> The browser, media player, photo gallery, and e-mail client on the WebStation are all from “Cupcake” (Android 1.5), and work just about the same. However, every single site the browser pulls up is first rejected as an untrusted source (even Google and Gmail!). So you have to click through and accept every one. For Web services that are usually Android apps like Twitter and Facebook, this quickly becomes tiresome.
via [betanews.com](http://www.betanews.com/article/Handson-with-the-WebStation-Android-Tablet/1271281002)
I’m sure companies will come up with better “iPad Killers” eventually. But right now, this is the what is being presented to the world as an Android tablet.
And some people wonder why Apple has been so successful?
Note, this device also demonstrates perfectly what’s wrong with the Android App market, and why developers aren’t flocking to write Android apps. This is a device made in 2010, and yet it’s running Android OS 1.5, not the current 2.1. So many Android apps are incompatible with it. You can’t even use the Android Marketplace on this device, in fact. So a developer has no way to easily market his or her apps to owners of this device.
As much as most of this tablet’s shortcomings are Camangi’s fault, I blame Google for the complete lack of discipline that has led to next to no quality control in the Android universe.