Quote:
Originally Posted by fjtorres
The Business features are for their Government contracts and for the educational space. I expect their corporate units will ship with Mayday hardwired to a separate call center.
|
I'm gonna have to agree with Prestid, and here's why (emphasis mine):
"As employees increasingly bring their own devices to work, the new Kindle Fire tablets can be easily integrated into the workplace with the new enterprise features.."
[edit: written before I saw the post above; sorry for redundancy]Murthi specifically refers to the consumer models used in the workplace, not special corporate units. You don't put VPN and Kerberos support on a device made purely for content consumption. That said, there could be special software provided to enterprise that alters the interface/functionality, and their ultimate goal could still be content consumption by employees.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jessica Lares
Slanted control buttons. Ugh.
Hate the new Amazon branding on the back too. If I wanted to advertise that I was using something I'd bought on Amazon, I'd just cut the box they ship it in into a case. 
|
I'm actually quite impressed that they did not put any logos on the front, which is an annoyingly common thing with tablets that upsets the view-able aesthetics far more than anything on the back.
Quote:
Originally Posted by fjtorres
And, BTW, the tablets are not over spec'd -- there is no such thing as too much RAM, CPU-power, or GPU-power, for *gaming*.
|
Agreed. These mobile processors are not powerful. In fact they can barely provide a smooth interface as it is, much less keep up with increasingly robust and demanding software. The only reason they aren't far, far more powerful than they are is that they're handicapped due to heat and energy limitations.
imo, the resolution increase was absolutely beneficial to text for news/magazines, one of the device's major uses.