iPad 3 Might Feature iOS 6, 'HD' Name
eWeek
For months, media and tech pundits have used "iPad 3" to describe Apple's next-generation tablet. Apple is hosting a March 7 event in San Francisco where the device will almost certainly be unveiled. Rumored features include a high-resolution Retina ...
See all stories on this topic »
| Top 5 New Gadgets of the Week ABC News By JOANNA STERN It was raining phones and tablets this week. Over 50 phones andtablets were announced this week at Mobile World Congress, a large mobiletradeshow in Barcelona. On top of that, some other very notable gadgets made there way into the ... See all stories on this topic » | ABC News |
ITworld.com
March 04, 2012, 7:57 AM — Microsoft has built a ton of new features and capabilities into Windows 8 that make it a prime OS for mobile devices like ultrabooks and tablets. Aside from the Metro UI that is designed to be tapped and swiped on a ...
See all stories on this topic »Facebook, Angry Birds Top BYOD Blacklist: Zenprise
eWeek
Mobile device management software makers continue to find interesting ways to slice and dice information related to the burgeoning bring-your-own-device, or BYOD, trend in the corporate workplace. Enter Zenprise, which found out that Facebook, ...
See all stories on this topic »Windows 8 Consumer Preview, Windows Server 8 Marked Microsoft's Week
eWeek
While the company maintains a lion's share of the “traditional” PC operating system market, that market as a whole is being eclipsed by the rise of tablets and other mobile devices as the center of consumers' computing lives.
See all stories on this topic »
| Asus Transformer Pad Infinity vs iPad 2: Is Apple Rotting? International Business Times By sangeeta mukherjee: Subscribe to sangeeta's RSS feed Asus introduced Transformer Pad Infinity tablet at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain, in February. Infinity might look familiar to the tablet lovers as it is essentially an upgraded... See all stories on this topic » | International Business Times |
Tampabay.com
Children who may have taken breast cancer treatment medication mistakenly distributed by a New Jersey pharmacy instead of prescribed fluoride pills likely won't suffer any health problems, Daniel Hussar, a professor with the Philadelphia College of ...
See all stories on this topic »