Sunday, August 15, 2010
ASUS prices Eee Pad range: $399 Android EP101TC, $1k EP121
ASUS CEO Jerry Shen has confirmed pricing for the company’s upcoming tablet range, with their Android-based model slipping in beneath the iPad’s base price. According to PCWorld, the ASUS Eee Pad EP101TC will cost under $399 when it arrives in March 2011, and will be the third in the company’s new line-up; first will be the ASUS Eee Pad EP121, announced back at Computex and set to cost around $1,000.
That’s significantly higher than the iPad, but ASUS’s machine will offer full PC functionality since it’s based on an Intel Core 2 Duo ULV processor running Windows 7 Home Premium. It also comes with a keyboard docking station for speedier text-entry, and has a 12-inch display.
Interestingly, while the EP101TC ditched Windows 7 Embedded Compact in favor of Android 3.0, according to Shen there will be a third model in January 2011 which will in fact use the Microsoft OS. That will have a 10-inch touchscreen, ARM processors and a price tag between $399 and $499, but lack the EP121′s docking station.
Finally, the ASUS Eee Tablet – a monochrome LCD slate intended for reading and annotating documents – will drop globally in October priced at around $300, considerably cheaper than the $500 tipped recently. It will run a homegrown Linux OS rather than Android, have WiFi, 2 -megapixel camera, touchscreen and audio recording, together with a browser, microSD card (augmenting the 2GB of onboard storage) and a battery good for 10hrs runtime. ASUS are considering renaming it to the Eee Note, so as to avoid direct tablet comparisons.
That’s significantly higher than the iPad, but ASUS’s machine will offer full PC functionality since it’s based on an Intel Core 2 Duo ULV processor running Windows 7 Home Premium. It also comes with a keyboard docking station for speedier text-entry, and has a 12-inch display.
Interestingly, while the EP101TC ditched Windows 7 Embedded Compact in favor of Android 3.0, according to Shen there will be a third model in January 2011 which will in fact use the Microsoft OS. That will have a 10-inch touchscreen, ARM processors and a price tag between $399 and $499, but lack the EP121′s docking station.
Finally, the ASUS Eee Tablet – a monochrome LCD slate intended for reading and annotating documents – will drop globally in October priced at around $300, considerably cheaper than the $500 tipped recently. It will run a homegrown Linux OS rather than Android, have WiFi, 2 -megapixel camera, touchscreen and audio recording, together with a browser, microSD card (augmenting the 2GB of onboard storage) and a battery good for 10hrs runtime. ASUS are considering renaming it to the Eee Note, so as to avoid direct tablet comparisons.