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Fulfilled by Amazon and Sold by M-X-C Tech
Average customer review: Fulfilled by Amazon and Sold by M-X-C Tech
(49 customer reviews)
- 11.6 in HD WXGA touchscreen (1366 x 768), 10-finger multi-touch support
- Intel Celeron N3050 1.60 GHz with Intel Burst Technology up to 2.16 GHz
- 2GB DDR3 1600MHz memory, 32GB eMMC.
- Windows 10 Home 64-bit
- 1 USB 3.0, 1 USB 2.0, 1 USB-C Gen 1, Micro HDMI.
Product Description
With a display that rotates from 0 to 360 degrees, the Transformer Book Flip covers every angle with ease. For work, use it like a traditional laptop. For games, change it into a tablet. Or for watching movies or viewing presentations, just flip it to a convenient angle for easy screen sharing. It's ultra-slim and light too-just 0.70 inches thin and 2.5 pounds-making it a breeze to tote wherever you're headed. Stay productive wherever you are with Office 365 Personal. Whether using Word, Excel, PowerPoint, or OneNote, your documents, photos, and videos are synced and ready to view or edit. Get speedy, power-efficient performance with an Intel Celeron N3050 processor, 2GB of memory, and 32GB solid state drive. USB 3.0, USB 2.0, and USB-C Gen ports are great for connecting and charging peripherals, while Micro HDMI hooks up to your big-screen TV. Windows 10 delivers faster start-ups, a familiar yet expanded Start menu, and great new ways to get stuff done across multiple devices.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1823 in Personal Computers
- Color: Dark Blue
- Brand: Asus
- Model: TP200SA-UHBF
- Dimensions: .72" h x 7.92" w x 11.69" l, 2.60 pounds
- CPU: Intel Celeron 1.6 GHz
- Memory: 2GB DDR3 SDRAM
- Hard Disk: 32GB
- Display size: 11.2
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1823 in Personal Computers
- Color: Dark Blue
- Brand: Asus
- Model: TP200SA-UHBF
- Dimensions: .72" h x 7.92" w x 11.69" l, 2.60 pounds
- CPU: Intel Celeron 1.6 GHz
- Memory: 2GB DDR3 SDRAM
- Hard Disk: 32GB
- Display size: 11.2
Features
- 11.6 in HD WXGA touchscreen (1366 x 768), 10-finger multi-touch support
- Intel Celeron N3050 1.60 GHz with Intel Burst Technology up to 2.16 GHz
- 2GB DDR3 1600MHz memory, 32GB eMMC.
- Windows 10 Home 64-bit
- 1 USB 3.0, 1 USB 2.0, 1 USB-C Gen 1, Micro HDMI.
- 11.6 in HD WXGA touchscreen (1366 x 768), 10-finger multi-touch support
- Intel Celeron N3050 1.60 GHz with Intel Burst Technology up to 2.16 GHz
- 2GB DDR3 1600MHz memory, 32GB eMMC.
- Windows 10 Home 64-bit
- 1 USB 3.0, 1 USB 2.0, 1 USB-C Gen 1, Micro HDMI.
Customer Reviews
Most helpful customer reviews
Summary (remember, this is value/effectiveness compared to price and device class):
++ Excellent battery life - consistenly pushes 8 hours on one charge
++ Very good audio
+ Good display/video (remember that this is based on devices of this class/price)
+ Good input (keyboard is comfortable size for these ham-hands with pleasant tactile response; touch pad functions well)
+ Good speed (remember that this is based on devices of this class/price)
+ Plays Well with Other Devices (Bluetooth and HDMI connection works flawlessly from what I can see; connecting to other systems via internet connection has been spotty for me though it may be my TV but - haven't experimented enough to be sure)
+ Runs programs pretty well (have only tried a couple of light/older games which were not terribly intensive, and did not do a lot of play-testing other than to verify that they loaded and ran). Most importantly, I was able to import MS Office 2010 which runs flawlessly as long as you have a legit license - hey, it's a great version of Office.
- Highly proprietary charging adapter: lucky the power time is so long because you probably don't have to move it (which is when we typically lose or damage our chargers)
In short, everything that you'd like to see in a budget laptop with the added bonus of transforming to a tablet. The "transforming" features work rather well with keyboard/touchpad deactivated past 180 degrees (making it an interestingly useful device to use on your lap up against your steering wheel while in a car waiting or resting, a touch tablet with its own stand, or fully folded as a tablet) and option to enter tablet mode (instead of being forced into it, though you can set a default). As pointed out before, it can be awkward when attempting to use as a tablet - most 10+ inch devices can (my personal fave is the 8" or a little larger than a paper back book).
Here are some things I noticed that may be useful to know, some common to Windows 10, maybe others common just to this tablet:
+ The power level of a Win 10 device with a 2GB RAM processor running sub 2GHz speeds is optimal for browsing, light gaming and the like. If you're a serious gamer who can afford to play all those great games, you're not running it off a tablet in any case. But if you're generating correspondence, checking emails and calendars, making spreadsheets and presentations, and playing Mah-Jong , then this is THE gadget for you.
+ The actual physical buttons for power and volume were so responsive that I didn't realize I had pressed it when trying to turn it on. It takes very little pressure to use them and the lack of tactile feedback can be disconcerting.
+ HDMI output works flawlessly - true plug and play. No glitches using the Project feature (duplicate screen, monitor only, computer only, extend for dual screen).
+ Google Chrome worked with no problems. I note that here because I've purchased a Win 10 tablet that required a bit of effort to make it work.
- Forget using your External DVD reader to load programs from disk: that's a chore... I'm not sure if it was my external DVD drive or just something in the whole schema of things, but it was way too slow. I got a drive clone program and mount a virtual disk - which worked exceptionally well for me.
- If you plan on using Google Drive, make sure you have a microSD card (formatted to NTFS file format) of at 32+ GB, create an appropriate folder on that drive and carefully go through Drive's set up routine and choose that folder as your Drive files storage. If you try to save your files to a microSD card formatted on anything other than NTFS, Google Drive will politely reject you (without explaining why).
See all 49 customer reviews...
Summary (remember, this is value/effectiveness compared to price and device class):
++ Excellent battery life - consistenly pushes 8 hours on one charge
++ Very good audio
+ Good display/video (remember that this is based on devices of this class/price)
+ Good input (keyboard is comfortable size for these ham-hands with pleasant tactile response; touch pad functions well)
+ Good speed (remember that this is based on devices of this class/price)
+ Plays Well with Other Devices (Bluetooth and HDMI connection works flawlessly from what I can see; connecting to other systems via internet connection has been spotty for me though it may be my TV but - haven't experimented enough to be sure)
+ Runs programs pretty well (have only tried a couple of light/older games which were not terribly intensive, and did not do a lot of play-testing other than to verify that they loaded and ran). Most importantly, I was able to import MS Office 2010 which runs flawlessly as long as you have a legit license - hey, it's a great version of Office.
- Highly proprietary charging adapter: lucky the power time is so long because you probably don't have to move it (which is when we typically lose or damage our chargers)
In short, everything that you'd like to see in a budget laptop with the added bonus of transforming to a tablet. The "transforming" features work rather well with keyboard/touchpad deactivated past 180 degrees (making it an interestingly useful device to use on your lap up against your steering wheel while in a car waiting or resting, a touch tablet with its own stand, or fully folded as a tablet) and option to enter tablet mode (instead of being forced into it, though you can set a default). As pointed out before, it can be awkward when attempting to use as a tablet - most 10+ inch devices can (my personal fave is the 8" or a little larger than a paper back book).
Here are some things I noticed that may be useful to know, some common to Windows 10, maybe others common just to this tablet:
+ The power level of a Win 10 device with a 2GB RAM processor running sub 2GHz speeds is optimal for browsing, light gaming and the like. If you're a serious gamer who can afford to play all those great games, you're not running it off a tablet in any case. But if you're generating correspondence, checking emails and calendars, making spreadsheets and presentations, and playing Mah-Jong , then this is THE gadget for you.
+ The actual physical buttons for power and volume were so responsive that I didn't realize I had pressed it when trying to turn it on. It takes very little pressure to use them and the lack of tactile feedback can be disconcerting.
+ HDMI output works flawlessly - true plug and play. No glitches using the Project feature (duplicate screen, monitor only, computer only, extend for dual screen).
+ Google Chrome worked with no problems. I note that here because I've purchased a Win 10 tablet that required a bit of effort to make it work.
- Forget using your External DVD reader to load programs from disk: that's a chore... I'm not sure if it was my external DVD drive or just something in the whole schema of things, but it was way too slow. I got a drive clone program and mount a virtual disk - which worked exceptionally well for me.
- If you plan on using Google Drive, make sure you have a microSD card (formatted to NTFS file format) of at 32+ GB, create an appropriate folder on that drive and carefully go through Drive's set up routine and choose that folder as your Drive files storage. If you try to save your files to a microSD card formatted on anything other than NTFS, Google Drive will politely reject you (without explaining why).
See all 49 customer reviews...
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