Tablets Aiwa

Aiwa Tab AB8

Aiwa Tab AB8
Available
Display
8" Color / IPS TFT16,7M colors, 60 Hz800 x 1280 px (8.00") 189 ppi∼72.0% screen-to-body ratio
800x1280
Chipset
MediaTek MT8183Processor clock: 2.00 GHzNumber of cores: 8GPU: ARM Mali-G72 MP3
2.00 GHz, 8 cores
Memory
64 GBBuy memory card
microSD, microSDHC, microSDXC
Operating System
Android12

The Aiwa Tab AB8 came to market as a practical, no-nonsense 8-inch tablet designed for users who wanted something portable without breaking the bank. With its compact form factor and modern Android 12 software, it positioned itself as an ideal companion device for work, media consumption, and casual computing. What makes this tablet noteworthy isn’t flashy features—it’s the balanced approach Aiwa took to create a reliable everyday device for the mid-range market.

Design & Durability

The Tab AB8 rocks a sleek aluminum construction that gives it a more premium feel than you’d typically expect at this price point. The midnight color option adds a touch of sophistication, making it look far more refined than your average budget tablet. The device measures in at a genuinely portable 8 inches, meaning it actually fits comfortably in a decent-sized bag or backpack without feeling like dead weight.

Build quality here is straightforward—Aiwa went with materials that prioritize durability without unnecessary complexity:

  • Aluminum chassis for structural integrity
  • Compact 8-inch form factor for genuine portability
  • Modest weight distribution for comfortable one-handed holding
  • Practical design focused on functionality over flair

> The Tab AB8 won’t win any design awards for trendsetting aesthetics, but it strikes a genuinely useful balance between looking professional and feeling rugged enough for daily life.

The aluminum frame should handle typical drops and bumps reasonably well, though Aiwa didn’t emphasize water resistance or Gorilla Glass, so you’ll want to be mindful with this device in less-than-ideal conditions.

Battery

The 4,400 mAh battery powering this tablet is honestly the area where you need to set realistic expectations. It’s adequate for a full day of moderate use—think web browsing, email checking, and light document editing. However, if you’re planning heavy video streaming or gaming sessions, you’ll likely want a charger nearby.

What matters here is understanding the actual user experience:

  1. Moderate usage: Expect roughly a full workday of productivity tasks
  2. Video streaming: Drops to 6-7 hours depending on brightness settings
  3. Light tasks: Can stretch into the next day with careful use
  4. Quick charging support helps mitigate battery anxiety

> Real talk—several users noted that daily charging became part of their routine, which is pretty standard for an 8-inch tablet in this class.

The charging implementation includes quick charge technology, so you’re not waiting forever to top up. For a device marketed toward professionals using it for web conferencing and document work, the battery was designed with realistic expectations in mind rather than unrealistic all-day marathons.

Performance & Hardware

Under the hood, the MediaTek MT8183 chipset with its 8-core processor clocked at 2.00 GHz handles everyday tasks with solid competence. This isn’t a powerhouse for intensive gaming, but it’s perfectly capable for what most tablet users actually do. The ARM Mali-G72 MP3 GPU provides adequate graphics performance for casual games, video playback, and general interface responsiveness.

The specs break down like this for real-world performance:

  • 8-core processor ensures smooth multitasking without constant stuttering
  • 2.00 GHz clock speed maintains reasonable performance across everyday apps
  • Mali-G72 GPU handles video streaming and light gaming without strain
  • 4GB RAM (based on available information) keeps multiple apps running smoothly

Practical performance expectations: Web browsing feels snappy, document editing in Google Docs or Microsoft Office works seamlessly, and Android 12 stays responsive even when juggling several applications. For work-focused tasks—particularly web conferencing with Teams, as users have mentioned—this hardware strikes a legitimate sweet spot. Gaming beyond casual titles might disappoint, but that wasn’t really the target audience anyway.

Camera System

Here’s where the Tab AB8 keeps things minimal—Aiwa didn’t splurge on impressive camera hardware, and honestly, that’s fine for a productivity-focused tablet. Most users aren’t buying tablets as primary cameras anyway. The specs remain relatively modest, focusing on functionality for video calls and occasional documentation rather than photography excellence.

What you’re getting is serviceable camera performance for:

  • Video conferencing clarity (which aligns with the Teams-focused marketing)
  • Quick document scanning for notes and receipts
  • Casual video recording of moderate quality
  • Basic photo documentation

The realistic take here is that this tablet’s camera exists to fulfill basic needs, not to impress. For a device that’s marketed toward professionals using it for web calls and productivity, that’s entirely appropriate. If you need quality photography or video, bring your smartphone instead.

Software Experience

The Tab AB8 launched with Android 12, which was relatively current at the time of release and brings meaningful improvements over older versions. This matters because it means you get modern privacy controls, improved notification management, and a generally cleaner interface out of the box.

Software highlights include:

  • Android 12 foundation provides solid security and privacy features
  • Clean interface without excessive manufacturer bloatware
  • Access to Google Play Store for comprehensive app ecosystem
  • Regular security updates (assuming reasonable support from Aiwa)

> Android 12 on a tablet actually shines—the OS handles split-screen multitasking well, and the larger screen real estate makes productivity apps genuinely useful rather than just pleasant.

The software experience feels purposeful rather than gimmick-laden. Aiwa resisted the temptation to layer unnecessary customizations on top of Android, letting the OS do what it does best. Users reported that the system stayed responsive and could handle app updates without constant slowdowns—important if you’re relying on this for professional tasks.

Connectivity & Audio

The connectivity package is straightforward and covers the essentials for a modern tablet:

  • Wi-Fi support for reliable internet connectivity
  • Bluetooth capability for pairing wireless peripherals and headphones
  • Standard audio output for content consumption

The 8-inch IPS display with 1280 x 800 resolution and 189 PPI delivers reasonable clarity for reading, web browsing, and video watching. The 60 Hz refresh rate is standard for this class—nothing fancy, but smooth enough for everyday use. The ~72% screen-to-body ratio means you’re getting decent display real estate without the tablet feeling unwieldy.

Audio reproduction here is typical for tablets in this category—adequate for watching videos and listening to podcasts, though serious audiophiles might want external speakers. The speakers handle casual content well without distortion at moderate volumes.

Pros & Cons

ProsCons
✓ Portable 8-inch size fits bags easily✗ 4,400 mAh battery requires daily charging
✓ Premium aluminum build feels solid✗ Modest camera system lacks quality
✓ Smooth Android 12 productivity experience✗ No standout performance advantage
✓ Excellent for web conferencing and work✗ Limited gaming or intensive multitasking
✓ Reasonable mid-range pricing strategy✗ 800×1280 resolution feels dated

Detailed Specifications

Related Specs