The rise of tablets: Does the market need laptops or phones anymore?
We may want them, but we don’t actually need them. Here’s why tablets can replace everything now.
We may want them, but we don’t actually need them. Here’s why tablets can replace everything now.
HP Inc has reported better-than-expected quarterly revenue and raised its full-year profit forecast, helped by strong demand for its notebooks and desktops.
2-in-1 tablets accounted for over 40 per cent of total Australian tablet sales during the second half of 2017, according to Telsyte.
Worldwide shipments of PCs, tablets and mobile phones are expected to reach 2.32 billion this year, according to Gartner.
Perth-based Aegis Aged Care Group is looking to the cloud to improve resident care and safety.
Telsyte has predicted that the local market will be hit by an incoming wave of touchscreen desktops devices.
After two years of decline, the global tablet market is starting to flourish with projections in 2017, highlighting moderate demand for 2-in-1s, Windows tablets, and enterprise sales.
HP's latest version of its Elite x2 tablet offers a top-notch keyboard case, a digital pen and the ability to be repaired in-house.
One wouldn't typically imagine liquid cooling in a tablet, but Acer has pulled it off with its latest Switch Alpha 12.
Intel's rise and fall in tablets are starting to resemble the company's misadventures in netbooks less than a decade ago.