BARCELONA, Spain ? Samsung Electronics is beefing up its tablet range with a competitor?
Here at Maclean's, we appreciate the written word. And we appreciate you, the reader. We are always looking for ways to create a better user experience for you and wanted to try out a new functionality that provides you with a reading experience in which the words and fonts take centre stage. We believe you'll appreciate the clean, white layout as you read our feature articles. But we don't want to force it on you and it's completely optional. Click "View in Clean Reading Mode" on any article if you want to try it out. Once there, you can click "Go back to regular view" at the top or bottom of the article to return to the regular layout.
BARCELONA, Spain ? Samsung Electronics is beefing up its tablet range with a competitor to Apple?s iPad Mini that sports a pen for writing on the screen.
The Korean company announced on Sunday in Barcelona that the Galaxy Note 8.0 will have an 8-inch screen, putting it very close in size to the Apple?s tablet, which launched in November with a 7.9-inch screen. It?s not the first time Samsung has made a tablet that?s in the Mini?s size range: it?s very first iPad competitor had a 7-inch screen, and it still makes a tablet of that size, but without a pen.
Samsung will start selling the new tablet in the April to June period, at an as yet undetermined price. It made the announcement ahead of Mobile World Congress, the wireless industry?s annual trade show, which starts Monday in Barcelona, Spain.
The Note 8.0 fills a gap in Samsung?s line-up of pen-equipped devices between the Galaxy Note II smartphone, with its 5.5-inch screen, and the Galaxy Note 10.1, a full-size tablet. Samsung has made the pen, or more properly the stylus, one of the tools it uses to chip away at Apple?s dominance in both tablets and high-end smartphones. Apple doesn?t make any devices that work with styluses, preferring to optimize its interfaces for fingers, mice and touchpads.
On Samsung?s Note line, the pens can be used to write, highlight and draw. The screens also sense when the mouse hovers over the screen, providing an equivalent to the hovering mouse cursor on the PC. However, few third-party applications have been modified to take full advantage of the pens.
bastille day breaking bad breaking bad food network star British Open 2012 bane Aurora Colorado
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.