Thursday 25 April 2013

Asus FonePad

As its name alludes, the FonePad is one of those tablet/smartphone — or phablet — doohickeys. Like the Samsung Galaxy Note 2, it features a large screen and you can make calls on it. However, with a 7-inch screen size, Asus has taken the FonePad to a whole new level of ridiculousness.


Holding the tablet to your head to make calls is awkward and looks (and feels) genuinely comical. Those whose first inclination at a concert is to whip out their iPads and start taking pictures have already shown us that some people have no shame when using their tech devices. I do and would not be caught in public holding the FonePad to my face.


The Asus FonePad is a good tablet. It’s no Nexus 7 in the performance, price, or always-having-the-latest-version-of-Android department, but it performs well, has a sharp screen, and a comfortable and durable build.


And if you’re willing to face the embarrassment and physical awkwardness of holding a Nexus 7-size slate to your head when making calls — sure, you could use a headset, but a 7-inch tablet isn’t nearly as portable as a phone — its £178 (or $275 if imported) price isn’t a bad deal for an all-inclusive device. However, if you’re strictly looking only for a tablet, skip this and buy the Nexus 7.


The Asus FonePad is available now in U.K., but Asus has no plans to release it in the U.S; however, it will work as a phone here in the states. I used an AT&T SIM to test it without any technical complications.


Design and features

Like the Asus Memo ME172V, the Asus FonePad is essentially a slightly redesigned Asus-made Nexus 7. It’s roughly the same size and has the same silver trim around its edge, but instead of a grippy leathery backside like the Nexus 7′s, it instead features a silver aluminum back. The Nexus 7 is still more comfortable to hold, but the FonePad’s slightly lighter metal body feels more durable.


























Weight in pounds0.700.740.680.76
Width in inches (landscape)7.77.87.878.2
Height in inches4.74.75.35.3
Depth in inches0.40.40.280.31
Side bezel width in inches (landscape)0.90.80.250.7

The power and volume buttons sit along the tablet’s left edge, which feels awkward and weird to me, like it did on the Memo. On the bottom edge is a Micro-USB port, headphone jack, and a microphone pinhole. The front-facing camera sits on the top of the bezel toward the right, directly left of the phone speaker. On the back, there’s a rear-facing 3-megapixel camera located in the top center with a small speaker grill several inches below it. The microSD card slot and SIM card slot are both hidden under a removable panel near the top, above the rear camera. While I appreciate the extra storage option, the panel is a bit difficult to remove; a more ergonomic solution would have been preferred.



The FonePad’s durable aluminum back isn’t quite as comfortable as the Nexus 7′s leathery one, but it’s probably more durable.




The FonePad ships with Android 4.1.2 (Jelly Bean) and its interface follows the same style as the Nexus 7′s, with a toolbar of apps at the bottom or right side of the screen, depending on the tablet’s orientation. It also includes several useful Asus customizations. Chief among them is Asus Splendid, which allows you to adjust the hue, color saturation, and color temperature of the tablet’s screen. There’s also a “Vivid Mode” option that appears to boost the contrast. While making adjustments, you’re given the option to see in real time how your changes affect your choice of three different images: color bars, the current background image, or a colorful picture of fruit.


We’ve see screen options before on tablets, but never have we been allowed to get as deep with color customizations that truly affect the display’s presentation. I just hope that Asus continues to offer and build on this feature.



The Asus Splendid app provides the deepest level of screen customization I’ve yet seen on a tablet.




The Power Saver option acts a bit differently than it does on other Asus tablets. Instead of throttling the CPU’s speed depending on the power profile you’ve selected, the three profiles — Ultra-saving, Optimized, and Customized — will only affect the brightness of the display and whether Wi-Fi is turned on. You can also customize the screen’s brightness for different tasks like reading books, watching videos, browsing the Web, etc.


The FonePad includes several built-in mini-app widgets: a browser, video player, calculator, and battery meter, among others. The widgets can all run concurrently, and unlike on the Memo 172V, performance remained smooth while doing so.



The microSD and SIM card secret compartment.




And it’s a phone
It may not surprise given its name — despite the spelling — that the FonePad is not only a tablet, but also a full-fledged, honest-to-goodness smartphone. Yes, you can make and receive calls on the FonePad just as easily as you would on a Galaxy S4, but the device is still much larger than even 5-inch “phablets” like the Note 2 and Optimus G Pro. If you thought those were cumbersome, inconvenient, unwieldy, or a bit weird-looking, you ain’t seen nothing yet. Once you catch yourself in the mirror holding a 7-inch tablet to your head and talking into it, you’ll understand the true meaning of silly-looking.



Off-camera, hundreds are pointing and laughing. I’m doing my best to hide my tears.




And beyond any embarrassment you may feel using it in public, it’s just unwieldy when attempting adjust in one hand, especially if you have small hands. The FonePad doesn’t include a headset unfortunately, which would be the ideal way to use it.


I used an AT&T SIM card to test the call quality here in San Francisco. Voices came in fuzzy and a bit “breathy” on both ends when calling a landline. Speaking into the FonePad, I definitely had to make sure I spoke loudly and clearly in order for the other party to hear me. Also, with the speaker enabled, it was difficult for the person on the other end to clearly hear my voice unless I put the mic right up to my mouth. I experienced no dropped calls nor any problems connecting using AT&T’s GSM network in San Francisco.



Asus FonePad

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