

- #Asus t100ta windows 10 microphone driver update
- #Asus t100ta windows 10 microphone driver Bluetooth
You cannot even buy the T100 without the dock otherwise it wouldn't be a Transformer Book. Accessories / Softwareīesides the small power supply unit (20 Watts, USB connector) Asus also provides the keyboard dock (DK002H). The signal is lost with a distance of more than 15 meters outside the house and Windows indicates two out of five bars, while we had four bars with a distance of 10 meters (inside). The Broadcom 802.11 bgn SDIO adaptor does not show a perfect performance in our test.
#Asus t100ta windows 10 microphone driver Bluetooth
We added our test results in the sections system performance, storage solution and battery runtimes.ĭraft-N WLAN and Bluetooth 4.0 are standard nowadays and that applies for Windows 8 tablets as well. We had the chance to test the T100TA-DK007H (90NB0451-M01470) with a 500 GB HDD in the dock and 64 GB flash storage inside the tablet.
#Asus t100ta windows 10 microphone driver update
Update : Review update of the version with 500GB + 64GB flash storage Which device offers the best performance for the money? Our in-depth review gives the answer. The second competitor is based on Intel's first tablet generation Z2760, the Lenovo IdeaTab Miix (64 GB) with a keyboard dock starts at 470 Euros (~$644). Temash was intended as a powerful tablet APU and rival to Intel's Atom.

Competitors for the Transformer Book are classic low-cost subnotebooks with AMD's Temash APU Acer's Aspire V5-122P ( A6-1450) retails for 380 Euros (~$521). It was interesting to see that the first devices with Temash were not tablets or convertibles, but subnotebooks like the Acer Aspire V5-122P-61454G50NSS or the Samsung ATIV Book 9 Lite.Īsus is one of the first manufacturers to use Intel's new platform with its Transformer Book T100TA. Does the successor Bay Trail solve this problem? This would really improve the acceptance and the general usability of the Windows tablet and especially the keyboard convertible.ĪMD rushed ahead with Temash a few months back, the first x86 APU with four native cores. There were several devices in 2013, but all of them shared one problem: The performance was way too low for Intel Core spoiled laptop users. It was supposed to compete with ARM or Tegra-based solutions and was ready for Windows 8 at the same time. Intel revealed its first tablet platform Clover Trail at the end of 2012. For the original German review, see here.
