It is said that the Dell Latitude 10 will be able to fit securely into current IT environments in order to help improve IT efficiency as well as decrease the total cost-of-ownership. The Dell Latitude 10 will not need any kind of new mobile device management or software licensing, and will still be able to support new and legacy Windows applications, playing nice with Adobe Flash to boot while hooking up to existing peripherals so that end-users can work and play in the same way that they always have.
Features include a full-size USB port, Instant-On with Connected Stand-By mode, Intel’s Atom processor, and will come in two storage capacities – 64GB and 32GB models. These will join the Dell Latitude 10 standard configuration which was first announced in November last year.