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Wacom is tempting iPad illustrators with its first Android-powered portable drawing tablet.
But this is not to say the iPad can’t be a superb business computer. It’s just that Apple is clever enough to spot the marketing dead-end that is business tablet computing and avoid it completely.
Motion Computing Inc. today is set to unveil a commercial-grade, rugged tablet PC for workers who aren’t always inside an office. The new Intel Centrino-based F5 tablet PC runs Windows XP Tablet ...
Microsoft just took the wraps off the all new Microsoft Surface. Even though the name is familiar this is an entirely new product. Simply put, the Surface is a Windows 8 tablet. But it seems so ...
The F5 is a semi-rugged Tablet PC, positioning itself between commercial Tablet PCs like the LE1700 and more rugged Tablet PCs like Mobile Demand’s T8700. It improves upon Motion’s Clinical […] ...
Through the 1990s, executives listened to their IT department heads explain why the company needed PDAs and other high-tech gadgets distributed throughout the workforce to improve “workplace ...
By Patricia Fusco. Just one-inch-thick and weighing only three pounds, the sleek new tablet PC forged from a union between Gateway and Motion Computing features a large 12-inch-plus display that’s ...
Legacy: The TravelMate was one of the first devices to come loaded with Windows XP Tablet PC Edition. ... The Motorola Atrix 4G could very well represent the future of mobile and desktop computing.
Microsoft shipped its Windows XP Tablet PC Edition operating system last week, opening the door for a slew of new mobile computers, dubbed tablet PCs.
Tablet computers are getting plenty of exposure at the moment thanks to Apple and its consumer plaything, the iPad. At the other end of the tablet market is Motion Computing, which since 2001 has ...
eWEEK content and product recommendations are editorially independent. We may make money when you click on links to our partners. Learn More. Tablet PC maker Motion Computing is maintaining its ...
Mobile computers are spreading faster than any other consumer technology in history. In the United States, smartphones have even begun reaching the group of relative technophobes that consumer ...
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