Asus Transformer Pad Tablet with 2560x1600 to Ship Soon
The new Asus tablet should start shipping next month.
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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.
Article continues belowThe $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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deftonian I love ASUS tablets... But I would have expected at least 3-4gb of RAM. I'm not familiar with Tegra 4 either so not sure about that either. The display is the only thing that catches my eye. Will hold out for reviews.Reply -
DarkSable And yet we can't get high resolution, smaller sized computer monitors... Why?Reply
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. -
antilycus Im a pretty big "power user". Work in network infrastructure support and blah blah blah. I have TF700T (tegra 3, 1920x1080) w/ the keyboard dock. The most useful thing about this? The keyboard/extra battery. For the year I've had it, what have I actually used it for? Thing's in a pinch as long as the work apps have a "tablet" / mobile version, which of course don't support a mouse at all (like the keyboard has). If you build it, THEY WONT COME. There is no market for it. I.T. People are 50% slower and to the power user, these things offer NOTHING. If I could load DEBIAN on it, great, but that makes the touch screen useless. If I could actually use it as a PC, great, but that makes the touch screen useless...Reply
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 -
DirectXtreme Reply11793918 said:And yet we can't get high resolution, smaller sized computer monitors... Why?
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%. -
DirectXtreme @DarkSableReply
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%. -
DirectXtreme @DarkSableReply
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%. -
dark_knight33 I have a TF700 Infinity Pad.Reply
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. -
teh_chem Yet again another boring overpriced rehash of every TF model since ASUS came out with them.Reply
@ 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. -
halcyon Reply11794107 said:Im a pretty big "power user". Work in network infrastructure support and blah blah blah. I have TF700T (tegra 3, 1920x1080) w/ the keyboard dock. The most useful thing about this? The keyboard/extra battery. For the year I've had it, what have I actually used it for? Thing's in a pinch as long as the work apps have a "tablet" / mobile version, which of course don't support a mouse at all (like the keyboard has). If you build it, THEY WONT COME. There is no market for it. I.T. People are 50% slower and to the power user, these things offer NOTHING. If I could load DEBIAN on it, great, but that makes the touch screen useless. If I could actually use it as a PC, great, but that makes the touch screen useless...
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
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