Showing posts with label Tablet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tablet. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Microsoft’s new Surface tablet takes aim at Apple’s MacBook


NEW YORK — Microsoft Corp unveiled a larger but lighter version of its Surface Pro tablet on Tuesday, hoping that the company’s expertise in business software will help it take on Apple Inc in mobile devices.

At a presentation in New York, new Chief Executive Officer Satya Nadella made it clear that Microsoft, which recently acquired Nokia’s handset business, is committed fully to making its own devices, despite a lack of success for its phones and tablets so far.

“We are not building hardware for hardware’s sake,” said Nadella, at the event. “We want to build experiences that bring together all the capabilities of our company.

The Surface Pro 3 tablet, which comes in three models starting from $799 and costing up to $1,949, features a 12-inch screen, much larger than Apple iPad’s 9.7 inches. It also comes with access to Microsoft’s Office software suite, employed in businesses around the world.


Microsoft executives made frequent comparisons with the MacBook Air at Tuesday’s launch, making it clear that Apple’s lightest laptop, which starts at $899, was the device to beat.

The same executives, highlighting a focus on the enterprise segment of the market, also talked up the limitations of existing tablets in a full office environment.

Microsoft “has concentrated on its key strength – business users who look at tablets as extensions and/or replacements for full laptop capability,” Jack Gold of J. Gold Associates wrote. “Microsoft finally seems to understand it cannot go head to head with Apple’s iPad, and must offer a superior business device.”

Microsoft, which is recasting itself as a ‘devices and services’ company, has not made much headway on the devices side, except for its Xbox game console.


The Surface, launched in October 2012 and updated last year, has about 2 percent of the tablet market, failing to make a dent on Apple’s iPad. Microsoft has only 3 percent global share in smartphones, chiefly through Nokia.

(A look at the global tablet market: link.reuters.com/ker49v)

The Surface Pro 3 runs the full Windows operating system, and Microsoft hopes it will be the device consumers and companies go to when they are replacing laptops.

Initial reaction was positive, but analysts have doubts that Microsoft can easily haul itself into a meaningful position in the hardware business.

“This is Microsoft’s best shot yet to move the needle in the right direction on market share gains,” said Daniel Ives, an analyst at FBR Capital Markets. “The odds are stacked against Microsoft, although we have to credit Nadella with putting his pedal to the metal to go after tablet market share, which remains key going forward.”

The new device, which like previous versions uses Intel Corp processors, will be available to order this week.

source: interaksyon.com

Saturday, April 13, 2013

ARCHOS’ Platinum range of Android tablets


ARCHOS Platinum is a new line of tablets that feature a sleek aluminum design combined with the best high definition IPS displays, quad-core processors and Android 4.1 Jelly Bean. There will be three tablets in the range including an 8-inch, 9.7-inch and 11.6-inch all of which deliver true vivid colors, sharper text and amazingly fast performance.

Firt up is the ARCHOS 80 Platinum, an 8” tablet that features a 1024×768 resolution IPS screen and when compared to the Kindle Fire HD 8.9 it is almost twice as fast, has double the RAM and has a back camera for a fraction of the cost.

While the ARCHOS 97 Platinum HD is a 9.7” tablet that features a stunning 2048×1536 resolution IPS screen, which is comparable to the Retina display found in the iPad, but is 40% less expensive.

And last but not least is the ARCHOS 116 Platinum, which is an 11.6” tablet that features a 1920×1080 resolution IPS screen, unlike anything currently on the market.

The entire Platinum range will all share the following features:

    High-Definition IPS display with capacitive multi-touch screen
    QUAD core CPU at 1.2 GHz with 8-core GPU, with 1080p video decoding
    2 GB RAM
    Android 4.1 Jelly Bean
    Full access to the 700,000 applications
    Archos Media Center applications
    Front and Back Cameras
    Mini-HDMI and Micro SD ports

source: interaksyon.com

Swipe, tap, watch with Coby


With portable media devices all the rage at the moment, it’s become somewhat of a necessity already for students to busy working folks. It’s the gadget of choice for many, given its ease of use, practicality and of course, its many entertaining features.

Such is the case with the Coby, a popular consumer electronics brand from the United States. Coby is best known for its practical features that exceed consumer expectations. The brand ranks number 3 for Android tablets in the US, and its latest, the Coby Kyros MID8011 (SRP P8,995) is the first tablet with a built-in analog TV to be launched in the market. Attesting to its quality, Coby has passed both American and European standards, better differentiating it from its counterparts.

Since launching its exciting line of entertainment tablets in the Philippines last year, Coby is now proud to offer its first-ever entertainment tablet with analog TV capability. Mobile TV-ready, the Coby Kyros MID8011 will come very handy on your many upcoming trips this summer or when you simply want to pass the time, especially in traffic.

Aside from 3G capability, it can also function as a phone as you can easily text or call through it, setting it apart from other entertainment tablets in the same price range.

Available in 7" and 8”, you can enjoy watching not just your movie or series downloads but your favorite local TV shows as well like Ina, Kapatid, Anak. As a special tie-up with ABS-CBN, Coby’s newest tablet will come pre-installed with a Facebook link for the popular nightly soap.

With so many impressive features like a built-in radio, dual cameras, video player, as well as practical add-ons for business, the Coby Kyros MID8011, offers you the best value for money. For those who like to travel, don’t worry about your phone not working when you’re abroad as this phablet is also Quad Band capable.


It is the perfect smartphone/entertainment tablet in one sleek package, carry it with you wherever you go, always keeping you connected and entertained.

source: philstar.com

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Amazon to launch new weapon in tablet battle


SAN FRANCISCO — Amazon.com Inc is expected to launch a new tablet on Thursday, the latest salvo in a battle for control of mobile access to the Internet.

Amazon is expected to announce at least one new version of its 7-inch Kindle Fire at a press conference near Los Angeles. A larger tablet may also be unveiled, along with an update of the company’s popular Kindle e-reader.

“The swing factor in the expectation on the upcoming Kindle Fire could be on how much lower pricing can go,” said So Young Lee, an analyst at SunTrust Robinson Humphrey.

Amazon is willing to make little or no money selling tablets and e-readers because it wants to get the devices into as many hands as possible, then sell higher-margin digital content, such as e-books, video, games, apps and music, to a more connected and engaged customer base.

More broadly, Amazon is fighting with Apple Inc, Google Inc and other technology giants for a foothold in the booming tablet market because these devices are fast becoming the preferred tool to access the Internet. As the world’s largest Internet retailer, it is essential for Amazon to have a major presence in this new sector.

“A successful tablet is much more important for Amazon than Google,” said Chad Bartley, an analyst at Pacific Crest Securities.

Amazon is one of the leading sellers of physical books, CDs, DVDs and video games. But these products are going digital, so the company is moving quickly to make sure it keeps its share of this evolving market.

“Amazon has to have devices that let customers purchase and consume digital content,” Bartley said.

Last year, Amazon surprised investors and rivals by pricing its first tablet at $199, well below Apple’s iPad and less than most other tablets at the time. Despite lukewarm reviews, the device sold well, giving Amazon more than a fifth of the U.S. tablet market.

Since then, Google started selling its 7-inch Nexus 7 tablet for $199 with better specifications, while Barnes & Noble cut the price of one of its Nook tablets to $179. Microsoft Corp’s up-coming Surface tablet may also be priced at $199.

“Introducing a tablet below the $150 mark could be compelling and another game changer in the industry where the $199 price point is no longer unique,” Lee said.

The cost to make the Kindle Fire has fallen since the tablet was launched last year, giving the company room to cut the price aggressively.

Google’s Nexus 7 has a more powerful processor, more memory and a higher resolution screen than the current Kindle Fire. It also has a camera, which the Fire lacks.

“I expect the new Fire to look a lot like the Nexus 7 for the same $199 price,” said Colin Sebastian, an analyst at R.W. Baird. “If it falls short, that could be a problem. If they go beyond that for the same price that would be good.”

Amazon may cut the price of the new Kindle Fire further by offering an ad-supported version, SunTrust’s Lee said.

The company already does this with some of its e-readers. The cheapest Kindle costs $79 with ads, while the same version without ads is $109, according to Amazon’s website.

“Ad-supported Kindle Fires mean cheaper devices and therefore a wider audience,” said Maria Alegre, CEO of Chartboost, which helps game developers make money through mobile devices including Amazon’s tablet.

Game and app developers are keen on the Kindle platform because Amazon customers are used to paying for content and the company’s one-click payment system makes purchasing easy.

What’s missing is the massive audiences accumulated by Apple, through its iPhone and iPad, and Google, through its Android mobile operating system, Alegre said.

“Volume is the number one thing Kindle Fire needs right now,” she added.

source: interaksyon.com

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Globe Tattoo Launches Own Tablet With The New Tattoo Mediapad


RIDING high on the popularity of tablet devices, Tattoo launches its own tablet with the Tattoo Mediapad.

“Once again, Tattoo leads other broadband services by having our very own tablet, the Tattoo Mediapad. As the number one broadband in the country, we constantly monitor and anticipate consumer needs and come up with products and services that best suit them. Subscribers have been clamoring for a tablet that would give them a bang for their buck bundled with a plan that would best fit their lifestyle,” explains Dong Ronquillo, Head of Tattoo Nomadic Broadband Business.

Running on a dual core 1.2 Ghz processor and Android 4.0 ICS, the 7” Tattoo Mediapad has a 1.3 megapixels front camera and a 5 megapixels rear camera, with 8 GB internal storage with built-in support for micro SD expansion. The Tattoo Mediapad boasts of an outstanding display and has the highest PPI among 7” tablets in the market today. It suits well as handy gadget for games and entertainment.

Furthermore, the Tattoo Mediapad has a hotspot feature which allows users to share their wireless Internet connection with up to 5 other Wi-Fi devices.

“Another standout feature of the Tattoo Mediapad are apps like Yozo Office, an office on-the-go program that allows you to to view and edit Worksheets, Text Documents, and Presentations. Tablet users who are always on the go would find this feature very useful,” Ronquillo adds.

The Tattoo Mediapad can be purchased at only P10,990 available at 12 months to pay at 0% interest when subscribed to a Tattoo Personalized Plan 999.

“With this bundle, you get the best of both worlds. You get to own one of the hottest tablets in the market today plus you get to experience the best mobile broadband service that only Tattoo could provide,” Ronquillo says.

Subscription to Tattoo also gives the subscriber access to livetattoo.ph, the first and only lifestyle portal in the Philippines, that provides exclusive discounts/ privileges and freebies.

Live without limits with your Tattoo Mediapad Plan 999.

Visit tattoo.globe.com.ph or any Globe store near you.

article source: mb.com.ph

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Barnes & Noble cuts price on Nook tablets


NEW YORK — Barnes & Noble Inc cut prices on three models of its Nook e-reader and tablet devices on Sunday, ahead of the peak of the back to school season and amid speculation that rival Amazon.com Inc is preparing to launch a new version of its Kindle Fire tablet.

Barnes & Noble, which has said the Nook has allowed it to win 27 percent of the U.S. e-books market, said it had slashed the retail price of its Nook tablet with 16 GB of memory to $199 from $249. Amazon is the market leader with about 60 percent of e-book and e-reader sales.

The largest U.S. bookstore chain also shaved $20 off its 8 GB version of the tablet to $179. Barnes & Noble lowered the price of its Nook Color by $20, bringing it to $149, the latest reduction for that model.

The new prices went into effect on Sunday.

Despite the popularity of the Nook devices, Barnes & Noble has had to reduce the price of various versions on a number of occasions to compete with Amazon, which is believed to be preparing to launch a new version of its Kindle Fire tablet. The earlier price reductions cut into Barnes & Noble’s earnings.

The company, which has bet its future on staking a claim in the e-books industry, reported lower-than-expected revenue in the fourth quarter and said Nook revenue fell 10.5 percent.

Signs at one Manhattan Barnes and Noble store already reflected the new prices on Sunday.

article source: interaksyon.com

Saturday, June 30, 2012

Global tablet usage for TV viewing doubles: survey


SAN FRANCISCO — Global usage of tablet computers by consumers for viewing TV and video content has more than doubled in the past year, said a new survey released on Wednesday.

Worldwide, over 12 percent of consumers said they watched TV or video on tablets such as Apple’s iPad and devices running on Google’s Android system, compared with nearly 5 percent a year earlier, according to the latest survey results from research firm NPD DisplaySearch.

The survey involved more than 14,000 TV owners in 14 regional markets worldwide.

It also found that more than 70 percent of consumers are using devices other than a TV set to view TV or video content.

In addition to tablets, survey respondents said they were also leveraging other alternate electronic devices such as laptops, smartphones and MP3 players to consume TV and video content.

“While the trends vary by region, it is evident that consumers around the globe are watching more video and TV content with their portable electronic devices as these provide additional means of accessing content,” Riddhi Patel, research director of consumer insights for NPD DisplaySearch, said in a statement.

“Despite this increase, however, TVs still remain the primary device of choice for viewing TV content, with 30 percent of consumers reporting that they view TV/video content on TVs alone,” she noted.

source: interaksyon.com

Saturday, June 16, 2012

Talk of Microsoft tablet resurfaces


SEATTLE — Microsoft Corp is gearing up to unveil its own tablet to boost its new Windows 8 operating system and counter Apple Inc’s hot-selling iPad, according to media reports on Friday.

Such an effort, which the company has not confirmed, would be a departure from its usual focus on software and potentially throw Microsoft into direct competition with its closest hardware partners such as Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and Hewlett-Packard Co.

The world’s largest software company has invited media to a “major” announcement in Los Angeles on Monday afternoon, but has not provided any details.

In the absence of information, talk is swirling that Microsoft will introduce its own tablet, according to anonymously sourced reports in the New York Times and the AllThingsD tech blog. Microsoft declined to comment on the subject and those reports.

It is not the first time such talk has surfaced, as Microsoft looks for a way to make an impact with its new tablet-friendly Windows 8 operating system and put the best product it can in the market to counter Apple’s iPad.

Apple, which makes both hardware and software for greater control over the performance of the final product, has revolutionized mobile markets with its smooth, seamless phones and tablets. Rival Google Inc may experiment with a similar approach after buying phone maker Motorola Mobility this year.

“Anything is possible if they don’t feel their partners are doing it right,” said Michael Silver, an analyst at tech research firm Gartner. “But it’s hard to compete with companies that sell your stuff and still have a great relationship with them.”

Other analysts suggested an own-branded tablet may be chiefly aimed at kick-starting the market for Windows tablets working on ARM Holdings Plc microprocessors – a new venture for Microsoft, which has traditionally relied on Intel Corp chips.

Microsoft charges hardware makers $50 or more to incorporate its software in machines and analysts suggest that hardware makers are struggling to produce tablets at a low enough price to challenge the iPad. By making its own tablets, Microsoft would presumably use its software for free, bringing down the overall price.

“It suggests to me that they’ve struggled to get OEMs on board to bring the prices down, so they feel they have to subsidize these products to get them out of the door, at least in the first iteration,” said Al Hilwa, an analyst at tech research firm IDC.

Making its own hardware for such an important product would be a departure for Microsoft, which based its success on licensing its software to other manufacturers, stressing the importance of “partners” and the Windows “ecosystem.”

When it has ventured into hardware, the Redmond, Washington-based company has a mixed record.

Apart from keyboards and mice, the Xbox game console was its first foray into major manufacturing. That is now a successful business, but only after billions of dollars of investment and overcoming problems with high rates of faulty units – a problem which was nicknamed the “red ring of death” by gamers.

The company’s Microsoft-branded Zune music player, a late rival to Apple’s iPod, was not a success and its unpopular Kin phone was taken off the market shortly after introduction.

Microsoft has tried hard to generate the type of excitement Apple gets for its secretive product launches, but usually disappoints. Talk was rife at the Consumer Electronics Show in 2010 that Microsoft would pre-empt Apple’s iPad with a slate of its own devising, but it never materialized.

The company killed off a two-screen, slate-style prototype called Courier later that year, saying the technology might emerge in another form later on.

source: interaksyon.com

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Barnes & Noble unveils $199 Nook Tablet


NEW YORK — U.S. bookseller Barnes & Noble unveiled a new version of its Nook tablet computer Tuesday, a device with the same $199 price tag as Amazon’s Kindle Fire.

The seven-inch (17.78-centimeter) Nook Tablet also has eight gigabytes of memory like the tablet released by online retail giant Amazon in November.

Apple’s cheapest iPad costs $499. Barnes & Noble released a $249 Nook Tablet with 16 gigabytes of memory in November.


Barnes & Noble also said it was slashing the price of its Nook Color electronic book reader to $169 from the current $199.

The New York-based bookseller also announced its fiscal third-quarter results on Tuesday.

The company said its net profit fell to $52 million in the quarter compared to $60.6 million in the same quarter a year ago. Revenue was up 5% at $2.4 billion in the quarter which ended on Jan 28.

“Our physical book sales at our stores increased more than four percent over last year,” Barnes & Noble chief executive William Lynch said in a statement.

“Our Nook digital content business continues to grow rapidly,” Lynch added. “According to some of the largest US publishers, we maintained or slightly gained share in the e-book market during the third quarter.”

Barnes & Noble said sales of digital content and Nook tablets and e-readers rose 38% during the quarter to $542 million.

source: japantoday.com