Tread carefully; you're addressing an ancien developer..! If one may only develop for next week's shiny gadget, one's product has a very short shelf-life. This, of course, makes sense for some folk (read 'industries'...), but some prefer keeping stuff going for a bit longer than the attention span of a ten-year old with too much pocket money. I always preferred stability over uber-powerful cutting edge, and had a healthy career in many IT roles.
(It is, however, a crap 'tablet', I'll allow ; goodness knows with what delivery of mail-ordered slippers it came as a 'free gift', but I found it under a pile of old stuff carefully put aside by my late wife, many years ago. It turns on, and I found how to take a photo or video with it, then turned it off and put it away again. I wouldn't use it to handle the sound or lights to our cottage, let alone a concert. I have laptops for that, all PC OS stuff...).