Asus always opens its home computer show Computex with a bang and this year it was the Padfone - a 4.3-inch smartphone that docks inside a 10.1-inch tablet dock with dynamic display switching, two batteries, a shared SIM card, a single hard drive, Qualcomm processor, Android's next generation operating system (Ice Cream Sandwich) and a Q4, 2011 launch date with a price in the US$800-1,000 area.
While specifics are thin on the ground at the moment, the ASUS smartphone will run on the latest version of Android available at launch and have all the functionality we've come to expect from such a device - browsing the internet, checking emails, watching online videos and playing addictive games like Angry Birds. If you find yourself wanting to watch movies or enjoy games on a bigger screen, the smartphone can be docked within the body of the tablet. There's no need to switch off one to use the other, whatever you were up to at docking time will be continued on the bigger screen and if you receive a call while using the tablet, you could either whip out the phone or connect using a Bluetooth headset.
ASUS says that there will be some sort of shared storage pool in the smartphone part of the device so that users won't have to concern themselves with synchronizing data between the two. This also suggests that the smartphone will likely provide the processing for the tablet too. The tablet, though, will not be a mere dumb terminal - it will also provide extra connectivity ports and some juice for the smartphone's battery.
It's another design masterpiece from ASUS, which consistently demonstrates the ability to think outside the square and the Padfone will enable users to switch between pad and phone for a best-fit user experience - too often I find myself using a smartphone and wanting more screen real estate or a tablet but finding it restrictive in the environment - the Padfone will definitely cure that problem.
It will also be interesting to see if this two-in-one approach encourages Android developers not to charge for separate phone/tablet ("HD") versions as is very common (and very annoying) on iOS devices.
Similarly, allow a range of different input devices, including onphone multi-touch, plus e.g. bluetooth keyboard
You don\'t necessarily even need to own the screen - just walk up and proximity login
BTW I have an HTC Desire and have just got an HTC Flyer; I\'ve downloaded all the same apps (as far as possible) and there are 2 things I have found: 1. VERY cool ... 2. BUT ... it would be much easier to have 1 set of apps and data, not 2; same for SIM cards, data plans, etc 2.
What if I were to announce a concept of a motorcycle that docks with a shell with additional seats, a roof and a trunk, turning it into a car? But it would cost the same as a comparable car plus a separate motorcycle. Most people would say it makes no sense. For the same price, they\'d rather have two independently functional vehicles. The same applies here. For the same price, I\'d rather have two devices with twice the storage rather than one fully functional device and one accessory that\'s useless without the first.
Saying that, a network provider that does decide to provide a single package, that allows the phone to be the main connecting device, that when docked with the larger pad, it becomes an all singing dancing tablet unit with phone ... will give Asus as a company the manopoly for present and future customers to buy only the Asus brand phones/tablets (physical phone size will need to stay the same). Imagine, if the product range of docking the phone was increased to laptops, and home PC\'s!
Surely, this will/must be giving Apple a run for the money!?! All I would add here also, is that if rumours are right about Apple lauching Ipad3 in October/November, and that its also considering to use quad-core processing power in its chip, then both Asus and Apple customers will be led by specification and costs. Who ever keeps the overall costs down, will in my opinion be the adaptive winner!!!
Maybe Asus should call the device, \'Interlect\'... hhhmm?
the only thing that i would change is the door on the back i would make it so the phone clips right in to the back to make a smooth finish and im curious if carries like crap att and verizon will even wanna carry it since they like raping people for seperate data plans but for the first device this is insaneeee
imagine when samsung makes their own verzion and htc! omg omg my whole cocern with gettin an ipad or a tablet is that my phone does the exact same things why should i shell out 500 and another data plan for a bigger screen ? this answers that simply amazing