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Aron Meystedt’s Tablets.com gets another new look and feel

Tablets.com

Aron Meystedt’s Tablets.com web site has received another small makeover in recent days. 

The internet site still has a blog section, but now when you type the URL tablets.com into your address bar, you’ll be presented with a redesigned home page with affiliate advertising from the affiliate marketing company Commission Junction, who has partnerships with top-tier advertisers, including Apple itself.

The domain name Tablets.com was purchased by Aron Meystedt’s company XF.com in late 2010 for an undisclosed amount, which owns a number of premium domain names like Copier.com, March.com, and the first .com ever registered –  Symbolics.com. 

Tablets are one of this year’s hottest products, after Apple announced the launch of its tablet device the iPad nearly one year ago today – and as expected, they’re taking a bite out of PC sales. 

As Geoff Duncan, a writer for Digital Trends pointed out this week, “Microsoft posted better-than-expected financial results for its holiday quarter, but admits Windows sales are being impacted by the popularity of tablets.”

Categories
News

Aron Meystedt’s Tablets.com gets a new look

Tablets.com

After weeks of being nothing more than just a blog, Aron Meystedt of XF.com Investments unveiled a new site for one of the hottest domain names in 2010 and beyond, Tablets.com

The site now provides a comparison engine that helps visitors find tablets, compare prices, read reviews, and more.

How hot will tablets be in 2011?

Well, according to Facebook’s Top Status Trends of 2010, tablets are going to be hot. 

“iPad and iPhone4” came in at #4 as one of the fastest growing trends.

Facebook Top Status Trends 2010

Last January, tablets.com didn’t even register a blip on Compete.com.  Less than a year later according to a rough estimate, visitors to the domain name number in the thousands. 

And now with a web site online, a comparison engine, and a Facebook page, expect 2011 to be a very good year for the domain name that sold in 2006 for a mere $50,500.