More on the Motorola Zoom with Android 3.0
I find this claim on battery life astonishing, so I think I'll hang fire and see what user reviews say.
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The tablet landscape is about to be shaken up by the new Motorola Xoom, the first in the world to feature Google's Android 3.0 (Honeycomb) operating system.
Many devices on the market are powered by Android, but the Motorola Xoom will grab headlines for being the first to run Honeycomb, which has been tailor-made for tablets.
Honeycomb allows users to customise their Motorola Xoom's home screen on its 10.1" HD widescreen display and offers a sleek interface, with neater notifications and clever widgets.
Motorola Xoom will be among the most powerful tablets available, packing a dual core processor, with each core running at 1Ghz, to produce sharp images at incredible speed.
Graphics, videos and other rich content on the web are central to the joy tablets bring to their owners. Motorola Xoom users will be able to enjoy the best of the web using Adobe Flash Player, whereas Apple's iPad appears unlikely to include the program any time soon.
With a battery life supporting up to 10 hours of video playback, the Motorola Xoom is ideal for watching HD movies on a long journey. It charges in half the time of comparable tablets on the market, so could appeal to people who use their tablet on the go.
Its 3D Graphics Engine delivers films the way the director intended, while the Xoom's built-in stereo speakers complete an immersive viewing experience.
Once you've exhausted your movie library, you can shoot your own films using the Motorola Xoom's HD camcorder. The built-in 5MP camera eliminates the need for connector kits which other tablets require.
The Motorola Xoom was named Best in Show at this year's CES and with such an impressive range of features, it is likely to be one of 2011's biggest gadgets.
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RIM announces Android App Support for Playbook
RIM today revealed expanded application support for its upcoming Blackberry Playbook tablet. With two "app players" available from the online App World, the tablet will be capable of running Blackberry Java and Android 2.3 apps, as well as native C/C++ apps written for the new Blackberry Tablet OS. The company has also managed to secure deals with Ideaworks Labs and Unity Technologies to bring their cross-platform gaming engines to the Playbook.
While expanded app support is great news, some may argue that the future is all about web applications, and RIM has already got that covered too. The Playbook will have HTML5 and Flash support built into its WebKit-based browser, allowing web developers to bring their projects to as many platforms as possible with little effort. RIM is fully behind Adobe's offerings, also bringing support for Adobe AIR through a special SDK.
No mention has been made of Honeycomb (or Android 3.0) app support, but it's still early days for the Blackberry Tablet OS. Honeycomb is a tablet-oriented release and is expected to bring a range of apps optimised for larger screens, a particularly beneficial bonus for the Playbook. A key advantage to distributing app players via the online store is upgrades such as Honeycomb support can be made without pushing an entire OS update, so Playbook owners are unlikely to be left behind for too long.
The Blackberry Playbook will be released April 19th, and a beta release of its SDK is expected for this summer. The full press release can be viewed here.