![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() And Asus was clever about how the system used its three batteries – the keyboard’s battery would drain first and charge last. The keyboard dock added another 6,600 mAh battery to the mix. This grew to a 10.1” LCD with 1,280 x 800 px resolution when you plugged it into the tablet dock, which also packed a 6,600 mAh battery (the phone itself had only a 1,520mAh cell on board). The phone itself had a 4.3” Super AMOLED screen with 540 x 960 px resolution. And that tablet could attach to a keyboard dock, much like the Transformer. The name isn’t subtle, it’s a phone that can turn into a tablet using the appropriate tablet dock. This came only a year later – enter the Asus PadFone. But Asus’ ambitions were much greater than a simple 2-in-1, it was going to create the only computing gadget you’ll ever need. This was nearly a decade before Apple decided to do the same with the Magic Keyboard for the iPad Pro. At CES 2011 Asus unveiled the EEE Pad Transformer TF101 – a tablet that could transform into a small laptop thanks to the optional keyboard dock. ![]()
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