How to make your Nexus 7 not suck
Google shipped their new 7-inch tablet with a built-in handicap. Here's how to fix it.
Google shipped their new 7-inch tablet with a built-in handicap. Here's how to fix it.
These were the articles from my column that inspired you the most this year. Surprise, surprise, it was all about Mobility and Tablets.
The PC hybrid is currently the only end-user business platform that is equipped to deal with next-generation cloud computing environments in dynamic mobile computing scenarios.
The Kindle and the NOOK may still be selling like hotcakes this holiday season, but doom is on the horizon.
Initial sales of the new Jelly Bean-powered Nexus 7 have been strong, but that doesn't fundamentally change user acceptance issues of Google's OS on most Android tablets.
Like the Pillar of Fire in the Old Testament, Amazon drops its own Finger of God on Google and its Android tablet OEMs during Passover season in the form of a reduced-price Kindle Fire HD.
Samsung's home-grown ARM-based System on a Chip, display technology and flash memory will provide the vertical integration to make full-size Android tablets cheaper than ever.
Amazon and Barnes & Noble may throw around streaming video as a marketing tool to postion their products, but real mobile usage data indicates that users aren't watching a lot of streaming feature films and TV on their tablets.
The Iconia A500 would have been more successful had it gotten its Honeycomb 3.1 act in order quickly.
Software developer Joseph Labrecque points towards a bright, positive outlook regarding Adobe Flash and AIR technologies on mobile devices, the desktop and the Web.