The company that brought us the PadFone, an all-in-one smartphone, tablet,
and laptop device, is thinking a bit bigger. Taiwan’s Asustek Computer has now
combined a tablet, smartphone, and desktop PC into a single product that it
calls the Transformer Book Trio.
Asus Chairman Jonney Shih introduced the product during Asus’s news
conference at the Computex Trade show in Taipei on Monday. “Ladies and
gentleman,” said Shih, who loves to put on a show for the Computex press corps,
“I present the Transformer Book Trio, the world’s first three-in-one notebook,
tablet, and desktop PC.”
The Trio is an 11.6-inch Android tablet, with a 2GHz Intel Atom 2580
processor. Snap it into a keyboard and it becomes a laptop that can run both
Android and Windows 8. Remove the tablet display, and the keyboard—which has its
own hard drive and Core i7 processor—can be connected to a wireless monitor and
used as a desktop PC.
The tablet and keyboard each have their own battery, CPU and operating
system, so while using the keyboard as a PC, “you can give the tablet to your
kids to go play with independently,” Shih said.
The tablet has a 16:9 aspect ratio IPS display with 1920x1080 resolution
and up to 64GB of storage, Shih said. Connected to the keyboard “dock station,”
which has its own 750GB hard drive, the device can “smoothly transition” between
Android and Windows, he said.
“You can access 700,000 apps in the Google Play store and over 50,000 apps
in the Windows store, and they all run natively on the device,” Shih said. He
didn’t give a price or a shipping date, but most of the products unveiled at
Computex are on sale in time for the end of year holiday season.
It’s not clear how much demand there will be for the all-in-one product,
but Asus is doing more than most companies to innovate around the PC and help it
compete with tablets and smartphones, which many people are turning to for their
computing.
At last year’s Computex, Asus introduced the PadFone, an Android smartphone
that can dock into the back of a 10.1-inch tablet PC, giving it up to 64 hours
of extended battery life. The whole device can then be docked onto a keyboard to
form a laptop-like contraption.
The Transformer Book Trio was one of a half dozen products Asus announced
at Computex Monday. It also launched a 6-inch phablet called the Fonepad Note
FHD6, and a 7-inch tablet called the Memo Pad FHD7 that will be priced at $149
in developed countries and $129 in emerging markets.
Shih is one of the more entertaining executives at Computex and enjoys
playing the impresario and putting on a show. Each time he introduces a product,
he takes time to walk across the stage, posing for photographs and saying,
“Thank you, thank you, thank you.”
“We try to see the world the way da Vinci saw it,” he said at one point
Monday, flashing a sketch of the 15th Century artist and inventor on the big
screen behind him.
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