Both are innovative ideas, and that's something
tablet makers need to do more of if they are to be successful in this Apple - dominated market.
Not exact matches
While the company is still only selling simple Kindle e-readers, Amazon has quietly built all the tools it
needs to compete against Apple and the other
tablet makers with its own Android - based
tablets.
As customers using
Tablets need to be engaged with better options, the challenges of improving the
tablet PCs are enormous and most companies are innovating to stay ahead as quoted by Vira Chen, working for a Taiwan - based PC
maker.
Google designed Android 3.0 so that
tablet makers wouldn't
need to include the traditional buttons found on phones.
The
tablet too is well received and its
makers are expecting further brisk sales post a much
needed price revision that has... [Read more...]
As we had already pointed out of rumors about Motorola likely to come up with a Gingerbread
tablet, here are fresh rumors of the mobile handset
maker to be in the process of developing a Honeycomb
tablet with Google providing all the support that it might
need.
And the reason why the
makers of this dual screened
tablet are able to come up with the launch window is that they have secured a whooping $ 46m funding that is
needed to make the Kno
tablet a market reality.
The
tablet too is well received and its
makers are expecting further brisk sales post a much
needed price revision that has made the 7 inch Android
tablet all the more affordable.
A growing number of hardware
makers are finding that there is no
need to rush out an Android
tablet.
A BlackBerry
tablet could satisfy the
needs of a small but fiercely loyal group of productivity - focused customers who have stuck with the struggling smartphone
maker and its operating system, potentially giving it a new revenue stream.
While one has to wonder if every
tablet maker really
needs to include a social networking aggregator (Samsung will have one, too), it's nice to see Lenovo trying to innovate here, even if the result currently is visually uninspiring and crashes often.
The more successful Apple's
tablets and apps are, the more difficult it will be for Amazon to walk away from its iOS platform — but it could whip up a dangerous level of consumer, developer and even regulatory opposition to the iPhone
maker (though, as the proud owner of a closed ecosystem itself, it would
need to tread carefully).
The iPhone 7 may benefit from better optimization, since app
makers need to account for only a handful of devices when creating software for iOS; in the Android ecosystem, developers
need to take into account hundreds of phones and
tablets with various CPUs.