Lynn University in Boca Raton, FL, is upgrading its iPad initiative by providing all undergraduate day students and faculty with an iPad Pro, Apple Pencil and Smart Keyboard.
Acer has launched a new notebook, the TravelMate B117, that company officials say is its first product designed specifically with students in mind.
A study published in the Journal of Media Education this week reported that students spend a fifth of their time in class doing things on their devices that have nothing to do with their school work.
A university in Nevada has commissioned the development of a custom campus safety app that will now be configured for eight other public colleges and universities in the state.
Tablet sales declined substantially in 2015, but they aren't down for good, according to one market research firm. Nevertheless, their short-term growth will be slower than previously expected.
LocknCharge has introduced a new mobile device charging cart that the company said will be cost-effective and customizable.
Four technology and innovation experts discuss the hottest trends in higher ed tech this year.
IQ Onsite, a company that provides mobile tools for constituent relationship management, has launched Campus Ping, a communication tool for educational institutions, with two new pilot programs.
How two colleges are preparing for this year's mobile demands.
The single greatest advantage of Microsoft's high-end Surface Pro 4 tablet over other high-end mobile Windows devices is its pressure-sensitive stylus. So those of you who jumped in with the latest generation of the device may have been perplexed (as I was) to find that some of the most popular graphics apps out there were incapable of using stylus pressure. But there's a simple fix for that.