Tablet wars are heating up day by day. Online retailer Amazon announced its foray in to the tablet space with the launch of its Kindle Fire tablet.
If recent history is anything to go by, then it can be seen that it pays to buy Apple shares whenever the stock drops; something that could make evaluation of the next buying opportunity a meaningful process.
Microsoft has begun to roll out its Windows Phone 7.5 Mango update to smartphones globally.
Amazon gained $5.50, or 2.5 percent, to $229.71 on the Nasdaq Stock Market. The stock has risen 28 per cent this year.
Yahoo has unveiled the first official Android app on Flickr, which will allow users of its popular photo service to easily share pictures, in real time, with family and friends.
Consumers truly anticipating the iPhone 5 release date, as recent research shows that 41 percent of mobile users in North American have plans to buy one of the Apple smartphones.
The Is My Son Gay? app for Google's Android has may in the LGBT community outraged.
Amazon rolled out its new line of Kindle tablets in New York Wednesday morning, adding the seven-inch $199 color Android Fire, the $99 keyboard-free 4GB Touch model and a $79 2GB non-touchscreen version to its ranks. Yet the Amazon product causing the most stir was not an e-reader or tablet, but Amazon Silk, the company's new mobile web platform powered by Amazon's incredibly extensive web services platform.
Amazon is red hot. The company's stock is surging on the same day Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos unveiled its first tablet -- the Kindle Fire -- at an event in New York.
Amazon's CEO Jeff Bezos has unveiled a new e-reader device called the Kindle Touch 3G, which is now selling for $149 and $99 without 3G.
With so many tablets now available, it seems incredible that a serious threat to the Apple iPad has not yet emerged. The lack of a Goldilocks-esque just-right balance between portability and connectivity, sleek styling and dual processing, is much to blame. Like that of the MP3 music player before it, the tablet market is littered with models that, for one reason or another, have failed to capture the public's imagination. Yet, Amazon's unveiling of the eagerly awaited Kindle Fire ...
Apple invited the tech press to an iPhone-related event scheduled for Oct.4, with simply the email tag Let's talk iPhone.
Apple, which has sold more than 110 million iPhones since it launched the product, would unveil its new iPhone at a media event at its Cupertino, California headquarters on Oct.4.
Microsoft has begun to roll out updates for its Windows Phone 7.5 Mango, the latest set of software upgrades, with over 500 changes, making it the biggest update yet for the mobile platform.
Nielsen, the market research company, has announced the results of its latest survey according to which people are crowding for Android devices. At the same time, it has cautioned investors that Apple's iOS will soon pick up with the release of the iPhone
An Android app that claims to tell parents about their son's sexual orientation is stirring controversy in the U.S. It's now for sale on Google's Android Market.
Amazon is set to bring color to the Kindle when it unveils Kindle Fire on Wednesday during a press conference, according to reports.
The invitation has gone out from Apple for its Oct. 4 event at company headquarters. Most observers think it's when Apple will unveil its new iPhone 5. The invitation for the event on Oct. 4 on the company's Cupertino, Calif., campus at 10 a.m. PT may give some clues.
The invitation has gone out from Apple for its October 4 event at company headquarters. Most observers think it's when Apple will unveil its new iPhone 5. The invitation for the event on Oct. 4 on the company's Cupertino, Ca., campus at 10 a.m. PT. may give some clues.
Samsung announced, Monday, its U.S. release plans for tablet Galaxy Tab 8.9 and two new media players, the Galaxy Player 4.0 and Galaxy Player 5.0. The tablet, which runs on Google's Android 3.1 Honeycomb, will be available Oct. 2 while the players both powered by Android 2.3.5, Gingerbread, are set for release on Oct.16.
Co-founder and CEO Kevin Systrom says Instagram 2.0 is signing up 78 new users every minute. The new version of Instagram, only available on iOS, is faster, more customizable and more creative.
The Apple is iPad is dominating the global tablet market, capturing 80 percent of the market according to industry statistics.