The nemesis of Apple is now offering a fresh challenge after Samsung announced its latest tablet: the Galaxy Tab 3.
This new tablet runs Google’s Android Jelly Bean 4.1 operating system and boasts a 7-inch display.
The device, which is powered by a 1.2GHz dual-core processor, comes with either 8 or 16GB of internal storage, plus up to 64GB of expandable memory. It also comes with both a 3-megapixel rear camera and 1.3-megapixel front camera. Plus, the design features a thinner bezel than its predecessor, the Galaxy Tab 2.
The release of the company’s latest tablet device follows the much-hyped launch of another product in the Galaxy family, the Galaxy S4 smartphone. The handset features a larger, richer display than the Galaxy S III – 5 inches and a resolution of 1,080 by 1920 – as well as an eight-core processor and a 13-megapixel camera. Samsung beefed up the software features as well. While the Galaxy S III has loads of camera options, with the Galaxy S 4, users can, among other things, add snippets of sound to still images.
While pricing and availability of the Galaxy Tab 3 remain unconfirmed, in the US AT&T announced 28 March that it will sell the Galaxy S 4 for $249 (£161) – $50 (£32) more than the industry standard for high-end devices like Apple’s iPhone 5 and the S 4’s predecessor – and it began accepting orders 16 April. Verizon Wireless and Sprint have also committed to selling the S4.
The household penetration rate of tablets is up 17 percent year over year, according to the research study “A Tale of Two Techs – Smartphone and Tablet Adoption and Usage,” conducted by the Consumer Electronics Association. Among tablet owners, 92 percent browse the Web and 83 percent use their tablets to check email, the report found.
Global tablet shipments reached 40.6 million units in the first quarter of 2013, with Google’s Android platform securing an impressive 43 percent global share, while Apple iOS devices, including the iPad and the iPad Mini, maintained their strong market leadership, accounting for nearly half (48 percent) of tablets shipped, according to the latest report from IT research firm Strategy Analytics.
Tablet shipments will exceed 350 million by the end of 2017, due to a predicted surge of smaller, lower-priced devices in the market, according to a March report from IT research firm IDC. The research firm raised its 2013 forecast for the worldwide tablet market to 190.9 million from its previous forecast for the year of 172.4 million units. Increases in tablet shipments have been made throughout the forecast period, with an average annual increase of 11 percent between 2013 and 2016.
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Originally published on eWeek.
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