Priceless. An image of the Xoom browsing the Xoom web page. This is a perfect example of Motorola's ineptitude. When you can' even make sure that your flagship product can actually browse its own product page, I don't think you have any business being a part of this market.

Sure, Adobe has yet to deliver a tablet version of Flash. That's no surprise and any OEM that thought to rely on Adobe is getting what they deserve. But there's no reason to use Flash on the Xoom web page. First you're excluding visitors from anyone using the market-leading product, and secondly (and obviously) if your own product doesn't have flash, your own customers won't be able to see the web page. Those are just obvious. The first would make sense if you had any intentions to try and capture any market share from your competition. The second because if you're advertising a product that can handle the full web, you should make sure your own site loads first and foremost.

Besides that there's the actual content itself. Pretty much just text and static images. Nothing that would even require javascript and could have been handled with good old HTML and CSS2.

Walt Mossberg found the Xoom's battery lasted about 7.5 hours versus 11.something on the iPad playing video while connected to the net. Motorola under-delivering on promised longevity and Apple over-delivering.
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Bruno
Twisted Melon : Fine Mac OS Software