorts of games and books. 

The Nokia T20 is not a device for high-performance gaming, intense creative work or most daily activities, but the 10.4-inch display with a resolution of 2K (1200 x 2000) is sharp and bright enough for this task. The T20 feels like a budget tablet, but no matter what you use it for, it won't cope with video editing or challenging games. Check out our best Nokia phones and our best budget tablets to see what the T20 can do. 

We are in the midst of a revival of the Android tablet following recent devices from Samsung, Walmart, Xiaomi, Lenovo, HMD and now an HMD tablet, Nokia T20. After years of focused on phones and HMDs, the release of HMD Android tablets under the Nokia brand is something we haven't seen from the real Nokia since the launch of the N1 Android in 2014. Its first Android tablet was a 10.4-inch tablet designed for work, study and home. We tested the Realme tablet today, and now we have news that HMD Global is the next company to get wet with the announcement of the affordable Nokia T 20 tablet, priced at $249 (PS179) in the US and UK. 

With Android 11, the Nokia T20 tablet carries the Nokia brand, eight years after the first from HMD Global. While it is fair to say that we have seen tablets attached to previous models with the Nokia branding, including one with Windows RT when they came out, the T20 is the first Nokia tablet released by HMD since it acquired the Nokia name. Like the Nokia N1 and T20 Android tablets in the Nokia current range of mobile phones, the new T20 uses OS updates, security updates and durability tests as they are known in phones. 

You might think the T20 is just another Nokia tablet, considering how long it has been since the company launched the Nokia N1 in 2014. In fact, it is the first tablet version we have seen since HMD Global took over the business earlier this year, breaking new ground for Nokia. A tablet with the Nokia name, and the second with Android, is hardly a first for the company, but the Nokia T20 proves otherwise. 

After 4 years of Android phone production and with the pandemic driving demand for the tablet form factor and the Nokia name, I think it makes sense to come up with the Nokia T20. It is marketed to a wide range of users, including those who need a tablet for work meeting, parents who look for a device to support their children in school, and those who want a device to catch up on TV and movies. The T20 comes with Android 11, supported by the promise of two years of the operating system, three years of monthly security updates, software from Google for Kids and Google for entertainment, and comes pre-installed with technologies such as Nokia Ozo Audio to expand the tablets media chops, punctuated by a 1036 x 2K display, stereo speakers and a 3.5mm headphone jack. 

Nokia is determined to make a range of tablets, and the first impression of the T20 counts for a lot. A new Android tablet from today (October 6) called Nokia T20, the first entry in HMD Global's new T series of tablets will go on sale on November 17 in the US, although an Ocean Blue version of the device has already been made available. The $249 (PS179) Nokia T20 tablet with modest specifications, including a Unisoc T610 processor, adds 4GB RAM and 64GB of expandable memory to the table. 

A new Android tablet from today (October 6 ) called Nokia T20 is the first entry into HMD Global's new T series of tablets - and if there are signs, the company is eager to leave its mark in the tablet world with a sharp display and strong battery. You can tell the T20 is a Nokia tablet because it has a similar style to Nokia's smartphone range, especially when it comes to the Nokia-like deep blue colour on the back. On the one hand, HMD Global suggests the tablet as a US-supported HMD-enabled, business-friendly mobility management tool and the fact that it meets Google's enterprise requirements for Android devices.

 CONCLUSION

If you plan to work with the Nokia T20 all day long, avoid it as it doesn't pack a lot of power, but that means when you take it out, you don't have to worry about charging it as the battery lasts for hours.