The Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1? We’ve heard exclusively it’s hitting Vodafone UK. Android Honeycomb on our shores? You betcha. Read on for all the details.
The Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1? We’ve heard exclusively it’s hitting Vodafone UK. Android Honeycomb on our shores? You betcha. Read on for all the details.
It’s here, in our hands, the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1! We’ve clapped flesh on the all-new, all-Android Honeycomb tablet. Read on, and we’ll show you its new skills up close, and give you our first impressions after a lengthy touching sesh.
UPDATE: See our hands-on photos of the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1, and read our first impressions report!
Samsung’s Mobile World Congress press conference hasn’t even kicked off yet, but already the firm is spilling the beans on the follow-up to its iPad challenger: the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1. Read, gawp and get the skinny right here!
Another week of exciting tech news has come to a climax. If you’ve been away don’t worry; you can catch up with all the best news morsels to have landed on Electricpig this week. Read on for our weekly news roundup filled with lots of exciting news on Nokia’s change of direction, the demise of Guitar Hero, a possible iPhone nano, iPad 2, new HTC handsets and much more.
We blew the lid off the HP press event yesterday, where the acquisition of Palm finally materialized into three webOS devices: HP Veer, HP TouchPad and HP Pre 3. Today, reports have come in suggesting the TouchPad will retail for $699, $100 cheaper than the Motorola Xoom, but still considerably more expensive than the WiFi iPad.
Good luck pronouncing it, but Samsung has just issued a press release, outing their dual-core processor — Exynos, set to replace their Hummingbird processors. Formerly known only by the code name Orion, these application processors will play an integral roll in Samsung’s flagship handsets, competing directly with Qualcomm’s dual-core Snapdragon range.
Dubbed ‘PC as a Service’, a joint venture between Ericsson and Novatium hopes to bring basic computing to the masses. The general concept is simple — offload the overhead of running an operating system to the cloud for typical tasks such as web browsing and applications. The end result is better performance, bandwidth notwithstanding, and improved battery life.