Final Words

ASUS delivered three things with the Eee Pad: a very competitive price point ($399), a surprisingly useful (albeit pricey) dock, and a good display. The price point alone is enough to make the Eee Pad the Honeycomb tablet to get assuming you don't need integrated 3G or LTE connectivity. The Eee Pad is comfortable to hold and use and despite the lower price point you don't feel like ASUS has sacrificed much at all to make it. The display has similar characteristics to what Apple ships in the iPad 2. Overall from a hardware standpoint, the Eee Pad is solid.

The Transformer dock is an extremely tempting addition to the Eee Pad, I only wish it were cheaper. When in use the dock extends battery life by 64%, pushing the Eee Pad past 15.5 hours in our general WiFi test. ASUS tells me that the Transformer dock will be compatible with all Transformer branded tablets in the future. I can imagine a thinner Kal-El based version must be in the works at this point.

Tight integration between the keyboard/trackpad and Honeycomb makes the Eee Pad Transformer one part tablet and one part Android netbook, and the whole thing works a lot better than I expected it to. When you need a netbook form factor, you have one, and when you just want to kick back and relax with a tablet you've got that as well. The experience isn't quite fast enough for me to replace my notebook, but I can see where things are headed.

I actually believe the dockable tablet is indicative of where the netbook (and perhaps ultra portable notebook) market is going. Give me some more (or faster) cores and an OS even better suited for notebook duty and the line between a tablet and a netbook becomes quite blurry. I finally understand why NVIDIA opted for four cores in Kal-El and why Microsoft keeps looking to Windows 8 to be its tablet strategy. Windows 8 tablets will be Windows 8 netbooks; they'll just be modular.

The biggest issues here are software related. Honeycomb has matured significantly just with the 3.0.1 update, but there are still dock and camera behavior issues that need to be worked out before ASUS takes the Eee Pad to market. I feel like Honeycomb got a worse rap than it deserves, but there are real issues that need addressing here. I lost a couple of pages of this review thanks to an unexpected hard lock and a reboot while typing this on the Eee Pad. For casual use it's not an issue but the platform isn't mature enough for real work yet.

So why do companies keep introducing tablets with known software issues? I always remember what AMD's Eric Demers once told me: the best way to lose a fight is to not show up.

The Honeycomb Update & Software Preload
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  • Anand Lal Shimpi - Thursday, April 21, 2011 - link

    I just confirmed with ASUS, the US version does have GPS hardware. Maps seems to require an active WiFi connection to use GPS however, which is why I originally assumed it wasn't present. My mistake, I've corrected the review :)

    Take care,
    Anand
  • Ananke - Thursday, April 21, 2011 - link

    If the US version has no usable GPS, it is worthless at the $399. It may be considerable purchase at $299. Asus shall make no such mistake, it would be marketing suicide. Besides, they have only a month window in US to penetrate the market. In June, once Samsung and Co come with competing products, it is going to get ugly. There is no time for mistakes.
  • Anand Lal Shimpi - Thursday, April 21, 2011 - link

    That was an error on my part - sorry about that! There is GPS hardware in the Eee Pad Transformer.

    Take care,
    Anand
  • Ananke - Thursday, April 21, 2011 - link

    Thank you Anand, for clarifying this. Your review is excellent, btw. I also wish all the best to ASUS - they are the first and only for now with a quality tablet that actually makes sense to own and use.
  • swaaye - Thursday, April 21, 2011 - link

    Android needs to improve a bit before I think it's ideal for this kind of thing. Their GUI acceleration is still seriously lacking and it makes the stock browser slow even on these somewhat powerful devices. My EeePC 900 on XP with a pathetic Celeron 900 and GMA 900 browses faster than the Xoom in my experience.

    I think the only advantage to Android is touch input in tablet mode. But there is a real load of disadvantages to it.
  • Ikshaar - Thursday, April 21, 2011 - link

    Hmmm someone changed the text in the review... from not having GPS to no mention at all.

    Does anyone know if this has GPS or not ?
  • MilwaukeeMike - Thursday, April 21, 2011 - link

    Yes. :)
  • Ikshaar - Thursday, April 21, 2011 - link

    Thanks. Cool. I see now the other comments... I guess we all posted at once.

    Now I wonder if this works with the WiFi tethering on my phone (Nexus), so I can get maps even when in the middle of nowhere.
  • I am as mad as hell - Friday, April 22, 2011 - link

    Oh uh, more confusion upon us.. just head over to Engadget.com !

    They just mentioned that the Transformer has only a A-GPS, not a GPS!

    So what is it now?
  • qhinton - Monday, April 25, 2011 - link

    I assume you live in milwaukee. Have you heard of BEST BUY carrying this.

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