If you’ve been waiting for a Pixel Slate 2 or Pixel C 2, we have some bad news: Google has confirmed that it won’t be making its own branded tablets any more—Android, Chrome, or otherwise. Google ...
With Google renewing its focus on Android tablets, what's in the cards for the future of Chrome OS? Here, for the first time, are some inside answers. Lemme let you in on a little secret: Google isn’t ...
Taiwanese computer manufacturer Acer plans to show off devices using Chrome OS, Google’s operating system for netbooks and other devices, before the end of the month, according to a report in Taiwan ...
Google’s Chrome OS started out as a browser-based operating system for notebook and desktop computers. But over the past few years Google has added support for touchscreen displays and the ability to ...
Chrome OS notebooks won’t arrive until later this year, but Google is already planning for tablets. CNet’s Stephen Shankland found lots of tablet evidence among the Chrome OS source code, including a ...
Google has conceptual images for what a Chrome OS-based tablet computer user interface might look like at its open source Chromium Projects site. The images actually went up a couple of days before ...
Google itself hasn't done much to help the segment. Some apps still won't run at all on an Android tablet, which is pretty silly. At a minimum, Google could have offered a mode that supported phone ...
Tablets aren’t even shipping yet and the wars between vendors are escalating. This despite that tablets have always so far been a strictly niche device (think UPS), although PC makers like Apple and ...
After years of only allowing its hardware partners to put Chrome OS on devices with a laptop or desktop form factor, the first official Chrome OS tablet has appeared. Share on Facebook (opens in a new ...
There was very little tablet orientated application design so 10-12" didn't work very well (especially compared to Apple.). ~7" did well for a bit then seemingly got wiped out by bigger phones, A bit ...
Then they are missing out on an opportunity. Previous articles have mentioned they loose Chrome users when they enter college, particularly in tech fields. What better way to open that up than to ...