When Windows 8 Surface tablets launch this fall, maybe Microsoft should steal a page from the Google Nexus 7 tablet launch: Microsoft should sell Surface tablets mainly online and keep inventories low to ensure initial tablet shipments “sell out.” Here’s why.
Google’s 16GB Nexus tablet, which counters Amazon’s Kindle Fire, apparently is sold out.
Good Afternoon!
I'm new to the world of Android after having been on iOS for the past few years and have a question that everyone seems to have different opinions on from googling the question!
We've bought our children Android tablets for Xmas (yes I know its ages away!) and was wondering if there is any way for us to be able to download the apps only once and for them to sync to the other
Android Honeycomb tablets are now on store shelves and vendor websites. Six months from Honeycomb's release, tablet makers have finally optimized their hardware to fit the new made-for-tablets OS version to their larger-than-smartphone screens. But where are the apps?
Are you a fan of the MLB, NFL, Olympics, NBA, NHL, NCAA, Tennis, PGA, or NASCAR? Good news for you… popular sports app ScoreMobile has been reworked to support tablets, including the Nexus 7. Rather than updating the regular app to work for both phones and tablets, Score Media Ventures Inc.
I have some identical tablets that I'm trying to get set up for the kids for Christmas.
I did this following:
On tablet #1, I downloaded all of the apps that I wanted, then used Titanium Backup to make backups of all of those apps.
On tablet #2, I used Titanium Backup to "restore" all of those apps.
But if I go to Google Play logged in with the account for tablet #2, it doesn't show
Android tablets have been around since late 2010 starting with the Samsung Galaxy Tab, but the first mainstream Android tablet was the Motorola XOOM, which debuted in the spring of 2011. Soon after, we saw tablet after tablet after tablet get released, but nothing seemed to gain any major traction.
Google’s Nexus 7 tablet has been quite a hit, but there can be little doubt that the average quality of Android tablet apps still ranks behind iOS. Google is clearly aware of this and today, the company is making a new push to get developers to ensure that their apps run well on tablets.
Well, the tablet wars seem to be hotting up with Google/Asus/Samsung releasing the Nexus 4, Nexus 7 32Gb and Nexus 10 tablets! Followed hot on the heels with he Asus Padfone 2!
I'd love a 32Gb Nexus 10 but the price-tag puts it right out of my reach right now. The 32Gb 7 is more affordable but the lack of a back facing camera means sorry, no sale...
While tablets such as the Kindle Fire and Nexus 7 have conditioned buyers to think of tablets -- but not the iPad -- as cheap, these are a different animal to Microsoft's Surface tablets.