Are you not experiencing the pleasure you need and deserve from your current tablet? Do you find that your 10-inch tablet simply isn't satisfying? The Samsung has the solution: not one, but two brand new tablets that offer a fabulous 12.2 inches of diagonal screen real estate. The Galaxy Tab Pro and Galaxy Note Pro 12.2, along with the smaller Galaxy Tab Pro 10.1 and 8.4, are both launching in United States retailers on February 13th. And the screens aren't the only things that are big.

If you need a memory refresh, these are the tablets announced last month at CES, complete with a totally new version of Samsung's user interface. All four tablets share some similar core specifications (1.9GHz Exynos 5 Octa processor, 8MP rear camera, 3GB RAM on the 12-inch tablets, 2GB on the smaller Tab Pros, 16-64GB storage plus MicroSD card slots) with the obvious difference being screen technology. All of them use a massive 2560x1600 screen resolution, even on the Tab Pro 8.4, but only the Galaxy Note Pro gets the S-Pen and Wacom digitizer. All four use Android 4.4 with a new UI that looks a bit like Windows 8's Metro start screen. All of them will be available in black and white.

Samsung is marketing these tablets as business machines, and boy, do they mean business. The Tab Pro 8.4 at 16GB is the cheapest of the lot - $400. The Tab Pro 10.1 jumps up to $500 for the basic 16GB model, then a whopping $650 for the 12.2-inch Tab Pro. Finally, the Galaxy Note Pro 12.2 starts at $750 for the 32GB model and jumps to $850 for the 64GB version. At the top of the line, these tablets are starting to compete with premium laptops, and they're easily the most expensive WiFi models on the market. Samsung is boosting the value proposition with the Galaxy Perks package, which includes subscriptions of varying lengths to Hulu, Bloomberg BusinessWeek, Cisco WebEx, two years of 50GB Dropbox space, and a $25 Google Play credit.

Even with the add-ons, these are some seriously expensive machines, and the Note 3-style faux leather can't hide the fact that they use Samsung's standard design sensibilities (including physical navigation keys). Samsung will start taking pre-orders tomorrow on its website, and initial retail partners include Best Buy, Wal-Mart, Amazon, Tiger Direct, Fry's, and Newegg. Any takers?