Asus Eee Pad Transformer Tf101 Usb Drivers For Mac
But all this doesn't help. ASUS guys really managed to screw up a good tablet by either intentionally complicating file transfer procedures or just hurrying so much to throw it out into the market that file transferring didn't get proper amount of thinking. Why wasn't it possible to just make Eee Pad seen by a PC as an external data storage?!! Then and Yes it is always easy to say, Oh something must be wrong with your computer! - but excuse me, WHY do I need to think about it if everything else works just fine? Hey ASUS guys was it really really not possible to make everything work before beginning the sales? Isn't it why so many people still love Apple - just because it bloody WORKS right out of the box!
But all this doesn't help. ASUS guys really managed to screw up a good tablet by either intentionally complicating file transfer procedures or just hurrying so much to throw it out into the market that file transferring didn't get proper amount of thinking. Why wasn't it possible to just make Eee Pad seen by a PC as an external data storage?!! Then and Yes it is always easy to say, Oh something must be wrong with your computer! - but excuse me, WHY do I need to think about it if everything else works just fine?
Hey ASUS guys was it really really not possible to make everything work before beginning the sales? Isn't it why so many people still love Apple - just because it bloody WORKS right out of the box! Download and install Microsoft user mode driver framework. Then reinstall the usb driver(MTP driver). Worked for me on Windows XP pro.
Let me know if you have any troubl. This is a 738kb file from Microsoft. This a Microsoft thing and relates to MTP support.
Asus Eee Pad Tf101 Specs
In use, the Transformer TF101 is a joy. We're big fans of the Android 3.0 Honeycomb OS, and it runs like a dream on the Asus Eee Pad Transformer TF101. We won't go into the general features of Honeycomb in this review – if you want to know more about it you can read our in-depth. By far the most interesting feature of the Transformer is the keyboard docking station, so let's go there next.
We had reservations before we tested the Transformer. Our main fear was that the tablet and the dock would not marry together well. Acer's Windows tablet was guilty of that – the keyboard was horrible, and the method of docking the two products together was implemented poorly. That's not the case, here, though. The tablet slots into the dock with a satisfying clunk, and once they're attached you wouldn't know that they were ever apart. You can fold the screen flat just like you can with a standard netbook – something that, on the Acer Iconica Tab W500, would result in the two pieces falling away from each other in an embarrassing fashion.
There's an easy-to-use silver switch on the front of the dock, which releases the tablet and automatically locks it into place when you dock it. The keyboard dock is significantly lighter than the tablet, which means that when they're docked together, the weight of the device as a whole isn't too bad. In a perfect world it would be a tad lighter, but really it's light enough to carry around without putting your back out.
The keyboard brings so much to the Android experience, too. Tablets are often called consumption devices because they're more about consuming media than actually creating content. However, with the keyboard and with the inclusion of Polaris Office, you're immediately well on the way to not needing a secondary laptop – we're not quite there yet though. Typing is quick and easy, and the keyboard isn't spongy in the slightest.
Typing the odd email and searching the web is quicker and easier than using the frankly horrible onscreen keyboard. That's one thing we really didn't like, in fact – the onscreen keyboard is different to the standard Android 3.0 one and it's not nice to type on at all. The first thing we wanted to do was install a different keyboard (one of Android's greatest strengths is that you can do things like that) because the keys are squished. This is one reason why the iPad's 4x3 aspect ratio works so well – it means the keys on the keyboard aren't as elongated. Trackpad When the dock is connected, a mouse cursor appears on the screen and you can then navigate the OS in three different ways. You can stick to the touch interface and use gestures on the screen. You can use the trackpad on the dock like you would use the trackpad and mouse buttons on a laptop.
Or you can also plug a USB mouse into one of the USB ports on the dock and use the mouse to control the cursor. You can also interchange between these input methods without having to change settings or switch modes – they all work simultaneously. We found that using the mouse and keyboard like a standard computer worked very well, although the experience is not flawless by any means.
For a start, the cursor seemed ever so slightly behind. It moves just a tiny fraction of a second after you move your finger on the trackpad or move the mouse. It's not a massive issue, but it's enough to make us feel that we didn't particularly want to use the cursor much.
The other minor quibble we had with the trackpad involved scrolling in the Android browser. On a laptop, to scroll down on a web page you slide your finger on the trackpad towards your body.
To scroll up, you'd slide your finger away from you. But here it's the opposite.
To scroll down you gesture in the direction of the screen, which is very unintuitive for anyone who's ever used a laptop – which is. We can see why it's done like that – it's to match the exact same gesture you'd make if scrolling by touching the screen itself. But it would be nice if there was an option to invert this input, as it's hella annoying. Screen The screen on the Asus Eee Pad Transformer is an IPS panel, and it's one of the best tablet screens we've seen.
Colours are bright and vivid, contrast is decent and the viewing angle is excellent. When watching videos, the picture is smooth and sharp while the touch input was extremely responsive.