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Lenovo Yoga Book with Halo keyboard launching in India on December 13

Lenovo Yoga Book, the tablet hybrid will launch in India on December 13. The company has sent out media invites for an event where the company will announce its hybrid tablet with a never seen before design.   Lenovo Yoga Book running Android or Windows was first showcased at IFA 2016. Lenovo says Yoga Book is the thinnest laptop hybrid and it is unlike anything else available in the market. Under the heart of Lenovo Yoga Book is an uninspiring Intel Atom x5-Z8550 processor, which Lenovo finds as a common thread in the world of Android and Windows. The device features a 10.1-inch IPS LED display with a full HD resolution of 1920 x 1200 pixels. The interesting part, however, is the other half of the device which basically skips traditional keyboard for a Halo effect. Yes, the keyboard is literally called Halo keyboard and it appears on demand, similar to the virtual keyboard on your smartphone.   Lenovo Yoga Book's Halo surface also accepts Pen inpu...

GizmoTab is a tablet made with both kids and parents in mind

Parents who want a tablet for their young kids have a new option in the GizmoTab from  Verizon Wireless . The carrier began selling the 8-inch Android tablet today, which includes a “kid-tough” removable bumper that can keep it working despite the large amount of abuse young children can offer. The pre-installed software that comes with the GizmoTab has been created especially for kids age 3-8, with access to 300 education-themed apps that are grouped in seven different islands. Those apps include Play-Doh ABCs, Operation Math Code Squad and Nat Geo Puzzle Explorer. Parents can access a dashboard on the tablet that will keep track of their kid’s use and set limits on how long they can use the device. When the kids are in bed or at grandma’s, parents can use the GizmoTab like any other Android tablet, with its Qualcomm Snapdragon 617 octa-core processor, 3GB of RAM, and 16GB of onboard storage. It does have Android Marshmallow 6.0.1 pre-installed, along with a...

Some Android app updates could cut their file sizes by 65 percent or more

As any Android smartphone owner knows, updates from the  Google Play Store  can come quite frequently for many popular apps. They can also use up data if updates are conducted on a cellular network. Today, Google announced a new approach for Android app downloads. The good news is this method could solve the problem of using a ton of data for such updates. In a blog post, Google describes the new approach, which it calls File-by-File patching. In the old days, Android apps were updated by downloading the app’s entire APK file. In 2016, the company began using the bsdiff algorithm to cut app file size updates by 47 percent. File-by-File patching can go even further, reducing app updates by an average of 65 percent. In fact, some app updates could be cut down by as much as 90 percent with this method. Normally, an APK file is compressed using a technology called Deflate, but Google says any change to the app’s original uncompressed content “can make the compres...