Of course we omitted
a fair number of devices such as the Kindle Fire, which is more of a tablet and Amazon is seeing a record number of pre-orders on it.
Not exact matches
Mainly people are buying this
device is a low end e-reader and it is compatible with a
fair number of formats and does have many different reading applications that you can download.
The iPad
of course is considered a multi-media
device and will play a
fair number of audio formats such as HE - AAC (V1 and V2), AAC (8 to 320 Kbps), Protected AAC (from iTunes Store), MP3 (8 to 320 Kbps), MP3 VBR, Audible (formats 2, 3, and 4, Audible Enhanced Audio, AAX, and AAX +), Apple Lossless, AIFF, and WAV.
Connectivity for this
device has a
fair number of options with integrated WIFI, and 2G / 3G options.
There is a
fair number of pros that I really liked with this
device.
I can imagine a
fair number of artists using this as an all in one Adobe Photoshop and In - Design
device to create some great content.
For now you can get a great
device with a
fair number of apps, but the entire ecosystem is smaller than Amazon's in - house Android App Store which is itself often complained about as being too sparsely populated.
Huawei's Mate 9 Pro finally has support for Daydream which means that owners
of the phone will be able to place the
device inside
of the Daydream View headset and enjoy all
of the content that has thus far been published to the Play Store, which includes quite a few different applications as well as a
fair number of games.
However, a by the
numbers comparison is never
fair when comparing Android and iOS flagships, given the two very different ecosystems that are being catered to, and despite any differences on paper, the performances
of both
devices are quite comparable.
There has been a
number of devices that have come through this year and caused their
fair share
of attention.
Add to that some higher - end
devices like the Moto Z, the ZTE Axon 7, and the ASUS Zenfone AR, and there's already a
fair number of Daydream handsets available.
Also, according to Microsoft's own Windows and Microsoft Store trends website, those 600 million Windows 10
devices accounted for 45 %
of all Windows
devices in November 2017, which puts the total
number of Windows
devices at around 1.3 billion, a
fair bit lower than the 1.5 billion Microsoft touted a few years ago.