Barnes & Noble's new Nook Tablet is pretty similar to Amazon's Kindle Fire and you suspect that B&N took a look at the Fire's success and said to their Nook e-reader engineers, "We need a $US199 Android tablet, stat!"
A grad student has caught Google with its hand in the cookies jar.
Rest easy, America: Congress has decided against killing the next generation of Wi-Fi and Bluetooth.
The Kindle Fire has been the most successful <a href="http://www.networkworld.com/news/2010/110910-google-android-useful-resources-smartphones.html">Android</a> tablet to date but that doesn't mean its flame is burning anywhere near as bright as the <a href="http://www.networkworld.com/news/2010/111910-apple-ipad-resources.html">iPad</a>'s.
If Google's Ice Cream Sandwich was supposed to unify <a href="http://www.networkworld.com/news/2010/110910-google-android-useful-resources-smartphones.html">Android</a> devices, it may not stay unified for long.
Being owned by Google apparently won't help Motorola get its devices upgraded to Android 4.0 ("Ice Cream Sandwich") any more quickly.
Anyone expecting LightSquared to bring LTE services to their neighborhood got a rude awakening today when the Federal Communications Commission said it would not permit the company to run an LTE network on satellite spectrum.
Google+ really is a man's social network.
The US Department of Justice has officially blessed the marriage between Google and Motorola after concluding that the merger would not adversely impact competition in the wireless market.
Samsung's sequel to the Galaxy Tab will make its public debut next month and you may be wondering what separates it from all the other Android tablets on the market.
Google acknowledged a major hole in its Google Wallet mobile payment platform this weekend after it temporarily disabled its Google Prepaid Cards.
It seems that Motorola has finally solved the missing piece for its popular line of Droid devices: a good keyboard.
If you took one look at Google Wallet and said to yourself, "There's no way that's completely secure," it turns out you were right.
You're familiar with autocomplete. Now get ready for auto-page rendering.
Google promised radical technology proposals would be a part of its <a href="http://www.wesolveforx.com/">Solve for X</a> project, and its initial offerings so far haven't disappointed.