Aug 15

Lenovo Yoga Convertible Laptop-Tablet Coming with ...

Lenovo officially announced its Windows 8 ThinkPad Tablet 2 this week, which will be aimed at professionals. But the company’s consumer side is also preparing its Windows 8 products, including its IdeaPad Yoga, which was shown off earlier this year at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.

The computer has a unique design: it looks like a regular laptop until the screen folds backwards to morph it into a tablet.

The device is scheduled to hit the market around the time of the general availability of Windows 8, which is slated for Oct. 26, ABC News has learned. There will be two versions of the Yoga – one that has an Intel processor and one that has a lower-powered ARM Nvidia Tegra processor. The ARM version will have double the battery life of the Intel version, sources said.

Microsoft has three versions of Windows 8 – Windows RT for ARM processors, which are lower-powered, and Windows 8 and Windows 8 Pro for x86 Intel and AMD processors.

The Wall Street Journal reported earlier today that Lenovo is prepping to release a Windows RT tablet with a “keyboard that flips around.” ABC News’ sources confirmed that this tablet is, in fact, the Yoga.

While Windows RT tablets based on ARM won’t have access to all the legacy applications for Windows, Windows RT tablets, like the Yoga, will have access to all the apps in Microsoft’s Store, which will be launched alongside Windows 8 in October. a lot of Windows 8 computers and tablets are expected in October, including Microsoft’s own Surface tablet. Earlier this week Lenovo’s Dilip Bhatia told ABC News that Surface has brought excitement to the market.

When reached, a Lenovo spokesperson said the company will have a number of Windows 8 devices, but wouldn’t comment on unannounced products.

Lenovo Yoga Convertible Laptop-Tablet Coming with Windows 8 RT

May 07

Toshiba’s New Tablets Loom Large (and Small, ...

In their never-ending, so-far-unsuccessful quest to give the iPad a run for its money, makers of Android tablets have produced models in a dizzying array of sizes. it doesn’t seem to be helping, and the novelty is wearing off. but I do confess to being intrigued by a new model which Toshiba is announcing today. It’s the Excite 13, with a 13″ screen that makes it the largest Android tablet so far. Toshiba gave me a sneak peek at the model recently — one of three tablets in an all-new lineup — and the screen is so spacious that it makes it feel like a different class of device altogether.

As its name suggests, the Excite 13 is a bigger brother to the 10″ Excite which Toshiba announced back at CES in January. it shares the same basic industrial design — a thin, curvy aluminum-clad look that makes it one of the few Android tablets to rival the iPad for sheer aesthetic splendor. Like the 10″ model, it has more connectors than most competitors, including an SD slot and Micro USB and Micro HDMI ports. (Toshiba is discontinuing its earlier Thrive line, which featured full-sized ports but were pretty chunky and plasticky by current standards.)

(PHOTOS: Day One of the Consumer Electronics Show)

If the Excite 13 were a laptop, its 13″ widescreen, with 1600-by-900 resolution, would qualify it for subcompact status. but it’s a strikingly large tablet — something I’ve been hoping someone would make. at .4″ thick and 2.2 pounds, it’s still reasonably portable, but Toshiba expects it to appeal to folks who intend to use their tablet mostly at home, not out and about. I think it could be a lot of fun for use with graphics apps: the iPad and other more conventionally-proportioned tablets are a tad cramped when it comes to sketching and painting.

The tablet has an Nvidia Tegra 3 processor with 1GB of RAM and will ship with Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich; as with all Android tablets, its single biggest downside is going to be the sparse library of Android tablet apps. I hesitate to mention battery life, since claimed figures so often bear little resemblance to reality, but Toshiba says it’ll get up to 13 hours. If true, that’s impressive.

Toshiba is going to offer a 32GB version of the Excite 13 for $649.99 and a 64GB one for $749.99 — fifty bucks more than the equivalent iPad in each instance. (The company doesn’t have any immediate plans to ship versions with 3G or 4G wireless broadband.) it plans to ship them on June 10.

(PHOTOS: Apple Announces new iPad)

Will the expansive Excite 13 do well, at least by Android tablet standards? I dunno, but I’m glad Toshiba is giving it a try.

The company is also announcing another new Excite in a new size, the Excite 7.7. It’s got a screen that measures — wait for it — 7.7″, and is Toshiba’s first tablet with a vivid AMOLED display instead of a more typical LCD screen. it looks similar to the larger Excites, has Micro SD and Micro USB, and is .3″ thick and weighs 13.4 ounces. It’ll go for $499.99 with 16GB and $579.99 with 32GB, and will also be available starting on June 10.

Lastly, there’s also a revised version of the original 10.1″ Excite. The new Excite 10 has similar specs to the 13″ model, including the Tegra 3, 1GB of RAM, SD slot, Micro USB and Micro HDMI. It’s .35″ thick and weighs 1.32 pounds. It’ll be available on May 6th in 16GB ($449.99), 32GB ($529.99) and 64GB ($649.99) variants.

Samsung remains the king of Android-tablet size experimentation: It’s got…let’s see…models at 5.3″, 7.0″, 7.7″, 8.9″ and 10.1″? (Why not, say, 6.3″ or 8.4″? I’m not sure…and for all we know, they’re coming.) but Toshiba now has a coherent lineup with machines that offer similar looks and benefits at three distinctly different sizes. That’s not so different from the approach that it’s long taken as a maker of notebooks, and it’ll be interesting to see if it works in the tablet business.

MORE: Toshiba ‘Excite X10′ Claims Thinnest, Lightest 10-inch Tablet Crown

MORE: Why the BlackBerry is All Thumbs

Toshiba’s New Tablets Loom Large (and Small, and Medium-Sized)

Mar 25

OnLive Desktop App Now Brings Windows to Android ...

OnLive Desktop, a mobile app that lets users stream their Microsoft Windows desktops to their iPad, is now available to Android tablet owners as well.

The app, released in the Android Market on Thursday, allows users to access Microsoft Office and other Windows applications on Android tablets running Gingerbread (Android 2.3) and higher. it is compatible with the Acer Iconia Tab A500, ASUS Eee TF101, Motorola Xoom, Samsung Galaxy Tab 8.9 and 10.1 and HTC Jetstream.

The app is based on San Francisco-based OnLive’s remote gaming technology, used to stream games onto PCs and other devices. Launched at the Consumer Electronics Show in January, OnLive Desktop was initially made available just to Apple iPad owners. The service will be expanded to other platforms over time, including smartphones, PCs, Macs, monitors, and even TVs, OnLive said.

The app comes in several incarnations, including a free version that brings Microsoft Word, Excel and PowerPoint, as well as Adobe Reader to the tablet, and includes 2 GB of online storage. The $4.99-a-month Plus version adds the OnLive web browser, which offers a  “gigabit-speed accelerated browsing experience” regardless of the device’s local internet speed and computing capability. A forthcoming Pro version, to be priced at $9.99, will offer 50GB of storage.

“Android tablets are a great platform for OnLive Desktop,” Steve Perlman, OnLive founder and CEO, said in a statement. “With full HD resolution, PC keyboard/mouse support and available 4G LTE, Android tablets deliver an excellent experience with full Microsoft Office and Adobe Reader PC applications.”

For the top stories in tech, follow us on Twitter at @PCMag.

OnLive Desktop App Now Brings Windows to Android Tablets

This Tablet PC Post was also found by:

    onlive desktop for kindle
    onlive desktop nook color
    kindle fire onlive desktop
    nook color onlive desktop
    onlive desktop for android 3 2
    onlivedesktop for nook
    rdp improve draw speed
    stream from pc to android tablet
Feb 25

Toshiba Unveils World’s Thinnest Tablet

Japanese electronics manufacturer Toshiba has released its ultra-thin 10.1 inch tablet in the UK. the AT200 is available exclusively online at the Carphone Warehouse and will arrive to retail stores on 15 February.

The device is just 7.7mm thin and weighs 558g, about the average weight of a hardcover book.

Toshiba’s first foray into the market, the AT100 Thrive, failed to compete with the likes of the iPad 2 and Galaxy Tab 10.1, but its latest tablet generated a lot of interest when it was demonstrated in January at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, under its American name, the Excite X10.

Pricing starts at £399 for the 16GB model, exactly the same amount of money Apple asks for an entry-level iPad 2, with the 32 GB version costing another £50. however Toshiba’s tablet also includes a micro-SD slot, which means you can upgrade the device’s capacity with another 32 GB at a later date.

AT200 features a multi-touch 10.1 inch capacitive LCD screen with LED backlight and can support a resolution of up to 1,280 x 800. its case is made out of brushed aluminium, and the screen is protected by scratch-resistant, anti-fingerprint Gorilla Glass.

It is powered by a 1.2GHz ARM dual-core A9 processor, supported by 1GB of DDR2 RAM. Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connectivity is included but there is no support for a 3G connection. Also on board is a five megapixel rear-facing camera and a two megapixel front facing camera, while the battery will run for eight hours while in use or 120 hours in suspended mode.

Unlike the iPad, the AT200 comes with extensive connectivity options, including micro-HDMI and micro-USB ports, enabling you to expand storage, connect to a TV or transfer files from other devices.

HD video playback is also supported and even if content is not HD, Toshiba’s upscaling technology, Resolution+, ups the standard definition content to add resolution and increase quality. the device ships with android 3.2 Honeycomb, although it is possible that it may be updated with the latest version of Android, 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich.

Toshiba Unveils World’s Thinnest Tablet

This Tablet PC Post was also found by:

    battery thrive at100
Feb 12

Asus MeMo 370T: The 7-Inch, Quad-Core, $250 Dream ...

Asus is promising what seems like the impossible with the MeMo 370T, a 7-inch Android Ice Cream Sandwich tablet with a quad-core processor for $250. I got my hands on a prototype during CES 2012, and I’m happy to say it’s real, and it could be spectacular.

Unlike so many other Android tablets, the Asus MeMo 370T doesn’t stammer on the home screen or stutter through web sites — it glides. And although I didn’t get to try any games on the tablet, performance should be similar to the MeMo’s bigger quad-core sibling, the Transformer Prime, which whizzes though 3D shooters and can output high-resolution games to a television screen through its micro-HDMI port.

(MORE: Check out Techland’s coverage of the 2012 Consumer Electronics Show)

The MeMo doesn’t cut a stunning figure like, say, Samsung’s Galaxy Tab 7.7. It’s more akin to Amazon’s Kindle Fire in terms of thickness, but its back panel does have a gentle curve that makes the tablet easy to hold in one hand.

What I like about 7-inch tablets is that you can hold them like a paperback book, or cradle them in two hands for gaming in landscape mode, or thumb type like you would with a smartphone. the MeMo’s design should be fine for all those uses.

Other specs include up to 16 GB of storage, 1 GB of RAM and an 8-megapixel rear-facing camera, but no front-facing camera. the display has a resolution of 1280-by-800 and uses a technology called in-plane switching to serve up wide viewing angles.

Android is still short on proper tablet apps, but that’s not as big of a deal with 7-inch tablets, which don’t have as much screen space to fill with blown up phone apps. And with Nvidia cultivating a library of meaty games optimized for its Tegra 3 quad-core processor, the MeMo should provide lots of entertainment for gamers.

Just one concern: Asus isn’t talking about battery life yet. Battery has been the downfall of some other 7-inch tablets, such as Toshiba’s 7-inch Thrive and the Acer Iconia Tab A100, so I’m just a little worried that this could be the Achilles heel for Asus as well. Hopefully Asus isn’t holding off on an estimate simply because it’s bad news.

I’ve waited a long time for a 7-inch tablet like the Asus MeMo 370T. Device makers who’ve tried to nail this screen size usually come up with underpowered or overpriced products. or in the case of the Galaxy Tab 7.7, they make the mistake of tying them to wireless service plans that most people don’t want. Amazon’s Kindle Fire and Barnes & Noble’s Nook Tablet are exceptions, but their walled gardens make them poor choices for power users.

If Asus can deliver on its promise, it’ll have a sure winner for users who want lots of power in a small package. the MeMo 370T is set to launch in the second quarter of this year.

(MORE: Toshiba ‘Excite X10′ Claims Thinnest, Lightest 10-inch Tablet Crown)

Asus MeMo 370T: The 7-Inch, Quad-Core, $250 Dream Tablet

This Tablet PC Post was also found by:

    asus memo 370t
    asus t370
    asus t370 release date
    asus memo t370
    memo 370t
    asus memo 370
    asus memo release date
    asus memo
    asus 370t release date
    asus memo t370 release date
Feb 09

CES: Toshiba Shows No-Glasses 3D TV; Sees Q1 HDD ...

Here it comes: 3D television that doesn’t require special glasses.

While the technology does have issues, Toshiba later this year will start shipping super high resolution LCD displays that in fact allow you to watch 3D without the usual goofy looking specs. The new sets, to ship in 47-inch and 55-inch models, won’t be cheap – for one thing, they will use the new cutting edge 4K resolution, roughly four times the resolution of standard high-def.

I got a look at the new TVs at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas last week, and I can tell you that it certainly is nice not to have to wear the special headgear, but the experience has drawbacks. Images don’t pop from the screen with quite the same drama that you get with either active or passive LCD technology, and to experience the 3D effect requires fairly specific viewing angles. In fact, the TV actually tracks who is watching, and adjusts the picture based on your location relative to the set; Toshiba says there is a choice of 9 viewing angles to get the full 3D experience.

I sat down with Toshiba America CEO mark Simons on Thursday in Las Vegas to talk televisions, laptops, disk drives and other topics. Here are some highlights of our discussion:

For complete CES coverage, see forbes.com/CES.

CES: Toshiba Shows No-Glasses 3D TV; Sees Q1 HDD Shortage

This Tablet PC Post was also found by:

    3d no glasses tv
    hdd shortage
    no glasses 3d tv
    toshiba no glasses 3d tv
    tv 3d no glasses
Feb 04

Acer Iconia Tab A200: Acer’s latest Android ...

Acer is looking to unveil its next installment of its Android powered tablets with the Iconia Tab A200.

Acer has unveiled its upcoming Iconia Tab A200, the very latest in Acer’s line of Android tablets. the newest tablet from Acer will feature a 10.1-inch screen and will allows users to enjoy and access a host of games, e-books , movies, music, photography, social networking, and more.

Weighing in at 1.5 pounds, Acers latest tablet will showcase a slim, titanium gray-colored casing and HD multi-touch display.

The new Iconia Tab A200 will be available on January 15 and be priced at an aggressive $329.99. Upon release, the A200 will make use of Android Honeycomb 3.2, but will allow users the ability to upgrade for free to Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) come mid-February.

Stay with Digital Trends as we bring you the latest from the 2012 Consumer Electronics Show.

Acer Iconia Tab A200: Acer’s latest Android powered multimedia tablet

This Tablet PC Post was also found by:

    acer latest tablet pc
    acer deluxe tablet
Jan 30

Windows 8 Tablets: Still Hiding

Similar Articles:

Considering that 2012 will be the year of Microsoft’s dramatic upgrade to Windows 8, one might have thought the floor of the Consumer Electronics Show last week would be filled with prospective hardware platforms for the new Windows operating system. it might have seemed logical to expect that to hear lots about tablets with Windows 8. But news on that front was surprisingly…quiet.

While CEO Steve Ballmer talked Windows 8 at his keynote and showed a Qualcomm prototype tablet running Windows 8, Intel’s Paul Otellini briefly showed a and Lenovo unveiled its innovative IdeaPad Yoga, a Windows 8-primed convertible notebook whose screen can twist around to turn into a tablet, little chatter was heard on the Windows tablet front.

The same three companies that showed off Windows 8 on ARM processors at BUILD were in the mix once more. Nvidia got things started by having a Microsoft rep do a five-minute demo of Windows 8 running smoothly on an Nvidia reference platform at its press conference. then, just hours thereafter, Ballmer was on stage showing the Qualcomm tablet already seen at BUILD. And in private briefings off the show floor, Texas Instruments displayed a Windows 8 reference platform.

A few Chinese tablet makers displayed tablets of distinctly generic design running Windows 7, but only one spoke specifically to Windows 8 plans. One tablet maker, Kupa, showed off its X11, a Windows 7 tablet available now that runs an Intel Atom Z670 processor; Kupa exhibited the tablet running the Windows 8 Developer’s Preview, and billed it as Windows 8-ready thanks to its 1366-by-768-pixel, 16:9 aspect ratio display — which matches to Microsoft’s optimized target for Windows 8; and to the specs of Samsung’s Series 7 tablet, distributed to Microsoft BUILD attendees last fall with the Windows 8 preview preinstalled.

But beyond the Yoga — an inventive concept that’s perfect for making noise at a big event like CES — none of the tablet makers were ready to talk about Windows 8 on a tablet, and what we might expect to see in that form factor. Samsung had nothing to discuss at the show on the Windows 8 tablet front.

Fujitsu’s Paul Moore, senior director of product development, hinted that Microsoft is encouraging a clean look on tablets that will run the new OS, but “they’ve been a bit vague so far.” Fujitsu, which already has the Stylistic Q550 on the market running an Intel Atom CPU, is looking at least one, maybe two updates to that model’s specs by midyear. the company is looking at boosting performance for better video playback. “That seems to be the biggest challenge on Atom,” Moore says. “And that’s the noticeable complaint customers have: the video is a little choppy.”

The Windows 8 interface is clearly optimized for touch, but what remains unclear is what, if any, advantage Windows 8 will have when it comes to the tablet market. That’s in part because Microsoft hasn’t yet clarified if and how exist Windows apps will work on the Windows 8 version destined for use on ARM processors. ARM tablets will have a distinct weight, power, and likely price advantage over tablets with x86 processors, which makes the ARM tablet space an intriguing one to watch.

Meanwhile, Intel is readying a dual-pronged approached to tablets to compete with the coming ARM onslaught. its single-core Medfield platform, launched at CES and due in the second quarter, is designed for Android; and its Clover Trail platform, due in the second half of this year, is built from the ground up for Windows 8. Clover Trail will replace the current Atom chips being used in most of the Windows 7 tablets available today, from companies like Fujitsu, Kupa, and Viewsonic; only Samsung, with its Core i5-based Series 7, has released a Windows tablet that uses the beefier CPU common to laptops.

What should users expect from ARM devices? in a private demo, Qualcomm showed off the second public Windows 8 build of its reference system, this time showing that the connected standby feature was enabled, even for connectivity like AT&T 4G LTE. Connected standby, a new state that powers down the system in a way that you can resume immediately, will enable 4G Windows 8 tablets to save power and extend battery life, for example.

“Microsoft has discussed this new [to its OS] concept of always on, always connected. we see this as a marriage of smartphone functionality and computing,” says Qualcomm’s Steve Horton, director of software and product management. “The content you care about will be active, and you will be able to program it, and it will be able to be fed.”

While tablet makers were mum when asked how ARM platforms will influence their tablet designs, the use of ARM will no doubt keep things interesting. in a previous conversation at BUILD, Horton noted that with ARM chips, there’s no restriction on form factor beyond the fact that Microsoft is asking hardware OEMs to stick to displays with 16:9 aspect ratio to match the optimal screen size for the new Windows 8 Metro interface.

When asked about Windows 8 tablets using ARM, for example, Senior Designer Junghwan Hong and Principal Designer Sangwon Yoon, the Samsung designers involved in creating the gorgeous, lightweight Series 9 laptop, shied away from specifics, but admitted that the prospect of ARM presents a new design opportunity and challenge.

“As designers, we are studying ARM,” Yoon says. “ we have a lot of different form factors for ARM devices. ARM has no fans, so for designers, that’s a good feature.” One logistical challenge: ARM tablets will likely carry relatively low prices, which “means we cannot use fancy materials. But they have to look good. That’s a challenge.”

And it’s likely not the only challenge for Windows 8 tablets. Even without any solid teasers at CES, 2012 promises to shape into an interesting year for tablets running Microsoft’s next operating system refresh.

Windows 8 Tablets: Still Hiding

This Tablet PC Post was also found by:

    windows 7 tablet i7
Jan 25

Apple iPad 3: Launching in February, March, or ...

Apple rumors — they seem to work readers, writers and editors up into a frenzy producing an echo of reports around the Internet. these blips of salacious speculation seem to spawn anew multiple times each week and, from time to time, they also fail to line up with one another, instead butting heads in contradiction.

The latest example of such conflicting rumors is the recent reports published on the pending release of what the tech media has dubbed the "iPad 3," Apple's eventual follow-up tablet to the hugely successful iPad 2 of 2011 and first-generation iPad released in 2010.

Late last week, as many tech reporters were hustling to keep up with wacky gadgets and the evolutionary advancement of TVs, smartphones and tablets at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Bloomberg News reported that Apple's next iPad would go on sale in March with 4G LTE connectivity (the first two iPads have Wi-Fi or 3G), a faster processor and a higher resolution touch screen.

Bloomberg didn't mention when it believed Apple would unveil the iPad 3, in its report, which cited three anonymous sources that reportedly have knowledge of Apple's plans.

Aside from the March-debut nugget of information, the rumored iPad 3 specs have been reported and re-reported countless times since Steve Jobs unveiled the iPad 2 on March 2, 2011, ahead of the tablet hitting U.S. stores on March 11, 2011.

On Tuesday, the Japanese website Mackotakara reported that the unveiling of a so-called iPad 3 along with an update to Apple's iOS 5 operating system would take place in February. according to PCMag and Apple Insider, Mackotakara cited an unnamed Asian supplier and an anonymous source in the U.S. for its report.

So, do the Bloomberg and Mackotakara reports line up or contradict? when is the iPad 3 coming — February or March?

In all likelihood, only Apply really knows when it will launch its next iPad. and Apple, which is known to reschedule its events and product launches up to the last minute, isn't saying. The company never comments on speculation about its product launches.

But it could be that both Mackotakara and Bloomberg are right? Maybe (and yes, I'm speculating here) the iPad 3 will be unveiled in February and go on sale in March?

Apple introduced the original iPad on Jan. 27, 2010, but it didn't go on sale until April 3, 2010.

Complicating matters is the Taiwanese website DigiTimes (which has a reputation for publishing inaccurate tech rumors). The DigiTimes has reported that the iPad 3 would be released sometime this month — but the site has also said its unnamed sources have also said the iPad 3 may arrive in March or April.

Well, here's one thing you can count on: Whenever Apple's next iPad is released, the Technology blog (and the much of the tech reporting world) will have plenty of coverage of the eagerly anticipated new tablet.

RELATED:

Apple iPad 3 rumors: From feasible to far-fetched

Apple iOS 5.1 beta code hints at quad-core iPad, iPhone

Apple iPad 3: Retina display and 5 more features we'd like to see

– Nathan Olivarez-Giles

Nathan Olivarez-Giles on Google+

Twitter.com/nateog

Photo: The Apple iPad 2. Credit: Nathan Olivarez-Giles / Los Angeles Times

Apple iPad 3: Launching in February, March, or later?

Jan 23

Intel CEO shows off an Intel-based tablet design ...

Intel chief executive Paul Otellini said in his keynote speech today that computing experiences are everywhere as consumers begin to reap the benefits of low-cost electronics that are spreading into everyday devices.

As part of that trend, Otellini showed showed off a new design for a tablet computer running on Intel’s Atom smartphone and tablet microprocessors. the upcoming 32-nanometer chip can run a tablet as well as a PC, and it will be able to run Microsoft’s Windows 8 operating system when it debuts later this year.

At the Consumer Electronics Show, Otellini said the devices themselves are less relevant, and we are moving from the era of the personal computer to the era of personal computing. Otellini, who is Intel’s fifth CEO and he has been an employee since 1974, said that the march of technology over time has been astounding.

Otellini also touted the excitement around Ultrabooks, or full-fledged computers that are thin and fast like Apple’s MacBook Air. Jeff Clarke, vice chairman of Dell, showed off a cool-looking 13-inch Ultrabook with a carbon-fiber base.

“What is it they won’t compromise on and what is it they shouldn’t compromise on?” Otellini asked. “the Ultrabook is ultra-responsive and totally without compromise.”

He said that devices have to be engaging and keep us with us. They have to be consistent, meaning “no compromise in quality or convenience.” Devices have to be aware of our needs and adapt to them. and they must be secure. those are the salient features that Intel focused on when creating its specification for next-generation laptops, or Ultrabooks.

Intel plans on spending hundreds of millions of dollars on its Ultrabook marketing campaign starting this spring. That’s as big a commitment in marketing as Intel made on its famous Centrino marketing campaign from 2003, when laptops with WiFi internet were touted for the first time.

Leslie Sobol, vice president of product marketing at rival Advanced Micro Devices, said that she isn’t sure that another “ingredient brand” marketing campaign, where Intel’s brand becomes more important than that of its customers, is a good idea. it may be good for Intel’s brand name and its products, but that doesn’t mean it will be good for Intel’s customers.

Only 10 percent of time spent with phones is dedicated to calls.

next Story: Previous Story:

Companies:

People:

Intel CEO shows off an Intel-based tablet design for Windows 8