ASUS is doubling down that
consumers want their
tablet and
phone to be
the same device. ASUS has announced that it has released the PadFone Mini in
Taiwan, with plans to bring the
device (devices?) to mainland China, Singapore, Russia, Hong Kong and Indonesia eventually.
The PadFone Mini is another in ASUS's line of devices that has users "dock" their
phone into a tablet-like device, charging the
phone and allowing the user to use the larger
screen. The PadFone Mini, as the name implies, brings the size down a bit, from the 10-inch tablets of ASUS's previous PadFones to the more casual 7-inch
tablet that we see here. The
specs in both devices are clearly in the "budget" camp.
The PadFone Mini includes a Snapdragon 400 CPU running at 1.3GHz, 1GB of RAM, 1500mAh
battery, 16GB onboard storage and a 960x540
screen. Plugging it into the
tablet will give the
device a 1280x800
screen and a 2200mAh
battery. The PadFone Mini is launching in
Taiwan for NT$11,990 (406USD, 294EUR) which is a pretty steep price considering the
specs behind the glass. You
do get two
screen and two batteries, for what it is worth, but you can only use one at a time anyway.
For not much more you could purchase a Nexus 7 and Nexus 4 together. Or you could get a
phone like the
THL W200, which is a more powerful
phone and has a better display, and still have $200 left over for a new
tablet. Or better yet, you could just purchase a 6-inch phablet and have the best of both worlds.
ASUS seems to be betting hard that
consumers want to dock their phones inside of their tablets, even when their tablets aren't much bigger than their phones, and are willing to pay a premium price in order to do so. What do you think, is the privilege of owning
1.5 devices worth the cost of admission?