Tossability is a complex-but-intuitive metric — something you just feel at a gut level. Kind of like pornography. But breaking it apart, it's a particular combination of size, weight, materials, density, build quality, and price.

Counter-intuitively, an iPad isn't super tossable, unless it's carefully swaddled in protective armor. The screen is too large and the device is too thin (this may be the only time anybody calls the iPad "too thin," ever), making the 9.7-inch expanse of glass seem eminently fragile, a vast plane wide open to deathblows. The aluminum scratches. Just as crucially, an iPad is at least $400 and every additional dollar in the pricepoint reduces tossability.

This is what makes the Nexus 7 killer, and what I've found to be the biggest difference between it and an iPad: It's the first full tablet that's both good and tossable. Despite some production issues, its high quality plastic back that won't show dings, scratch-resistant screen and overall density means the Nexus 7 feels remarkably sturdy, like a paperback — perhaps the original tossable technology. Compared to the iPad, it has half the amount of exposed glass, weighs half as much and it's just a hair thicker. And it's only $200. It feels almost analog: I do things with a Nexus 7 I'd never do with an iPad, case or no case. All with out thinking about it. Leave it on a kitchen counter while I'm cooking or making juice, with oil and green goo splashing everywhere. Shove it into a bag with no case. Fling it onto my bed from across the room. It's the first computer I've truly never worried about breaking.