Monday, September 5, 2011

Tech companies have been flexing their design muscles at the IFA trade show in Berlin this week, trying to prove that Apple's not the only one that can make ultra-thin, ultra-light laptops and tablets. Turns out that these PC makers can out-slim the iPad and the MacBook Air after all. They just needed Apple to start the fire. Here's a peek at the best-looking tablets and "Ultrabook" laptops revealed at IFA 2011.

Samsung's follow-up to the original 7-inch Galaxy Tab is thinner, lighter and faster, thanks to a 1.4 GHz dual-core processor and an aluminum frame that apes the style of the company's Galaxy Tab 10.1 -- and a certain other popular tablet. And unlike last year's model, the Galaxy Tab 7.7 runs a Android Honeycomb 3.2, which was designed with tablets in mind. For now, Samsung says it has no plans to launch the Galaxy Tab 7.7 in the United States, but you can be sure the company's working on something.
Where Dell's Streak 5 failed, the Galaxy Note could succeed if Samsung markets this 5.3-inch tablet-phone hybrid properly. Essentially, this is a gigantic version of the Galaxy S II smartphone, but it also hides a small stylus that can be used for notetaking -- hence the name. The Note packs a 1.4 GHz dual-core processor, an 8-megapixel rear camera, a 2-megapixel front camera and 16 GB of storage. But for now, there's no firm release date or set plans to launch stateside.

Read more:
http://techland.time.com/2011/09/03/the-tablets-and-ultrabooks-of-ifa-2011-you-should-know-about/#ixzz1X7S753iP



I think that is very good that there are more tablets besides the iPad, because if someone don't like the iPad, he can bought another tablates that maybe are very good. I think that the best tablet is the iPad, because it is from Apple and Apple have very good things.

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