I’ve reviewed a number of attempts at new Tablet computers over the past few years. They were all based on the current Microsoft operating systems at the time (Win 95, 98, NT, 2000, or CE). They weren ...
Sound like the same hype you've heard in the past? Maybe. But a growing number of integrators are stepping up their efforts to add full-size tablets to their mix of offerings,not PDAs, but ...
based on a new version of Microsoft's Windows XP operating system, will account for just 1 percent of worldwide notebook shipments in 2003, for a total of about 425,000 tablet PCs. Although they may ...
NEEDHAM, Mass.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The global market for personal computing devices, including PCs and tablets, is set to grow 3.8% in 2024, reaching 403.5 million units, according to the latest ...
Manufacturers are having a field day with their new tablet PCs. Top vendors Hewlett-Packard and Toshiba say sales of their tablet PCs--tiny portable computers fitted with pens, touch screens and ...
The list of what tablets can do is long and growing, but it's the list of what they can't do that's keeping most employees from using tablets as PC replacements I’m a big fan of tablets. I recommend ...
Microsoft sees tablet computers as a type of PC and that view was behind Microsoft's decision to develop versions of its next-generation Windows 8 desktop operating system for tablet computers, said ...
Acting quickly to move away from Windows 8, HP will start pre-installing Windows 10 across its old and new PCs and tablets within days of the release of the new OS on July 29. One of HP’s first ...
Despite the initial rush of Centrino-based notebooks into the market, Intel Corp.’s new platform isn’t just about notebooks. Built around Intel’s Pentium M processor, announced earlier this month, and ...
Panasonic's Toughbook U1 is one of a growing number of tablet computers that have met the Defense Department's Mil-Std 810G standards. Testing for 810G compliance includes surviving 26 drops from a ...
Tablet computing has a long and tortured evolution. We can trace its roots all the way back to 1915. That’s when the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office awarded a patent for a handwriting recognition ...