HP’s new lineup of enterprise tablets and convertibles is led by the HP Pro Slate 12 ($529, £349, or AUS$646), a large format tablet that can turn physical pen-to-paper drawings into digital files.
Well below the Pro Slate 12 is the HP Pro Tab 10 EE ($279, £184, AUS$340), a 10.10-inch tablet geared toward the education market.
Although neither of these devices will compete with enterprise-focused tablets like the Dell Venue 11 Pro 7140 (starting at $699, £430, AU$795), and the Samsung Galaxy Tab Pro (starting at $545, £549, AU$995), they’re both solid units that are capable of performing as advertised.
The same can be said about the HP Pro Tablet 408 G1 ($299, £178, AU$319) an 8-inch enterprise tablet that looks and feels more like an e-reader or a large smartphone than any of the aforementioned devices.
Design and specs
The first thing you’ll notice about the 408 G1 is how small and light it is. At just 8.4 inches tall, 5.5 inches wide and a whopping 0.35 inches thick, this is one of the thinnest tablets on the market. The Dell Venue 8 7840 is the slimmest tablet on the market at 0.23 inches, which …read more
Source: techradar.com – PC and Mac