We’ve picked out some faults, but overall we’re happy to recommend the Asus Eee Pad Transformer with the keyboard caveat. It might be £50 that doesn’t always work right, but when it does work, it’s a wonderful experience. You can pick up the Eee Pad Transformer (both parts) for £429, or the Eee Pad (tablet only) for £379, making the keyboard about £50. It looks to be good value for money too, especially as the design is rather handsome. Given that the keyboard dock is an accessory (it’s not as though the operational problems make your tablet useless) we’re happy to give Asus the benefit of the doubt here: you might be looking to just buy the tablet on its own after all. Again, we’re sure that Asus will work these problems out, and judging by the comments on forums across the internet, these problems aren’t universal and Asus are aware of them. There are places where things could be improved on the tablet front - wider video support, increased uniformity across Asus’ app offerings - but some of the current Honeycomb limitations (e.g.: number of optimised apps) we can’t fault Asus for. Drawing out a verdict on the Asus Eee Pad Transformer isn’t as tricky as it might seem - we love it.
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