First up: Apple's landslide court victory over Samsung and what it could mean to Android. Next, some impressions of the Galaxy Note 10.1 and thoughts on some upcoming events and potential device announcements.
Starting out with the explanation of "pickleball", Matt and Kevin move through history to discuss what got Apple thinking of a 7-inch iPad, plus thoughts on Nexus 7 cases and the T-Mobile Galaxy Note.
This week Matt and Kevin share hands-on insights with the Galaxy S III, Nexus 7 tablet and Nokia PureView 808 phone. Plus some impressions of Android 4.1, also known as Jelly Bean: It's sweet!
Toshiba's Excite 7.7 is in the house and so is its 13-inch big brother! Plus Kevin gets a ChromeBook just before Apple's WWDC event, which we guess at what's coming.
The roundtable commences with Chris Miller, Michael Cummings and Robert Murray to discuss: Facebook cameraColor relaunches with no fanfareFlipboard for Androidpromoted Facebook postsYahoo AxisVisit our showlinks and join our Diigo bookmarking group to keep up and share stories with us.
Matt shares a customer service horror story between AT&T and Amazon Wireless while Kevin loves the latest Kickstarter project: A smart home screen for Android tablets.
Is the HTC One S T-Mobile's best phone yet? Our experiences are positive with the new handset as they are with the Kindle Touch and the improved Chrome for Android beta.
Which Galaxy Note should you buy: the AT&T version or the international one? Thoughts on Placeme's location tracking and the gadget that got Kevin to stop running with his smartphone.
Facebook spends a billion dollars for some pictures and an app, Google Plus redesigns the user interface and PlaceMe makes location services even creepier. TheSocialGeeks roundtable comes to order with Robert Murray, Michael Cummings, Corvida and hosted by Chris Miller. We all agree why Facebook bought Instagram, but the amount is staggering. PlaceMe makes checking into Foursquare look like childs play with added creepiness and Google Plus changes the UI, small revolts are quickly extinguished.