Asus Transformer Pad Tablet with 2560x1600 to Ship Soon
The new Asus tablet should start shipping next month.
Although we haven't seen anything official from Asus, the company's Transformer Pad TF701T is supposedly coming to the United States soon. It will be packing a hefty 2560 x 1600 resolution inside a 10.1 inch screen, backed by Nvidia's quad-core Tegra 4 SoC clocked at 1.9 GHz. The hybrid tablet is on sale now at ExcaliberPC with a starting price of $449 USD.
According to the specs, the tablet features 2 GB of memory, 32 GB of internal storage, and a microSD card slot providing up to 128 GB of extra storage. The tablet also features Wireless N and Bluetooth 3.0 + EDR connectivity, a 5MP camera on the back and a 1.2MP camera on the front.
The tablet also reportedly supports Miracast and SonicMaster technology, as well as provide miniHDMI output, a 3.5 mm headphone jack, and a 31Wh Li-polymer battery promising up to 13 hours on a single charge. Android 4.2 "Jelly Bean" is the OS of choice, and possibly 4.3 once the tablet hits the North American market.
The $449 pricetag is for the tablet only, but the company will also sell the device with a keyboard dock in a combo for $599; the dock by itself is $149. The keyboard dock adds an additional SD card slot, USB 3.0 port, and a backup battery providing four additional hours.
"The new ASUS Transformer Pad is perfect for on-the-go entertainment, thanks to a durable metallic design that's just 8.9mm thick and weighs 585g," reads the listing. "A high-quality speaker with ASUS SonicMaster audio technology gives loud, clear sound for music, movies and games, while the 17-hour battery life when docked means the new ASUS Transformer Pad lasts for two full working days between charges."
ExcaliberPC is taking pre-orders now and expects to start shipping the device on November 3. There's also a 64 GB model, but currently there's no pricetag.
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If a $200, 15" tablet can have a 1080p screen, and a $500 tablet like this can have a 1600p screen in a TEN inch screen, why in the world can't we buy a 24" monitor with the same resolution for the same price? It's not that it can't be manufactured, as has beens said before, and there's obviously a market for it.
If nothing else, make a tablet with a decent PPI and an hdmi-in. I guarantee it'll sell like hotcakes.
I struggle justifying the $500 w/ keyboard I spent total. Like everyone who buys and Apple product, I am constnatly trying to justify to myself why these things are needed and I have ZERO idea.
Good programmers are a dying breed. (thank you .net and MS). X86 vs ARM...it's not even worthy of a comparison and don't even bother throwing Intel ATOM into that. I love NVIDIA and Tegra, but I HATED HATED HATED the early 90's GPU chipset race and that's all that is happening w/ tablets right now. NO reason to buy, no demand for the product. These things are glorified big phones without the option to dial (VOIP excluded). It's a waste, IMO and I'd like someone try actually justify these things past email/web browsers w/ long battery life
If a $200, 15" tablet can have a 1080p screen, and a $500 tablet like this can have a 1600p screen in a TEN inch screen, why in the world can't we buy a 24" monitor with the same resolution for the same price? It's not that it can't be manufactured, as has beens said before, and there's obviously a market for it.
If nothing else, make a tablet with a decent PPI and an hdmi-in. I guarantee it'll sell like hotcakes.
http://www.ebay.com/sch/items/?_nkw=2048x1536+ipad+replacement+display&_sacat=&_ex_kw=&_mPrRngCbx=1&_udlo=&_udhi=&_sop=12&_fpos=&_fspt=1&_sadis=&LH_CAds=
http://dp2retina.rozsnyo.com/
It is possible to forge a high PPI PC monitor from an iPad Retina display for a fairly low price if you're willing to work with a 9.7" screen. They also sell boards that work with 13" and 15" Macbook Pro Retina displays. Also if text and graphic size is an issue just set the Windows DPI scaling to a higher value. I've heard many people complain about poor scaling, but I work on a 19" 4:3 CRT monitor which I run at 1920x1200 (letterboxed to a 17" screen) and most programs work fine with Windows DPI scaling set to 140%.
http://www.ebay.com/sch/items/?_nkw=2048x1536+ipad+repl...
http://dp2retina.rozsnyo.com/
It is possible to forge a high PPI PC monitor from an iPad Retina display for a fairly low price if you're willing to work with a 9.7" screen. They also sell boards that work with 13" and 15" Macbook Pro Retina displays. Also if text and graphic size is an issue just set the Windows DPI scaling to a higher value. I've heard many people complain about poor scaling, but I work on a 19" 4:3 CRT monitor which I run at 1920x1200 (letterboxed to a 17" screen) and most programs work fine with Windows DPI scaling set to 140%.
http://www.ebay.com/sch/items/?_nkw=2048x1536+ipad+repl...
http://dp2retina.rozsnyo.com/
It is possible to forge a high PPI PC monitor from an iPad Retina display for a fairly low price if you're willing to work with a 9.7" screen. They also sell boards that work with 13" and 15" Macbook Pro Retina displays. Also if text and graphic size is an issue just set the Windows DPI scaling to a higher value. I've heard many people complain about poor scaling, but I work on a 19" 4:3 CRT monitor which I run at 1920x1200 (letterboxed to a 17" screen) and most programs work fine with Windows DPI scaling set to 140%.
They skimped on the damn NAND speeds! The tablet is beautiful, but the interface lags a lot because of it. I've even gone so far as to root and use SDbooster to copy as much onto a class 10 MicroSD card as possible to help boost performance. It's severely RAM constrained, laggy, and the external speaker is a damn joke. Even with DSP manager I can't boost the sound to acceptable levels without putting a hard object behind the speaker port to reflect the sound, FYI Volume+ doesn't always work properly with JB 4.1+. My older HP Touchpad blows this thing away when playing back media, and that's just insulting.
That said, Skype works wonderfully. I use it more than anything else on the tablet. I've used Netflix on the go, and that also works well. Internet browsing can be a frustrating experience, but the slow speed is an acceptable trade off for the larger display over my SGS3.
The battery life is phenomenal with the Keyboard dock. I rarely use it without it.
Also, the first one died exactly 45 days after I purchased it. Netflix stopped playing back properly, so I rebooted it and it just never came back up. Had to exchange it.
I don't really regret my purchase, but I'm not as happy with it as I thought I'd be. Most of these flaws aren't apparent when you are demoing the unit in a store.
The TF701 may have addressed many of these issues, but be forewarned about them before committing to buy it.
@ DarkSable; there is a big difference between the quality of a tablet panel and the quality of a desktop monitor. It goes beyond just the resolution and PPI. It's for the same reasons that a good 24" 1920x1080 computer monitor can cost as much or more than a 50" 1920x1080 LED-LCD TV.
I struggle justifying the $500 w/ keyboard I spent total. Like everyone who buys and Apple product, I am constnatly trying to justify to myself why these things are needed and I have ZERO idea.
Good programmers are a dying breed. (thank you .net and MS). X86 vs ARM...it's not even worthy of a comparison and don't even bother throwing Intel ATOM into that. I love NVIDIA and Tegra, but I HATED HATED HATED the early 90's GPU chipset race and that's all that is happening w/ tablets right now. NO reason to buy, no demand for the product. These things are glorified big phones without the option to dial (VOIP excluded). It's a waste, IMO and I'd like someone try actually justify these things past email/web browsers w/ long battery life
Remote Desktop
Again, the factors that go into the quality of a panel are different for tablets vs. desktop monitors vs. TV's. Desktop monitors generally have superior panels when it comes to: uniformity, viewing angle, WTW, BTB, response times, etc. Comparing the price of a tablet or desktop or TV panel is like comparing the price of a Smart Car to the price of a Bently. Sure they're both cars and they can both keep you going at 65mph on the freeway, but the quality of each is different.
Yet again another boring overpriced rehash of every TF model since ASUS came out with them.
YOU must really hate apple then because they are the KING of overprices rehashes!! oh wait...you love apple...therefore your comment in thrown into the dustbin where it belongs!
Yet again another boring overpriced rehash of every TF model since ASUS came out with them.
YOU must really hate apple then because they are the KING of overprices rehashes!! oh wait...you love apple...therefore your comment in thrown into the dustbin where it belongs!
Wait, who said I love apple? The only apple product I own is a 2nd gen ipod touch from 5 years ago. I use android devices for my phones and tablets; have two android tablets and more android phones than I can count. I have no idea wtf you're talking about...still doesn't change the fact that ASUS hasn't done much with their android TF line, and most of their tablets cost more than they ought. Not to mention how many OTA updates they screwed the pooch on with the TF101.
The Prime is sssslllloooowwww - I have had to wait 20 to 30 seconds for the scfreen to start accepting input. A simple Spider Solitaire game cannot play smoothly - animations freeze for 5 to 10 seconds, the screen won't accept input for 5 to 10 seconds, with no other apps in the background. The wi-fi connection is weak, the sound barely acceptable.
They may talk about how good this one is, but "once burned, twice shy". I'm looking got replace the Prime with its frustrations.I doubt that this will make the first list, let alone the short list. It's an Asus.
Such a pity. I really like their motherboards.