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Computex Taipei 2010 hasn’t even started and new product launches are being done already by big names of the IT industry. It’s time for ASUS now, who officially announced three products: EEE Tablet, EEE Pad EP101TC and Eee Pad EP121.
The first one is an electronic notepad, media player and eReader with an amazing 2450 dpi touch screen. It’s not a touch tablet per say, but more like a drawing board with the options of saving files in digital format.
ASUS EEE Tablet is meant for students and mobile professionals, features a 2 megapixel camera, USB and microSD card slot and a battery that will last you about 10 hours of continuous use.

Asus EEE Tablet
Getting to more serious stuff we have the Eee Pad EP101TC, a 10 inch tablet running Windows Embedded Compact 7 in a 675 grams body that’s 12.2 mm thin.

Asus EEE Pad EP101TC
If you’re hunting for the real deal, it’s name is Asus Eee Pad EP121, a 12 inch slate tablet powered by an Intel CULV CPU (that’s real power my friends), Windows 7 and offers 10 hours battery life (just like the iPad, at least on paper). The other interesting thing about EEE Pad EP121 is the docking station with keyboard (which contains also an additional battery), which means you’ll be able to do some real work on it, if you feel like.

Asus Eee Pad EP121
I’ll update this article as more info becomes available, so check back soon here.
UPDATE: We now have a video hands on with the two devices. The EEE Pad EP101TC was running Tegra 2 chipset and a beta version of software, hence the sluggish interface performance, while the EEE Pad EP121 wasn’t running at all, but was showcased with the incredible docking keyboard. Both devices featured great build quality with aluminum casing and glossy edge-to-edge glass covered displays. Take a look below the the video Engadget has filmed:
UPDATE 2: And a hands on with Asus EEE Tablet:

The clock is ticking, getting us closer to the 30th edition of Computex, the annual IT trade show that takes...
Not a comment, more like questions:
1) price of this product
2) instead of Windows, can Android be used with this device?
Mike, I’ll update the post once Asus announces something official, but for now that’s all the info I got.
So we know it’s 10 or 12″ by ~.5″ thick, but how wide are they? is the 10″ fairly comparable in size to the ipad?
Korbl, be sure that the 10 inch EEE pad is similar in size to the iPad, but a little bit thicker. The 12 inch model is bigger, but not by much.