The “Not Boring Cloud” company is releasing test tablets before the official launch

Feb 3, 2014 12:31 GMT  ·  By

Earlier this month mobile software and hardware solution provider Imerjn launched its own file sharing service, dubbed the “Not Boring Cloud.”

But the company is apparently not stopping here and plans to take the Android tablet market by storm with two new slate models, a 7-incher and a 10-incher.

Imerjn boasts the tablets are going to be something special as their “designers don’t design for design’s sake, our developers don’t engineer to stroke their own ego.”

“We are not that company trying to develop a product that appeals to every demographic. Our products are designed, developed and produced for one very specific person…YOU.”

“Your specs, your options, your cost.”

Basically, Imerjin hopes its slates are going to be able to compete with major tablet products like the Google Nexus and Apple iPad Air.

The slates are powered by a 1.5 GHz quad-core processor, which is a little higher than the iPad Air (1.4GHz). The tablets will also be equipped with USB ports, Bluetooth (something that the Apple slate lacks) and will provide a battery capable of sustaining 10 hours of life.

According to the press-release, the battery cycle will be comparable with that of the Google Nexus and iPad Air and will out-perform Microsoft’s Surface.

And now the company is announcing that a limited numbers of Imerjn tablets will be made available for evaluation purposes ahead of the big roll-out scheduled for next month.

Imerjn CEO, Adam Radly explained why they were adopting this strategy.

“We are looking forward to receiving feedback from our early adopters. We are excited about being able to offer a tablet that will offer features and a price that compare very with our main competitors.”

Since Imerjn aims to roll out a tablet that we could call customizable (judging by what they are saying on their official website), making a few products to a limited number of consumers before the official launch seems like a good idea.

Nevertheless, as far as we know, there’s nothing really impressive about these slates, as they seem to be quite mid-range Android offerings, but we’ll have to wait and see until they are spotted in the wild.