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From: Sam12/26/2010 11:45:06 PM
1 Recommendation   of 54968
 
Motorola Stings Competitors With Teaser Ad for Android Tablet
* December 22, 2010
* By Larry Barrett
enterprisemobiletoday.com 

Motorola this week gave tablet PC connoisseurs something new to ponder with a teaser ad that managed to mock both Apple's iPad and Samsung's Galaxy Tab while simultaneously lauding the Rosetta Stone.

While the video did a great job of dissing Apple's iPad as simply a "giant iPhone" and credits the Galaxy Tab for running the Android mobile OS but belittles it for using a version "for a phone," it did little to clarify exactly what the new Motorola (NYSE: MOT) tablet device will look like when it's unveiled at the 2011 Consumer Electronics Show in January.

The only clue to particulars is found at the conclusion of the video when a bee buzzes its way toward the yet-to-be-unveiled device, implying perhaps that Motorola's new slate will run Google's Android 3.0 Honeycomb mobile operating system for tablets.

Motorola previously said it will launch both 7-inch and 10-inch tablets running Android in 2011, as it and others vendors battle hammer and tong to be the Android-based device of choice for consumers and enterprises looking for an alternative to Apple's (NASDAQ: AAPL) iPad.

CES 2011 is expected to be something of a coming out party for all sorts of tablet PCs and tablet-specific apps.

If the Motorola tablet is anything like the Motorola device demonstrated earlier this month by Andy Rubin, Google's top mobile executive, it will feature touchscreen navigation, support for larger mobile apps and a dual-core NVidia Tegra 2 processor, 32 GB of storage and both front- and back-facing cameras.

Though originally envisioned primarily as consumer-centric devices, tablet PCs -- mainly the iPad -- have been surprisingly popular additions for some enterprises, particularly those in the financial services and health care sectors.

Earlier this month, a Gartner report predicted that tablet PC shipments will surge from almost 20 million units this year to more than 208 million in 2014, displacing roughly 10 percent of PC units sold over this five-year span.

Related Articles

* Meet the Top Android Tablets for 2010 and Beyond
* Honeycomb On Tap for Android Tablets After Gingerbread Update
* Acer Unveils Android Tablets, Smartphone
* Rubin Demos Honeycomb Tablet, NFC on Nexus S with Gingerbread
* Samsung's Android 2.2. Galaxy Tab Coming to All Four Carriers
* RIM Takes On Apple's iPad With Sub-$500 PlayBook
* Financial Services Leads Way in iPad Adoption

Larry Barrett is a senior editor at InternetNews.com, the news service of Internet.com, the network for technology professionals.

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From: Sam12/26/2010 11:48:31 PM
   of 54968
 
Very strange, IMHO. But business is business, and it makes some very strange bedfellows sometimes.

Toshiba decides to outsource chips to Samsung
Kyodo News
search.japantimes.co.jp 

Toshiba Corp. will outsource its unprofitable business of producing semiconductors for digital home appliances to Samsung Electronics Co. of South Korea as it tries to restructure its chip-related operations, according to company officials.

Toshiba plans to engage only in designing the system large-scale integration chips so it can concentrate resources on its memory chip business, which is seeing growing demand for use in smart phones, the officials said.

The company will also sell a semiconductor plant to Sony Corp. and build a factory to produce liquid crystal panels for Apple Inc.'s iPhones.

Toshiba is holding talks with other chip makers to start outsourcing its system LSI production in fiscal 2011, the officials said.

The firm said it will restructure its system LSI business on Jan. 1 to accelerate decision-making and optimize use of management resources.

In doing so, the business will be reorganized into two divisions — one responsible for cutting-edge digital home appliances and the other for a wide range of products.

Continuing the system LSI business would require Toshiba to invest heavily because it needs state-of-the-art facilities.

By outsourcing the business, the electronics giant aims to cut investment costs and focus on producing NAND flash memory chips, the officials said.

Toshiba currently makes system LSIs at its plants in Oita and Nagasaki prefectures. After outsourcing the business, the Oita plant will make imaging sensors used in digital cameras while the Nagasaki plant will be sold to Sony.

Toshiba has agreed to sell the plant in Isahaya, Nagasaki Prefecture, owned by Toshiba and run by Nagasaki Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp., a joint venture among Toshiba, Sony and Sony Computer Entertainment Inc., to Sony, terminating their joint venture ties, Toshiba and Sony said.

They said the facilities to be transferred include the fabrication facilities and equipment for the 300-mm wafer line in Nagasaki Semiconductor Manufacturing's Nagasaki Technology Center bought by Toshiba from the Sony group in 2008.

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To: Sam who wrote (47564)12/26/2010 11:50:22 PM
From: Sam   of 54968
 
Palm announces tablet, hoping to give iPad some competition
By Hayley Tsukayama
voices.washingtonpost.com 

FOX News reported this morning that Palm is launching a competitor to the iPad.

Palm and parent company Hewlett-Packard will introduce three models of the tablet at the Consumer Electronics Show next month, the report said. All will run the WebOS operating system. The FOX report said that the new tablet's specs are "nearly identical" to the iPad and will run on Sprint's 4G network.

A fourth version of the tablet, geared toward university students, is to come, and HP hopes that it can hit classrooms as early as next fall.

Palm says early adopters can get their hands on the gadget in March.

By Hayley Tsukayama | December 22, 2010; 9:45 AM ET

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To: Sam who wrote (47565)12/26/2010 11:52:41 PM
From: Sam   of 54968
 
Tablets galore!

BenQ to Launch R100 Tablet PC in Early 2011
By Dan Nystedt, IDG News
pcworld.com 

Taiwanese consumer electronics vendor BenQ plans to launch its first tablet PC in China and Taiwan during the first quarter of 2011, a company representative confirmed Wednesday.

The R100 tablet boasts a 10.1-inch LCD touchscreen with 1024 x 600 resolution and runs Google's Android mobile OS. It also has an ARM-based processor made by Samsung Electronics that runs at 833MHz, according to information provided by BenQ.

With the R100, BenQ will join the ranks of other companies around the world putting out tablet PCs to compete with Apple's iPad. BenQ hopes to sell the R100 in content deals that pair the device with reading material such as books, or magazine and newspaper subscriptions.

The company said the R100's battery can run for up to 12 hours when the device is being used for reading. It can also be used for note-taking because users can write on the touchscreen with a stylus, in English or Chinese, both simplified and traditional characters.

The R100 will come with 8GB of internal storage as well as an SD slot able to handle up to 16GB SD cards. BenQ added mini-USB and mini-HDMI ports to the device as well as a 3.5-millimeter earphone jack.

It works with Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n and Bluetooth wireless data transfer protocol.

The R100 is 15mm thick and is 191mm by 244mm in size. It weighs 720 grams.

BenQ has not yet set a price for the R100 and a company representative said pictures would be available when the device is officially launched.

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To: Sam who wrote (47565)12/27/2010 12:37:33 AM
From: Ausdauer   of 54968
 
Sam, lots of tablet announcements with no finished product to show for it.

Aus

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To: FUBHO who wrote (47559)12/27/2010 12:38:59 AM
From: Ausdauer   of 54968
 
FUBHO, glad to hear that you like it.


Keep us updated with your experience.

Aus

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To: Ausdauer who wrote (47567)12/27/2010 8:09:20 AM
From: Sam   of 54968
 
They will be introduced at CES. Waiting for Gingerbread to be stable and out. There will be a flood of tablets for sale over the next few months.

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To: Sam who wrote (47569)12/27/2010 8:30:06 AM
From: FUBHO   of 54968
 
Honeycomb is the first Android version with dedicated tablet support. It is easy to get confused with all these updates.

androidng.com 

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To: FUBHO who wrote (47570)12/27/2010 8:41:19 AM
From: Sam   of 54968
 
Yes, I was just coming here to make that correction myself!

I knew that, too early in the morning after another late night to be posting anything with substance. Even simple substance.

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To: Sam who wrote (47569)12/27/2010 2:10:52 PM
From: clean86   of 54968
 
There will be a flood of tablets for sale over the next few months.

Yep along with the iPad 2.0.

All will eat flash and be good for Sandisk.

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