Wednesday, 1 August 2012

Asus Tablet Review And Specs

By Odessa Lundell


The Asus Transformer Pad TF300T sports a 10.1 inch LCD screen having 1280x800px image resolution. This IPS panel supplies great, crisp images with good color separation and wide viewing angles and it is the best of the latest tablet computers 2012 lineup, but is of course overshadowed by the New iPad?s retina display.

The TF300T is powered by the Tegra 3 chipset, clocking in at a respectable 1.2 gigahertz, making for a zippy user experience. There?s some 3D acceleration integrated that would probably be super slick, but there?s not much available for the Android platform to make complete use of this, hopefully this would be solved in the near future.

The one gig of ram is pretty regular fare at time of writing , and the built-in 32gb of memory space is expandable with micro SD. There?s also a full size SD reader on the dock, that is a welcome feature for both much more storeroom , and for digi cam owners.

The Asus Transformer Pad TF300T also ships with Android 4, giving the much cleaner and tidier OS experience with the advanced app tray and widgets.

The keyboard dock is well developed, and doesn't really feel inexpensive or like an afterthought , and it is possibly the very best so far in the Transformer line. Typing seems nice with good responses from the keys .

Some have complained regarding the size of the keys , but if you have paid some time using a netbook computer you'll know very well what to expect. On the plus part, the keyboard set is much better compared to most netbook computers I?ve personally used, by a long shot. It also makes the device feel like a lot more cohesive experience than using accessory keys with some other devices.

In general, the Asus Transformer Pad is a great tablet and the keyboard set is expertly implemented and leaves the user with the choice to like it or leave it at will. While technically a cut down model of the Prime, I didn?t notice substantial downsides when compared to its older brother, and as a whole I think I prefer the user experience as a whole to that of the Prime.




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