The Eee Pad Transformer Prime is king of the hill for Android tablets at the moment, despite an embarrassing objection from an entirely different kind of robot. Now Asus CEO Jonney Shih, who revealed the tablet himself at a conference months ago, says the company expects to sell at least three and as many as six million tablets next year. Taiwan Economic News reports the quote, noting that a considerable number of Transformer Prime units are experiencing WiFi difficulties, though Asus has already begun a replacement program for affected customers.

The original Eee Pad Transformer was one of the most popular of the initial Android Honeycomb tablets, due in no small part to its relatively low $399 starting price and attacheable keyboard. Though the Transformer Prime is $100 more expensive (and rightly so, with a quad-core Nvidia Tegra 3 processor and a truly stunning all-metal frame) the company continues to sell the original, setting up two tiers for tablet competition. The first Transformer has sold 1.8 million units worldwide.
Story Timeline
- ASUS Eee Pad Transformer Prime gets official: Tegra 3 quad-core Tab starting at $499 on Nov 9th 2011
- ASUS Transformer Prime caught in the wild [Gallery] on Nov 11th 2011
- ASUS Transformer Prime Official Hands-on on Dec 1st 2011
- ASUS Transformer Prime vs iPad 2: Benchmark Wars on Dec 1st 2011
- ASUS Transformer Prime Review on Dec 7th 2011
- ASUS confirms Transformer Prime will be available on launch day on Dec 10th 2011
- Hasbro sues Asus over Transformer Prime name on Dec 21st 2011
Android tablets are still nowhere near as popular as the iPad, but the gap has been closed considerably. Thanks to low-cost tablets like the Nook Color and Nook Tablet, which aren’t just cheap but reliable as well, Android’s market share in the tablet world is beginning to see the same accelerated growth that began its current boom in the smartphone market. Fourth-quarter sales could be as much as 40%. With 7-inch tablets hitting hard from the low end, and quad-core tablets bringing the fight to the iPad on the high end, 2012 looks promising indeed for the platform. And we still have 1080p screens and open source Ice Cream Sandwich tablets to look forward to, not to mention Asus’ very own Padfone, due early next year.
[via SlashGear]
)
AndroidCommunity
Related Posts
- Jelly Bean gets official as it arrives at Google HQ [UPDATE]
- Motorola Q1 2013 operating loss tops $271 million
- Google working on semantic search for possible Assistant integration
- Instapaper Android app update brings new features and bug fixes
- Google Voice is getting MMS – raise your hand if you care
- T-Mobile Galaxy S II update brings Isis support to battle Google Wallet
- HTC’s Blinkfeed and Ultrapixel camera headed to mid-range phones too
- YouTube updated with new UI for Gingerbread and older devices
- Duck Retro Hunt brings nostalgia and 8-bit gaming to Android
- Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 comes with 50GB Dropbox storage free for 2 years




