Microsoft may be right to dub the iPad Pro a 'companion device'
Redmond is only pointing out what many of us were already thinking.
Redmond is only pointing out what many of us were already thinking.
With preorders beginning for the iPad Pro, it's time to start thinking about how to get your order in.
Larger mobile phones are causing problems for tablet providers.
The tablet market will continue to grow in the next three years.
Apple's iPad mini has the fastest touchscreen out of all of the most popular tablets presently on the market.
It's bad news for Microsoft as ASUS announces a lower-than-expected sales forecast for the present quarter.
In just a few short years, the once novel tablet computer will outsell the entire laptop market.
Just eight percent of U.S. adults currently own a tablet computer, according to the results of a new Pew Internet Project Survey. Surprisingly, this number hasn’t changed much since November 2010 when that number was five percent.
A recent investigation by Bernstein Research has made an interesting discovery: According to the investigation, consumers choose tablets based on how similar they are to Apple's iPad - a device that dominates (and will likely continue to dominate) the tablet market.
According to a recently published report by JP Morgan, various companies in the tablet market have reduced their build plans following poor sales.
Apple's iPad premiered last year, and it took the market by storm. But, since then, a variety of other tablets have appeared - from RIM's PlayBook, to the upcoming Motorola Xoom. Fortunately, the guys over at Engadget have put together a comparative chart, which displays the tech specs of each tablet.