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17.10.12
Asus lancar PadFone 2p
Asus lancar PadFone 2
Daripada Nazrul Azim Sharuddin di Taipei, Taiwan
SYARIKAT teknologi pengkomputeran Asus melancarkan telefon pintar
empat teras terbaru, Asus PadFone 2 dengan sokongan stesen tablet untuk
transisi paparan kepada saiz 10.1 inci yang lebih fleksibel.
Ketua Pegawai Operasinya, Jerry Shen berkata, kombinasi kedua-duanya
memberi keunikan kepada produk itu kerana menawarkan pengguna pilihan
operasi sama ada telefon atau tablet pada bila-bila masa.
“Selain
rekaan elegan, PadFone 2 mempunyai skrin bersaiz 4.7 inci dan berat
hanya 649 gram apabila disambung ke stesen tablet PadFone 2.
“Prestasinya juga sangat lancar berikutan mengaplikasikan pemproses
Qualcomm SnapDragon S4 dan dilengkapi storan web Asus sehingga 500GB,”
katanya pada pelancaran Asus PadFone 2 di Taipei, Taiwan semalam.
Model
itu juga disempurnakan sistem operasi Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich),
sambungan rangkaian LTE dan resolusi kamera 13 megapiksel.
Difahamkan,
model telefon pintar itu yang belum ditentukan harga pasarannya,
dijangka memasuki pasaran Malaysia pada akhir tahun ini. Ketika ini,
telefon itu dijual di Taiwan pada harga RM2,590 seunit.
We've got our hands on the Asus Padfone 2 - Asus' second attempt at a smartphone/tablet pairing. In
case you don't know, the Padfone is an original Asus concept that
brings together a tablet and a phone; the tablet itself is essentially a
dummy device which the phone slots into. There is a battery for
extra life inside the tablet, but otherwise all the processing power,
memory and more comes from inside the phone. The
company says it has listened carefully to the customer feedback on the
original Padfone and has made some significant improvements for the
device's second generation – notably the introduction of a rather
special slotting mechanism; the original Padfone featured a lift up
cover under which you placed the phone in sideways. With
this new design it's remarkably easy to slot the phone in straight down
from the top, while rubber gromits ensure the phone can't slide out
unless you want it to. It's a remarkably snug fit and metal plugs at the
bottom of the dock provide the contact between the phone and the tablet
part. When
you place the phone into the station you feel a small vibration to
indicate it has been inserted properly. The content on the phone screen
is also transferred to the tablet, but while this is great in theory, it
only seems to work with main built-in apps at the moment. The
tablet dock is styled in a similar fashion to the phone, but when held
side by side it lacks a little of the phone's refinement – the glossy
Corning glass looks smart, but smudges really easily. The
phone itself is considerably sleeker than its older brother, measuring
in at 9mm at its thickest point and tapering to just 3mm at its tip.
It's unbelievably light. The phone and the tablet part – known as the
Padfone station - weigh a combined 649g. That's lighter than iPad 3, as
Asus was keen to point out to us at the launch event we attended. The 4.7-inch screen is certainly a step up from its predecessor, but somehow feels considerably smaller than the Samsung Galaxy S3's
4.8-inch offering than you might expect. The 10.1-inch tablet screen
isn't Full HD, but Asus indicated to us that this would definitely be
something for the future; it already uses a Full HD screen in the Transformer Pad Infinity, but it would have added in extra cost. There's
no two ways about it – this is an extremely powerful smartphone. The
1.5GHz quad-core Qualcomm Snapdragon simply roars along and it spells
out where Asus sees the Padfone 2 going – into the hands of early
adopters and power consumers; there's nothing low end about this
package. Battery
life has a big push for Asus, with the company boasting that when the
phone is docked in the tablet it has a 3G standby time of six weeks. In
terms of the phone itself, Asus claims 3G talk time of 16 hours,
browsing of 13 hours, video of nine hours and 3G standby of two weeks. Without
the tablet, Asus claims 3G talk time of 16 hours, browsing of 13 hours,
video of nine hours and The Padfone's 13MP camera is impressive,
offering a S3-bettering 6fps for 100 continuous shots and 720p video
recording at 60fps, also better than the Samsung Galaxy S3 and HTC One X. Sound
is also definitely worth a mention – Asus' SonicMaster tech is now in
its third generation and, while it didn't impress during the keynote
(anybody can hold a microphone to a tablet), in a later briefing we had
we were pretty impressed at how it filled the room (admittedly the music
was of Asus' own choice). The app to accompany the audio is also an
example of some of the nice add-on work Asus is doing. Extra
work on a further SmartNote app (which recognises handwriting on
screen) seeks to appeal to those who find the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 a
draw (if you'll forgive the pun). You also get a huge 50GB of cloud
storage to boot.
Early verdict
With
the Padfone 2 Asus has presented a hardware combination that delivers
on much of the unfulfilled promise of the original Padfone. If you're
investing in a high end smartphone, it may be a tempting option. It's
expensive when you think about it in terms of a single product, but
when you think of it as both a smartphone and tablet it becomes a lot
more reasonable – especially when you consider that you'll only need one
data contract (it will be interesting if it comes to 4G tariffs, too). It's
unlikely Padfone 2 will be a truly dominant force and it probably won't
see Asus taking Apple and Samsung head on just yet, but the Padfone 2
does see Asus offering something unique and doing it with a good deal of
style.
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