-
Six tablets that come to premature end and never appear in market
Posted on January 10th, 2012 No commentsThe year just past by has witnessed a fast and strong growth in tablets industry. Various popular and powerful tablets emerged in the market to meet users’ needs, like the Amazon Kindle Fire, Motorola Droid Xyboard, Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1, HTC EVO View 4G, etc. all of which are the result of high tech and provides users excellent user experience. In fact, these tablets are just partial of tablets that various tablets makers put into market in the end. There are also a lot of tablets which come to a premature end and never appear in the market, which means these tablets are dead before being put into market. A ZDNet Author has made a collection about these premature ended tablets for us. The following 6 tablets all belong to this kind of tablets. Check the following original content to get to know more insight about tablet market.
Sony Tablet P
When Sony announced its entry into the Android tablet game in August 2011, it showed off two devices. One was the Sony Tablet S, which made it to market a few months later. The other was the Sony Tablet P (then known as the Tablet S2), a unique folding tablet planned to be released by AT&T in time for the holidays. It didn’t.
Dell tablet of Android version
To Dell’s credit, the company was one of the first major players to challenge the Apple iPad with the Android-based Streak tablet. So when it announced its plan to deliver a 10-inch Android tablet tablet for 2011, we had every reason to believe the company. Well, it produced a 10-inch Windows 7 tablet, but an Android version never made it out the door. Maybe the cardboard mock-up company reps showed off during the announcement event (shown here) should have tipped us off.
Lenovo tablet
Lenovo first showed off its IdeaPad U1 concept at CES of 2010, and its hybrid concept turned a lot of heads. The device worked as a Windows notebook when docked, but its detachable screen acted as an Android tablet when used separately. It missed its 2010 release, but popped up again at CES 2011. Who knows? Maybe we’ll see it again at CES 2012.
Kno tablet
Unlike most of the tablets on this list, the Kno tablet wasn’t geared for consumers. Its dual-screen design was made specifically to address the need for a full-size, full color replacement for large textbooks. Unfortunately, it never happened. In April 2011, the company decided to change direction and abandon hardware creation to focus specifically on software development.
Samsung Galaxy Tab 4G
During CES 2011, Samsung announced plans to release a 4G version of the 7-inch Galaxy Tab Android tablet for Verizon. Though Samsung went on to make many new versions to its Galaxy Tab line in 2011, a 4G version of this original Galaxy Tab never materialized.
BlackBerry Playbook 4G for Sprint
When RIM unveiled its BlackBerry PlayBook tablet, the company publicly announced its intention to release a 4G version of the device for Sprint. In August, Sprint nixed the idea. For more products we never saw in 2011, check out CNET’s Top 5 vaporware from CES 2011.
Source from: http://www.zdnet.com/photos/tablets-that-never-happened-photos/6335942?tag=photo-frame;get-photo-roto
Related useful guides for tablets
How to Convert Blu-ray to iPad 2 for Freely Watch Blu-ray on iPad 2
How to Convert Blu-ray Movies to Samsung Galaxy Tab 8.9
How to Convert Video to Flyer for Any Video Playback on HTC Flyer
How to covnert Blu-ray to BlackBerry PlayBook tablet for ultra HD video enjoymentзайм на карту rusbankinfo.ru
Blu-ray Ripper, DVD Ripper, Free Resources, Gadget News, Industry News, Video Converter amazon kindle fire, BlackBerry PlayBook, blu ray to samsung galaxy tab, Blu-ray Ripper, blu-ray to ipad 2, bluray to blackberry playbook, dvd ripper, htc evo view 4g, motorola droid xyboard, samsung galaxy tab, samsung galaxy tab 10.1, tablet, tablet news, Video Converter, video to flyer
Recent Comments