OnLive Desktop Plus adds Flash to your iPad, for $5 a month (hands-on)

OnLive Desktop Plus for iPad During CES 2012, the surprise appearance of OnLive Desktop was an intriguing idea for Windows-lovers: rent a Windows 7 computer remotely, and stream the whole experience to your iPad. Helping the cause for the first iteration of OnLive Desktop was its price: free. That version only had 2GB of cloud storage and the Windows 7 environment only ran a suite of Microsoft Office applications (sans Outlook), but for the cloud-curious and those who lack a word processor for their iPad, OnLive’s streaming solution is a clever way to explore a mobile office.

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OnLive Desktop Plus adds Flash to your iPad, for $5 a month (hands-on)

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Malata’s 2012 / 2013 roadmap reveals a very tablet-friendly future

Chinese manufacturer Malata is relatively unknown in the tablet universe, as it hasn’t been in the spotlight since showing off its SMB-A1011 back in 2010. Now, the outfit’s quietly unveiled a roadmap that’s got more than a handful of noteworthy slabs in sight. The company plans on launching a variety of Tegra 3-packing slates dubbed SMB-B1023, including a 7, 9.7 and 10.1-inch version, all of which are said to be sporting ICS.

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Malata’s 2012 / 2013 roadmap reveals a very tablet-friendly future

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Lenovo and Motorola may confirm Intel Medfield plans next week

This Motorola smartphone is expected to run an Intel Medfield chipset.

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Lenovo and Motorola may confirm Intel Medfield plans next week

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iPad and Kindle Fire: The top 5 technical annoyances

(Credit: FixYa) Users of the iPad and the Kindle Fire share some of the same technical issues but also face their own unique challenges, according to a study out yesterday from FixYa. Analyzing the array of problems seen by site users who own one of the two popular tablets, FixYa boiled the list down to the top five major glitches.

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iPad and Kindle Fire: The top 5 technical annoyances

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